When Carol in Tampa drafted her will, she named her brother in Ohio as executor because he was organized and trustworthy. Sensible, except for one Florida wrinkle: he likely could not serve. Florida calls this role the personal representative, and the state imposes qualification rules that quietly disqualify many people families would otherwise choose. Picking the right person, and confirming they can actually serve, prevents months of delay.
What the Personal Representative Actually Does
After death, the personal representative shepherds the estate through Florida probate under Chapters 731 through 735. That means filing the will with the court, identifying and securing assets, notifying creditors, paying valid debts and final expenses, filing any required tax returns, and distributing what remains to beneficiaries. In a formal administration this involves court filings and deadlines; in a streamlined summary administration, available for smaller estates or when the decedent has been gone over two years, the process is faster but still demands diligence.
Florida’s Eligibility Rules
This is where Carol’s plan broke down. A Florida personal representative must be at least 18, mentally and physically capable, and not have a disqualifying felony conviction. The big trap is residency: a non-relative who lives outside Florida generally cannot serve. Out-of-state individuals may serve only if they are related to the decedent by blood, marriage, or adoption, such as a child, sibling, or spouse. So Carol’s brother qualifies as family, but her trusted out-of-state friend would not. Banks and trust companies authorized to do business in Florida can also serve.
Traits That Matter More Than Affection
The most loving person is not always the right one. Look for someone organized, honest, financially literate, and calm under pressure, because the role mixes paperwork, deadlines, and occasionally tense beneficiaries. Geography helps too: a personal representative who lives near where the property, accounts, and probate court are located handles the practical work far more easily than one managing everything from across the country, even if legally eligible.
One Person or Co-Representatives?
Some families name two adult children together to feel fair. That can work, but co-representatives must agree on filings and signatures, which slows things down and can deadlock if siblings clash. Often it is cleaner to name one capable person with a clearly named alternate as backup. Always name at least one successor in case your first choice dies, declines, or becomes unable to serve.
Compensation and Bond
Florida law allows a personal representative reasonable compensation for their work, and beneficiaries sometimes resent paying a family member. You can address expectations in your will. The court may also require a bond unless your will waives it, so consider including a bond waiver for a trusted representative to avoid unnecessary cost and friction.
A Note Before You Act
Naming an ineligible personal representative can force your family to petition the court for a replacement at exactly the wrong time. Before finalizing your will, consult a Florida estate planning attorney to confirm your chosen personal representative qualifies and to coordinate the appointment with the rest of your plan.
For more on our Florida practice, see our overview of Florida estate planning. Morgan Legal Group's affiliated New York office also handles how a will is contested in New York.