State guide · Illinois

What to do when a parent passes away in Illinois

A calm, step-by-step walkthrough of the immediate moments, the paperwork, and the Illinois-specific details that often catch families off guard. Read it once now, then come back to it as needed.

Death certificates

Illinois Department of Public Health, Division of Vital Records

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Probate court

Illinois Courts – Probate

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State estate or inheritance tax

Estate tax applies

Step 1

The immediate moments

You don't have to do anything right now except breathe. If your parent died at home and was on hospice, call the hospice line — they will guide you through declaring death and calling the funeral home. If they died in a hospital, the staff handles the medical paperwork and will hand you next steps when you're ready.

If the death was unattended (no medical professional present), call 911. They will arrange for a coroner or medical examiner to come, which is required before the body can be released.

Most decisions can wait until tomorrow, or even next week. Take the time you need.

Step 2

Order certified death certificates in Illinois

You will need certified copies of the death certificate for almost every administrative task ahead — closing accounts, filing for life insurance, transferring titles. Most families need 10 to 15 certified copies. Order more than you think.

In Illinois, certified death certificates are issued by Illinois Department of Public Health, Division of Vital Records. The funeral home will usually order the first batch for you and bill the estate.

Step 3

Notify federal agencies and the bank

The funeral home typically reports the death to the Social Security Administration automatically, but it's worth confirming. If your parent was receiving Social Security, the payment for the month of death must be returned, even if it arrives after the date of death.

  • Social Security: A surviving spouse may be eligible for a one-time $255 lump-sum benefit and ongoing survivor benefits.
  • Veterans Affairs: If your parent was a veteran, the VA may help with burial costs and survivor benefits.
  • Banks & brokerages: Bring a certified death certificate. Joint accounts and accounts with named beneficiaries usually transfer immediately; others may need to wait for probate.
  • Employer or pension: Notify their employer, union, and any pension provider. Survivor benefits and final paychecks often need to be claimed.

Step 4

Understand Illinois probate options

Illinois offers a Small Estate Affidavit for estates with limited personal property and no real estate.

Probate is the court process that transfers what your parent owned to the people who inherit it. In Illinois, probate is overseen by Illinois Courts – Probate. Many things pass outside probate — joint accounts, life insurance with named beneficiaries, retirement accounts, and assets in a trust — so the actual probate estate is often much smaller than people expect.

You usually have time. There's no need to rush to court in the first week.

Step 5

Illinois estate & inheritance taxes

Illinois has its own estate tax that kicks in at a much lower threshold than the federal exemption (about $4 million), so middle-class families with significant real estate may owe state estate tax. There is no inheritance tax.

Step 6

Illinois-specific things to know

  • Illinois death certificates can be ordered from the county clerk where the death occurred, which is usually faster than the state office.
  • Because of the lower estate tax threshold, an estate plan that worked under federal rules may still trigger state tax — review with an Illinois attorney.

Step 7

Protect against identity theft and scams

The deceased are a target for fraud, sometimes within days. Notify the three credit bureaus (Equifax, Experian, TransUnion) and request a death notice be placed on the file. Watch the mail and inbox for unfamiliar accounts.

Report suspected scams to the FTC at ReportFraud.ftc.gov and the FBI's Internet Crime Complaint Center at IC3.gov.

Step 8

Take care of yourself

Grief makes paperwork feel ten times heavier. Eat regularly. Sleep when you can. Let people bring you food. The list above will still be there tomorrow, and the day after, and we'll walk through it with you one step at a time.

A plan made for Illinois

NextStep walks you through every task above in plain language, with the right Illinois forms and links pre-filled. One step at a time.

Begin your plan

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