How Long Do You Have To Contest A Will In Tennessee? 

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In most situations, a will contest in Tennessee must be filed within two years after the will is admitted to probate. 

This two year statute of limitations is generally treated as a strict deadline, meaning that once the period expires the will usually cannot be challenged, even if new evidence is discovered. 

Why Timing Matters in a Tennessee Will Contest 

When a loved one dies, you expect their will to bring clarity and closure. Instead, you may be left with serious doubts about whether the will really reflects what they wanted. Maybe a new caregiver suddenly inherits most of the estate, or a long time child is cut out with no clear explanation. 

If you are in this situation, timing is critical. Tennessee law gives you only a limited window to challenge a will in court. Once that deadline passes, you may lose your right to contest the will forever, even if you later uncover strong evidence of wrongdoing. 

A will contest is a lawsuit asking a court to decide whether a will is legally valid. These cases can be complex and emotional, but one rule is simple: you cannot wait too long to act. This article explains how long you usually have to contest a will in Tennessee, when the clock starts, and what steps to take if you think a will is invalid. 

Key Takeaways: Deadlines for Contesting a Will in Tennessee 

  • Tennessee gives you a limited amount of time to contest a will, and missing that deadline can permanently bar your claim. 
  • The clock usually starts when the will is admitted to probate, not on the date of death. 
  • The type of probate used, whether common form or solemn form, can change whether and how long you can challenge the will. 
  • Waiting to get legal advice is risky, because the estate may already be moving forward while your deadline is running. 
  • If you suspect a problem with a Tennessee will, your first step should be to find out when and where it was probated and speak with a probate litigation attorney as soon as possible. 

What Does “Contesting a Will” Mean? 

Contesting a will means asking a court to decide whether a will is valid. It is not just telling the court you think the will is unfair. It is a formal lawsuit where you claim that something about the will or the way it was signed violates Tennessee law. 

Only certain people are allowed to bring this kind of case. You must either be someone who would inherit if there were no will, or someone who was named in an earlier will but left out or reduced in the new one. 

People usually contest wills for a few main reasons. Common grounds include undue influence, which means serious pressure or manipulation, problems with mental capacity, fraud, or mistakes in how the will was signed and witnessed. 

How Much Time Do You Have to Contest a Will in Tennessee? 

In Tennessee, a will contest must generally be filed within two years after the will is admitted to probate. If you wait longer than the allowed time to file a contest, the court will usually dismiss your case, even if you believe you have strong evidence. 

It is also important to know that the two year period is a maximum, not a target. A contest filed late in the process can be much harder because the estate administration may already be far along. Property may have been sold, accounts may have been paid out, and records or witnesses may be harder to find. For that reason, anyone who is worried about a will should view the legal deadline as the outer limit and should speak with a lawyer as early as possible. 

The two year period is the general rule for most Tennessee estates. There is one more piece you need to understand, though: how the will was probated, in common form or solemn form, can change whether you actually have that much time. 

How Common Form and Solemn Form Probate Affect Your Time to Contest 

In Tennessee, a will can be admitted to probate in common form or solemn form, and that choice changes how much time you have to challenge it. 

Common form probate: where the two year rule applies 

Most wills in Tennessee are probated in common form. In a common form probate, the clerk admits the will without a formal courtroom hearing for all heirs and beneficiaries, and the executor can usually be appointed the same day the petition is filed. Because there is no advance notice requirement at this stage, Tennessee law allows a later will contest.  

In most of these cases, the two year deadline described above runs from the date the will is first admitted to probate in common form. 

Solemn form probate: much less room to contest later 

Solemn form probate is more formal. The court sets a hearing, gives notice to interested parties, and hears any objections before deciding whether to admit the will. When the court admits a will to probate in solemn form after proper notice and hearing, that judgment is generally final on the question of whether the document is a valid will.  

In practical terms, if you receive notice of a solemn form hearing and do not raise your objections in time, you may not be able to file a later will contest at all, even though the usual two year period has not passed. 

Because of this, anyone who receives notice of a probate hearing in Tennessee should not assume the standard two year rule will protect them. It is important to find out quickly whether the estate is being handled in common form or solemn form and to talk with a probate litigation attorney before the court enters a final order. 

What Happens If You Miss the Deadline? 

If you do not file a will contest before the statute of limitations expires, the court will almost always treat the will as final. At that point, you can no longer ask the court to decide whether the will itself is valid. 

The estate will continue to be handled under that will, and the people named in it will keep their inheritances. Even if you later uncover information about undue influence, lack of capacity, or fraud, those facts usually cannot be used to undo the will once the time limit has passed. 

Warning Signs You Should Not Wait 

When you are unsure about a will, the hardest part is deciding how quickly to act. Tennessee’s statute of limitations gives you some time, but certain facts should push you to move much faster. The warning signs below often show up in cases where a will contest becomes necessary. 

Last Minute Will That Changes Everything 

This warning sign appears when a final will is signed shortly before death and looks very different from the earlier estate plans. It often cuts down or removes inheritances for longtime heirs and instead gives much more to one person. When a major change happens near the end of life, you should assume the deadline clock is already running and speak with a lawyer soon. 

A New Gatekeeper Controlling Access 

Another red flag is the sudden rise of a “gatekeeper.” This might be a caregiver, new spouse, or relative who controls visits, phone calls, and information about money or health. If that same person helped arrange the will or now receives a much larger share of the estate, those facts can point toward possible undue influence and call for quick legal review. 

Serious Problems With Memory or Thinking 

If your loved one had advanced dementia, frequent confusion, or heavy medication around the time the will was signed, there may be real questions about mental capacity. Medical records and witness memories are easier to collect while events are still fresh. Waiting too long can make it harder to find and use this important evidence. 

You Only Learn About the Will After Probate Starts 

You may first hear about the will when you get a court notice, a letter from the executor, or word that accounts are being paid out or property is for sale. Those signs usually mean the will has already been admitted to probate and your contest deadline is already running. At that point, delay can be especially dangerous. 

The Story Simply Does Not Add Up 

Sometimes the concern is less about a single fact and more about a pattern of events that does not make sense. Family members may have been excluded from meetings, given conflicting explanations about the will, or told it is “too late” to ask questions. In these situations, reviewing the probate file and confirming the deadline is often the first step. 

Practical Next Steps if You Are Worried About a Will 

If you think something is wrong with a Tennessee will, it helps to take a few simple steps right away. These steps do not commit you to filing a lawsuit, but they do protect your ability to make a good decision later.

Step 1: Get Copies of Key Documents

Ask for a copy of the current will and, if possible, any earlier wills or estate planning documents. You should also find out which court is handling the probate and the case number. Court papers often show the date the will was admitted to probate, which is a key date for your deadline.

Step 2: Write Down What You Know

Make a short timeline of important events. Include when your loved one’s health changed, when relationships shifted, and when you first learned about the new will. Note any details about who was present when the will was signed or who arranged the meeting with the lawyer.

Step 3: Gather Basic Evidence

Collect any letters, emails, text messages, or notes that seem important. If you can, make a list of doctors, nurses, caregivers, or friends who saw your loved one around the time the will was signed. You do not need every record before you talk with a lawyer, but having some names and dates is helpful.

Step 4: Talk With a Tennessee Will Contest Attorney

Once you have the will, the probate information, and a basic timeline, schedule a meeting with an attorney who handles will contests. The lawyer can check your deadline, explain whether you have legal standing, and give you an honest view of your chances. Even if you decide not to file a contest, you will at least know where you stand and how much time you have to act. 

Special Rules for Minors and Legally Incompetent Adults 

Tennessee law pauses the deadline when the person who could contest the will is a minor or has been found legally incompetent at the time the will is admitted to probate. In those cases, the statute of limitations is tolled until the disability ends. Once the person turns eighteen or is restored to legal competency, they then have the full two year period to bring the will contest. Because this rule is technical and facts can be disputed, a parent, guardian, or conservator should ask a Tennessee probate lawyer to calculate the exact deadline for that person’s situation. 

Frequently Asked Questions About Will Contest Deadlines in Tennessee

Yes, in many cases you can. In Tennessee, a will is often admitted to probate in common form, and the estate may begin moving forward before anyone files a contest. As long as you are still within the allowed time to contest, and you have legal standing, you may still challenge the will even after probate has begun. However, if the will was admitted in solemn form after notice and a hearing, later contests are usually barred, so you should have a lawyer check how the will was probated. 

You can usually find this in the probate court file. The petition, orders, and notices will show whether the will was admitted informally or after a hearing with notice to interested parties. A probate lawyer can often review the file quickly and tell you which form was used and how that affects your deadline. 

Usually it does not. The key question is when the will was admitted to probate in Tennessee, not where you live. Out-of-state heirs and beneficiaries are generally held to the same time limits, which is why they should move quickly once they learn that a Tennessee estate has been opened. 

No. Private talks with the executor or other family members do not pause or extend the legal deadline to file a will contest in Tennessee. Even if everyone is “trying to work it out,” you still need to file your contest on time or you may lose your rights. 

No. Filing a claim for money you believe the estate owes you is different from contesting the validity of the will itself. A separate will contest must be filed if you want the court to decide whether the will is valid, and that contest must be filed before the deadline expires. 

As soon as you suspect a problem. A lawyer can often confirm the probate date in a few minutes, calculate your deadline, and tell you what options you have. Getting this advice early gives you more time to decide whether a will contest makes sense for your family. 

Sometimes. When the person who could contest a will is a minor or has been found legally incompetent when the will is admitted to probate, Tennessee law pauses the deadline. The statute of limitations is tolled until that disability ends. Once the person turns eighteen or is restored to legal competency, they then have the full two year period to bring the will contest. Because these dates can be tricky, a parent, guardian, or conservator should ask a lawyer to confirm the exact deadline. 

You may still be able to contest a will even if you never received mailed notice, as long as you file within the allowed time after the will was admitted to probate. Lack of notice can be an important fact, but it usually does not erase the deadline itself. This is why it is important to check the court file and learn the probate date as soon as you hear that an estate has been opened. 

No. Simply telling the executor, another heir, or the court clerk that you plan to contest the will does not stop the statute of limitations. The deadline only stops when a proper will contest is filed with the court. 

Finding new evidence after the deadline is frustrating, but it usually does not restart the clock. In rare cases, very serious fraud connected to the probate itself might support a different type of legal action, but that is different from a standard will contest. An attorney can tell you whether your situation fits within one of these narrow exceptions. 

Yes. The deadline is tied to the Tennessee probate case, not just to whether the estate owns local property. Even if most assets are in other states or in accounts, the time to contest a Tennessee will still runs from when the will is admitted to probate in a Tennessee court. 

Talk With a Tennessee Will Contest Lawyer About Your Deadline

Questions about how long you have to contest a will in Tennessee are rarely just about dates on a calendar. They usually come up when families are dealing with grief, confusion, and sudden changes in longstanding estate plans. It can be hard to know whether you truly have a case, whether you still have time, or whether a contest is worth the emotional and financial cost. 

A short meeting with a Tennessee probate litigation attorney can answer many of those questions. A lawyer can look up the probate date, confirm your deadline, review the facts around the will, and explain whether a contest is realistic in your situation. Even if you decide not to go forward, you will understand your rights and the time you have left. 

If you believe a Tennessee will may be invalid or you are worried that your deadline is approaching, Crow Estate Planning & Probate can help you evaluate your options. Our firm handles will contests and related probate disputes across Tennessee, and we can show you how this timing rule fits with the broader will contest process described in our Complete Will Contest Guide and Process articles. 

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