ACCA has been approved to authorise individuals and firms to carry out probate work
ACCA has been approved to authorise individuals and firms to carry out probate work. Accordingly, The Legal Activities Regulations 2018 are in the 2019 ACCA Rulebook and form part of the UK annex to the Chartered Certified Accountants’ Global Practising Regulations 2003 (GPRs).
The Legal Activities Regulations apply to the provision of non-contentious probate business in England and Wales. The Rulebook states that contentious probate business means probate business done in, or for the purposes of, proceedings begun before a court or before an arbitrator appointed under the Arbitration Act 1950.
A member holding a practising certificate and having completed a relevant course and assessment in probate will be eligible to apply to register as an authorised legal activities individual (ALAI).
Members are not eligible to undertake probate work through ACCA unless the firm(s) in which they practise hold a firm’s legal activities certificate (FLAC) from ACCA.
Members must complete an application form to register as an ALAI.
A non-ACCA member is eligible if they:
You can download a range of application forms.
There is no fee to register as an ALAI but the fee for a FLAC in 2019 is £260 per ALAI (ACCA member and non-ACCA member).
A list of accredited probate firms in the UK is available for download from the Probate Registration guidance page which you can refer to and contact firms near you.
Alternatively, you can also search for firms on our Directory of Business Advisers and follow the steps below to filter the results for probate practitioners:
ACCA has made available updated versions of the probate factsheets. The suite of factsheets starts with ‘What to do when someone dies’, with others looking at administration of estates, taxation, calculations, forms required and distributions to beneficiaries.
The probate factsheets are available by request and will be free to practitioners who email supportingpractitioners@accaglobal.com. Please include your membership number, firm and ‘probate factsheets’ in the subject line.
We have the following additional guidance that will be made available to members:
Trusts legal framework factsheets
These will be highlighted to members over the next few months.
Firms must ensure that they have professional indemnity insurance (PII) cover with minimum limits of indemnity of £100,000 in respect of each and every claim.
Lockton, ACCA’s recommended PII provider, has stated that, as long as the relevant probate course and assessment has been completed, the scheme insurers are happy to cover this activity at standard premium rates. Should probate work start to form the majority of an accountant’s income then they may have to review this, as a legal policy may be more suitable than an accountants’ policy wording.
Those individuals who have set up separate firms will need to contact their PII provider as some may require a separate legal policy.
ACCA will accept those who have completed the ACCA probate course or other similar probate courses, including the SWAT Certificate in Probate and Estate Administration.
The first ACCA probate course is expected to run in June.
ACCA is not a licensing authority and can only authorise firms where all the partners, directors and shareholders are authorised for probate activities. The structure of the firm is more restrictive on firms who have partners, directors and shareholders who are not authorised for probate. These firms will need to consider how control is maintained by authorised legal activities individuals. For most firms this will involve establishing a separate legal entity.
Firms whose partners, directors and shareholders are authorised for probate activities can consider incorporating the activity within the current firm.