The Probate Attorney’s Vetting Checklist for Heir Search Firms

Summary

Most probate attorneys vet heir search firms the way they vet other vendors: a referral, a quick call, an engagement. That works until it does not. The wrong firm can compromise a case file, delay a closing, or expose your firm to malpractice. This guide gives you a complete vetting checklist to use before you sign with any heir search firm, and explains how to apply it in practice.

  • Vetting an heir search firm is risk management, not procurement
  • The same checklist applies whether you have used the firm before or not
  • Documented answers beat verbal answers, every time

Why Vetting Heir Search Firms Matters

The heir search firm your firm engages becomes part of the case file. If their report has gaps, your firm has gaps. If their methodology will not hold up in court, your case will not hold up either. The vetting decision is not a procurement question. It is a risk management question that has direct downstream effects on the case and on your firm’s exposure.

Most attorneys we work with did not use a structured checklist before engaging. They relied on a referral or a quick conversation. Some of those referrals worked out. Others created problems that took months to clean up. A short, written checklist applied consistently is the difference between predictable engagements and recurring surprises.

Unlike industry standard heir search firms that resist documentation requests during vetting, we welcome them and encourage probate attorneys to apply the same checklist to us as to anyone else.

The Probate Attorney’s Vetting Checklist

Apply this checklist before you sign any engagement letter with an heir search firm.

Checklist Item What You Want to See Walk-Away Signal
Pricing structure Flat-fee, paid by your firm or estate Contingency or open-ended billable
Conflict of interest No financial relationship with the heirs identified Firm collects from the heir directly
Sample report Available without requiring a call Refusal to share or vague excuses
Source citations Inline citations on every relationship Family-tree summaries with no sources
Court testimony availability Genealogist available to testify if needed No testimony availability or vague promises
International capability In-country research partners in major immigrant-source nations International work treated as out of scope
Documented methodology Standard repeatable workflow you can read Ad-hoc per case, no documentation
Timeline commitment Defined timeline in writing at engagement Refusal to commit or two-week promises
Sample report preview Available on our website here

Unlike industry standard practice that treats vetting as a quick call, we recommend applying this checklist in writing for every new vendor. The questions are easy to ask. The answers are revealing.

Where Most Vetting Falls Short

Three patterns we see when probate firms vet heir search vendors informally.

Vetting is verbal, not written

The questions get asked on a call but the answers are not documented. When the engagement runs into trouble later, no one remembers what was promised. A written checklist creates a record both the firm and the vendor can refer back to.

Sample report is never reviewed

The single most informative artifact in heir search vetting is the sample report. Most firms ask if it exists, accept the answer, and move on without actually reading one. The sample report tells you everything: documentation depth, source citation style, methodology, and how the firm communicates findings.

Conflict of interest gets glossed over

The contingency vs flat-fee question matters. A firm that collects from the heir is not your firm’s vendor. They are the heir’s vendor. That distinction has consequences. Vetting often moves past this question too fast.

How to Use the Checklist in Practice

Two simple ways to use this checklist effectively.

Send it as a written intake question set

Email the checklist to the firm before the introductory call. Tell them you want written answers to each item. Firms that resist or send vague answers tell you a lot about how they will respond once engaged.

Use it as a comparison framework

If you are evaluating two or three firms, run all of them through the same checklist. The answers normalize the comparison. The firm that answers all eight items clearly is almost always the right choice.

How HeirPros Answers the Checklist

For full transparency, here is how we answer the eight checklist items.

  • Pricing structure: flat-fee, paid by your firm or the estate
  • Conflict of interest: none, no relationship with the heirs identified
  • Sample report: published openly on our FAQs page
  • Source citations: inline citations on every relationship in every report
  • Court testimony availability: yes, genealogist available on request
  • International capability: in-country partners in major immigrant-source nations
  • Documented methodology: standard repeatable workflow, available on request
  • Timeline commitment: defined timeline in writing at engagement

Unlike our competitors who answer some of these and dodge others, we are happy to put all eight in writing for any probate attorney evaluating us.

A Final Word for Probate Operations Teams

Vetting heir search firms is one of the highest-leverage process improvements a probate firm can adopt. Build the checklist into your standard intake. Require written answers. Apply it consistently to every vendor, including incumbents. The firms that pass the checklist save you cleanup work for years. The firms that fail tell you to look elsewhere before the case is at risk.

That is the standard we hold ourselves to at HeirPros. It is the standard your firm and your client deserve.

We’re #1 in the industry.

See a Sample Report Before You Commit

Compare your options for heir search and probate research services. If your firm needs clear sourcing, court-ready documentation, and predictable pricing, HeirPros gives you a fast way to review what matters before assigning a case.

FAQs

Should I run this checklist on incumbent heir search firms?

Yes. Even firms you have used before should answer the same questions. Vendors evolve, staff changes, and a periodic re-check protects your case file.

What is the most important checklist item?

The sample report and the pricing structure tie for first. The sample report tells you the documentation standard. The pricing structure tells you whose interests the firm represents.

Does HeirPros provide written answers to vetting questions?

Yes. We provide written answers to any structured vetting questionnaire and welcome probate attorneys applying the same checklist to us as to anyone else.

How long should the vetting process take?

Less time than most firms spend. A written questionnaire returned within a week, followed by a sample report review, is enough to make the engagement decision.

Can I share this checklist with other probate attorneys?

Yes. The checklist works regardless of which firm any individual attorney ultimately engages. Better vetting across the probate bar protects every case file.

Expert Tips

  • Send the checklist in writing before the first call so the firm answers in writing
  • Always read the sample report before signing, even if you have used the firm before
  • Apply the same checklist to every firm under consideration to normalize the comparison
  • Walk away from any firm that resists answering the checklist in writing
  • Save the answers in your firm’s vendor file so the next case starts with a known baseline

Related Resources

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