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HB 2172An Act amending Title 20 (Decedents, Estates and Fiduciaries) of the Pennsylvania Consolidated Statutes, in dispositions independent of letters, family exemption, probate of wills and grant of letters, providing for small estate primary residence affidavit.

Congress · introduced 2026-01-30

Latest action: Referred to JUDICIARY, Jan. 30, 2026

Sponsors

Action timeline

  1. · house Referred to JUDICIARY, Jan. 30, 2026

Text versions

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Bill text

Printer's No. 2829 · 5,510 characters · source document

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PRINTER'S NO.   2829

                     THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF PENNSYLVANIA



                         HOUSE BILL
                         No. 2172
                                               Session of
                                                 2026

     INTRODUCED BY SCOTT, POWELL, HILL-EVANS, OTTEN, ABNEY,
        DOUGHERTY, HARKINS AND NEILSON, JANUARY 29, 2026

     REFERRED TO COMMITTEE ON JUDICIARY, JANUARY 30, 2026


                                    AN ACT
 1   Amending Title 20 (Decedents, Estates and Fiduciaries) of the
 2      Pennsylvania Consolidated Statutes, in dispositions
 3      independent of letters, family exemption, probate of wills
 4      and grant of letters, providing for small estate primary
 5      residence affidavit.
 6      The General Assembly of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania
 7   hereby enacts as follows:
 8      Section 1.    Title 20 of the Pennsylvania Consolidated
 9   Statutes is amended by adding a section to read:
10   § 3103.   Small estate primary residence affidavit.
11      (a)    Authorization.--A county property office may establish,
12   consistent with this section, a process that permits transfer by
13   affidavit of real property containing a primary residence during
14   the administration of a small estate.
15      (b)    Small estate primary residence affidavit.--If a person
16   dies while legally domiciled and owning a primary residence in a
17   county that has established a process under subsection (a), the
18   county in which the decedent was domiciled at the time of death
19   may in a decree direct distribution of the primary residence to
 1   the parties entitled to the primary residence:
 2            (1)   upon petition of a party in interest;
 3            (2)   in the discretion of the court;
 4            (3)   with or without appraisement;
 5            (4)   with notice as the court shall direct; and
 6            (5)   whether or not letters have been issued or a will
 7      probated.
 8      (c)   Process.--
 9            (1)   Pursuant to the process developed by the county
10      property office under subsection (a), the attorney for the
11      descendants, ascendants or surviving spouse of the decedent
12      shall record the property transfer of the decedent's primary
13      residence with the county.
14            (2)   If the descendants, ascendants or surviving spouse
15      of the decedent prove that their income is less than 120% of
16      the Federal poverty guidelines, the county property office
17      shall waive any filing fees under this section.
18            (3)   The authority of the court to award distribution of
19      a primary residence under this section shall not be
20      restricted because of the decedent's ownership of real
21      estate, regardless of its value.
22            (4)   The decree of distribution shall:
23                  (i)    Constitute sufficient authority to all transfer
24            agents, registrars and others dealing with the primary
25            residence of the estate to recognize the persons named in
26            the decree as entitled to receive the primary residence
27            to be distributed without administration.
28                  (ii)   In all respects have the same effect as a
29            decree of distribution after an accounting by a personal
30            representative.

20260HB2172PN2829                       - 2 -
 1            (5)   Within two years after the decree of distribution
 2      has been made, a party in interest may file a petition to
 3      revoke the decree because an improper distribution has been
 4      ordered. If the court finds that an improper distribution has
 5      been ordered, the court shall revoke the decree and direct
 6      restitution as equity and justice require.
 7      (d)   Reporting.--
 8            (1)   No later than five years after the effective date of
 9      this section, the Local Government Commission shall conduct a
10      study of county property offices that have established
11      processes authorized under subsection (a).
12            (2)   No later than six years after the effective date of
13      this section, the Local Government Commission shall submit a
14      report of the study to the General Assembly and shall provide
15      recommendations on the continuation, expansion or termination
16      of the authority granted under subsection (a).
17      (e)   Realty transfer tax.--A county, city or school district
18   that is due a payment of a realty transfer tax as a result of a
19   transfer of property under this section may waive, refund or
20   exempt the realty transfer tax subject to this section.
21      (f)   Expiration.--This section shall expire seven years after
22   the effective date of this subsection.
23      (g)   Definitions.--As used in this section, the following
24   words and phrases shall have the meanings given to them in this
25   subsection unless the context clearly indicates otherwise:
26      "County property office."    The recorder of deeds, register of
27   wills or other county government office responsible for the
28   transfer of deeds within a county.
29      "Primary residence."    Residential real property primarily
30   used as a home with an assessed value of no more than $150,000.

20260HB2172PN2829                    - 3 -
1     Section 2.    This act shall take effect in 60 days.




20260HB2172PN2829                 - 4 -

Connected on the graph

Outbound (1)

datetypetoamountrolesource
referred_to_committeePennsylvania House Judiciary Committeepa-leg

The full graph

Every typed relationship touching this entity — 1 edge across 1 category. Grouped by what the connection is; the heaviest few are shown, with a link to the full list.

Committees

Referred to committee 1 edge

Who matters

Members ranked by combined influence on this bill: role (sponsor 5 / cosponsor 1), capped speech count from the Congressional Record, and recorded-vote engagement.

#MemberRoleSpeechesVotedScore
1Greg Scott (D, state_lower PA-54)sponsor05
2Aerion Abney (D, state_lower PA-19)cosponsor01
3Carol Hill-Evans (D, state_lower PA-95)cosponsor01
4Dan K. Williams (D, state_lower PA-74)cosponsor01
5Danielle Friel Otten (D, state_lower PA-155)cosponsor01
6Ed Neilson (D, state_lower PA-174)cosponsor01
7La'Tasha D. Mayes (D, state_lower PA-24)cosponsor01
8Lindsay Powell (D, state_lower PA-21)cosponsor01
9Patrick J. Harkins (D, state_lower PA-1)cosponsor01
10Sean Dougherty (D, state_lower PA-172)cosponsor01

Predicted vote

Aggregated from: actual roll-call votes (when present) → sponsor → cosponsor → party median (predicts YES when ≥25% of the caucus sponsored/cosponsored). Each row labels its confidence tier so you can see why a position was predicted.

0 predicted yes (0%) · 543 predicted no (100%) · 0 unknown (0%)

By party: · R: 0 yes / 277 no · D: 0 yes / 263 no · I: 0 yes / 3 no

Activity

Every typed-graph event involving this entity, newest first. Each row is one edge in the influence graph; click the date to jump to its provenance.

  1. 2026-05-20 · was referred to Pennsylvania House Judiciary Committee · pa-leg

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