Heir Tracing
Professional heir tracing support for estates where entitled beneficiaries need to be identified, verified or contacted before matters can move forward.
Finding the right people, with the right evidence.
Heir tracing is often required when an estate cannot be distributed because one or more beneficiaries are unknown, difficult to locate or need to be confirmed through family research.
- Beneficiaries may be unknown or missing
- Family lines may need to be confirmed
- Contact details may be outdated or incomplete
- Executors may need support before distribution
- Legal representatives may require verified research
What our heir tracing service covers
Beneficiary Identification
Researching family lines to identify individuals who may be entitled to an estate.
Address Tracing
Helping locate current contact information where beneficiaries are no longer at known addresses.
Family Verification
Checking family connections through records before further estate action is taken.
Estate Support
Assisting executors and representatives with research needed before distribution.
Record Research
Reviewing birth, marriage, death and other records where relevant to the case.
Clear Findings
Providing structured information so the next stage of the matter can be handled properly.
Our heir tracing process
Initial Case Review
We review the known estate details, names, family information and the reason heir tracing is required.
Family Line Research
We examine available records to understand the family structure and identify possible lines of entitlement.
Beneficiary Tracing
Where individuals are identified, we work to locate current contact details and confirm relevant information.
Verification
We check the connection between the individual and the estate to help reduce uncertainty before next steps are taken.
Clear Outcome
We provide the relevant findings so executors, families or professionals can move the matter forward with more confidence.
Submit an heir tracing enquiry.
Send the estate details, known names, last known addresses and any family information you already have. The more detail provided, the easier it is to assess the case properly.
