About List of Interested Persons
To identify and list all heirs, legatees, and the personal representative in an estate proceeding for filing with the Maryland Register of Wills or Orphans' Court.
When you'd use it: This form must be filed within 20 days after appointment of a personal representative under administrative probate, or at the time of filing a Petition for Judicial Probate or Petition for Administration of a Small Estate.
Where to get the official form
The official version of List of Interested Persons is published as a PDF by the Maryland courts. We checked this link and it resolved to a form on an official court or government website — always download the current version directly from the source rather than a third-party copy:
Download List of Interested Persons (PDF) →
Source: registers.maryland.gov
Link last checked: May 30, 2026
How to file List of Interested Persons in Maryland
- Step 1 — Confirm you have the correct formUse List of Interested Persons (RW1104) when this form must be filed within 20 days after appointment of a personal representative under administrative probate, or at the time of filing a Petition for Judicial Probate or Petition for Administration of a Small Estate. Double-check it's the right form for your situation — Maryland probate forms are revised periodically, so verify the name and number against your court's current form list before you start.
- Step 2 — Complete every required fieldFill out List of Interested Persons carefully and review it for errors before filing. Probate cases can already take months — a small mistake on the form can set your timeline back further.
- Step 3 — Get it notarized or witnessed if requiredSome probate forms must be signed in front of a notary or witnesses. Check the instructions on the form itself, and arrange notarization before you file if it's required.
- Step 4 — File it with the correct courtSubmit List of Interested Persons to the probate court or county clerk handling the estate — usually in the Maryland county where the deceased lived. Ask the clerk how they prefer to receive filings (in person, by mail, or e-filing).