What to do after the first 48 hours after someone dies.

After the first two days, the focus usually shifts from emergency response to stabilizing people, property, and paperwork over the next two weeks.

What People Often Think

Many people believe that everything important must be handled immediately after the first two days.
Others feel pressure to start distributing belongings, closing accounts, or “getting things done” before the funeral.
It can feel like there is a narrow window to act before something goes wrong.

What’s actually true.

The period after the first 48 hours is best understood as a stabilization phase, not a completion phase.

Days 3–7: Three priorities

  • People: finalize funeral or memorial plans, communicate details, and coordinate care for kids, elders, pets, and visitors.

  • Protection: secure the home, collect mail, manage deliveries, and make sure utilities and insurance stay active.

  • Paperwork: order certified death certificates, locate the will or trust, and identify the executor or point person.

Days 8–14: Three follow-ups

  • Certificates: receive and store death certificates for later use.

  • Notifications: begin notifying key institutions (employer, Social Security, insurers, some banks).

  • Accounts triage: make a simple list of assets, debts, bills, and subscriptions—without moving or closing most of them yet.

What usually should not happen yet

  • Distributing or giving away property.

  • Selling homes, vehicles, or valuables.

  • Large donations or “family cleanouts.”

  • Final probate filings or tax work.

Most legal, financial, and distribution steps happen weeks or months later, not in this two-week window.

Why it matters.

Rushing into later-phase decisions during this period often creates conflict, mistakes, or work that has to be undone.
Treating the first two weeks as a time to stabilize—not resolve—reduces burnout and protects both relationships and assets.
Chunking the work helps families avoid overload when grief is already draining attention and energy.

Practical takeaway.

Think in two weeks, not two days.

Helpful approaches include:

  • Assigning clear roles (executor, funeral coordinator, communications lead, home checker).

  • Writing everything down instead of relying on memory.

  • Doing only what keeps people safe, informed, and supported.

  • Saving distribution, selling, and major decisions for later.

If all you’ve done by day 14 is stabilize, document, and rest—you are on track.

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