When is your Tennessee conservator accounting due?
Every court-appointed conservator in Tennessee files accountings on a statutory clock — and the clock starts on your appointment date, not the calendar year. Enter your appointment date and see every deadline with the statute behind it.
The Tennessee deadlines, explained
| What | When | Authority |
|---|---|---|
| First accounting | within 30 days after the six-month anniversary of appointment | T.C.A. §34-1-111 |
| Later accountings | annually thereafter | T.C.A. §34-1-111 |
What happens if you miss one
In Tennessee, incomplete accountings will not be accepted by the clerk, with statutory enforcement behind the deadline.[T.C.A. §34-1-111]
What you'll file
Your accounting takes the form of the annual fiduciary accounting with the §34-1-111 attachment set. The court checks it line by line: the math has to balance exactly, this period's opening balance has to match last period's closing balance to the penny, and disbursements need receipts behind them. See why Tennessee accountings get rejected for the specifics.
ClerkProof tracks all of this for you
Snap receipts all year, import your bank statements, and ClerkProof keeps the running balance court-exact — then produces the filing packet when the deadline approaches. Deadlines, citations, and the math, handled.
Start ClerkProof — $99/yearClerkProof is a record-keeping tool, not a law firm, and this page is general information, not legal advice. Deadlines can vary by county and by court order — always confirm with your court or an attorney.