You inherited a house. Now what?

A practical guide for the moment grief meets paperwork: what probate actually is, your real options for the property, the tax piece nobody explains, and how to know whether to keep, rent, or sell.

If someone you love passed away and left you a house, the last thing you probably want to think about is what to do with the property. But the questions start coming fast: Who's paying the mortgage now? What about the utilities? Is the house insured? Can you even sell it yet? And what does "probate" actually mean?

This guide is for that moment. We'll walk you through the basics of how an inherited home works, your real options, the important first steps, and how to decide what's right for you and your family. We'll be honest: we're a home-buying company, and selling to us is one of the options we'll cover. But it isn't always the right one, and we'll tell you when it is and when it isn't.

The very first thing to do

Before anything else: secure the property and check the insurance. Change the locks (you don't know who has keys), make sure homeowner's insurance is still active, and call the insurance company to ask about their "vacancy clause." Most policies stop covering an empty home after 30 to 60 days. This is the step almost everyone misses.

What probate actually is

Probate is the legal process the court uses to settle a deceased person's estate: paying their debts, identifying their heirs, and transferring their property to those heirs. If the home wasn't placed in a living trust or set up to transfer automatically, it has to go through probate before anyone can sell it.

The process varies significantly by state. In some states (Texas, for example), there's an "independent administration" or "independent executor" process that's relatively streamlined: the executor is appointed in 30 to 45 days and can manage and sell the property without ongoing court supervision. In other states, every step requires court approval, which adds months.

In general, probate takes anywhere from 6 to 24 months, sometimes longer if there's a dispute among heirs or complex assets. The good news is that you don't have to wait for the full process to end before you can sell.

Can you sell the house before probate is complete?

The short answer: usually yes, but only once the court has officially appointed someone (the executor or administrator) to act on behalf of the estate. Once you have what's called "Letters Testamentary" or "Letters of Administration" from the court, you have legal authority to list and sell.

The exceptions are if the home was placed in a living trust, held in joint tenancy with right of survivorship, or had a transfer-on-death deed. In those cases, probate isn't required for the home at all, and the sale can happen much faster.

Three paths forward

01 Keep the home

You move in or hold onto the property. Best if the home is sentimental, if you need a place to live, or if it's a strong long-term asset in a great location.

Watch out for: Ongoing costs (mortgage, taxes, insurance, repairs), the emotional weight of living in a loved one's home, and any siblings or co-heirs who need to be bought out

02 Rent it out

Turn the home into an income-producing rental property. Works best if the home is in a good rental market, in solid condition, and you (or a property manager) have the bandwidth to handle tenants.

Watch out for: Becoming an accidental landlord. Tenants, repairs, vacancies, and management take real time and money. Many heirs underestimate this.

03 Sell the home

Convert the home into cash and distribute proceeds among heirs. The most common path, especially when heirs live in different cities or the home needs significant work.

Best if: You don't want the property, the home needs repairs, there are multiple heirs to pay out, or you live out of state and can't manage it

If you're selling, you have three sub-options

Traditional listing with an agent

Often the highest sale price, but it takes time. You'll need to deal with showings, repairs, staging, and a 60-to-90-day average closing. Court approval may be required at multiple steps in probate states, which can slow things further. Some states require a "court-confirmed sale" where the home must sell for at least 90 percent of the appraised value and the final offer is confirmed by a judge.

Best for: Homes in good condition, in good locations, when nobody is in a hurry, and when you have the bandwidth to coordinate showings and repairs (especially difficult if you live out of state).

Sell to a cash buyer

You sell directly to a company like ours. We buy the home as-is on the date you choose, with no repairs, no cleaning, no commissions, and no showings. You won't get the absolute top dollar a traditional sale might get, but you avoid the costs, the time, and the work. For inherited properties full of decades of belongings, this often nets the same or more after you factor in everything you'd have to spend.

Best for: Out-of-state heirs, homes needing significant work, situations with multiple heirs who want to settle and move on, and timelines that don't fit traditional selling.

Sell at auction

Less common for residential properties, but sometimes used when speed matters more than maximizing price. Outcomes are unpredictable. Usually only worth considering for very specific situations.

Curious what we'd offer?

We're a family-owned company that works patiently with executors, heirs, and out-of-state owners on inherited properties. No pressure, no obligation. We work around probate timelines, and you can leave anything behind you don't want.

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The tax piece nobody explains: stepped-up basis

This is the single most important thing to understand if you're selling an inherited home, and most people don't know about it.

When you inherit a property, your "basis" in the home (the number used to calculate capital gains tax) is generally "stepped up" to the property's fair market value on the date of the original owner's death, not what they originally paid for it.

What that means in practice: if your parents bought the house for $80,000 in 1985 and it's worth $400,000 when they pass away, your basis is $400,000, not $80,000. If you sell the house quickly for $400,000, you owe little or no capital gains tax on the sale. If you'd inherited the original $80,000 basis, you'd owe taxes on a $320,000 gain.

This is a huge benefit, and it favors selling sooner rather than later. The longer you hold the home, the more the value can grow above the stepped-up basis, creating taxable gains you'd owe taxes on when you eventually sell.

⚠️ Talk to a CPA

Tax rules change, your specific situation matters, and the stepped-up basis can be complicated by things like joint ownership, life estates, or property held in trust. Before making decisions, talk to a CPA or tax professional. This guide is general education, not tax advice.

The first-48-hours checklist

Do these things first

When a cash sale makes sense for inherited property

Here's our honest take on when selling to a cash buyer is genuinely the right move:

It probably isn't the right move if:

Trusted resources

Free and low-cost help

We'd be glad to help.

We're here to help families dealing with inherited homes. No pressure, no obligation. Just an honest conversation and a fair cash offer if it's the right path for your family.

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Important: This guide is for general educational purposes only and is not legal, financial, or tax advice. Probate laws vary significantly by state, and tax rules change. Your specific situation may have details that change what applies to you. Please consult with a licensed probate attorney, a CPA or tax professional, and a HUD-approved housing counselor (if applicable) before making decisions about an inherited property.