GA Inherited Property

Sell Your Inherited Georgia Home Without the Probate Stress

Close in weeks, not months. We handle the GA Probate Court (each county has its own) paperwork timing while you handle the estate.

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How Selling an Inherited Georgia Home Actually Works

When you inherit a home in Georgia, the property generally cannot be transferred until the executor or administrator has been granted authority by the Probate Court (each county has its own). That authority is documented by Letters Testamentary or Letters of Administration. Sale of real estate by a personal representative requires Letters in hand and clear title — without both, no Georgia title company will close.

Georgia probate typically runs 6–12 months; can extend with contested wills. The relevant authority is Georgia Code Title 53. Not strictly required but common.

Small-estate procedures may apply: No formal threshold; "no administration necessary" possible if all heirs agree and no debts. These shortcuts bypass the full probate process when the estate qualifies — useful for smaller estates with primarily personal property, but real estate generally still requires the standard probate procedure.

Our process: we sign a purchase contract conditioned on the issuance of Letters, hold the contract open at the same price during the wait, then close 7–14 days after the personal representative has authority. No re-trade, no second negotiation. We coordinate with your probate attorney and the Georgia title company directly.

Counties we serve in Georgia: Fulton, DeKalb, Gwinnett, Cobb, Clayton, and others — see all Georgia cities we serve.

Our 3-Step GA Inherited Property Process

1

GA Property Walkthrough or Remote Assessment

We visit the inherited property or assess remotely. Leave the contents — we sort, donate, and dispose. The personal representative does not need to be local; we coordinate everything via e-sign and mail.

2

Written Cash Offer — Held Open Through GA Probate

You get a written offer in 24–48 hours. The contract is signed by the executor or administrator in expectation of Letters Testamentary or Letters of Administration issuing. We hold the price firm during the Georgia probate wait — no renegotiation.

3

Close in 7–14 Days Once Letters Testamentary or Letters of Administration Issue

Title company verifies authority, settles any liens or estate debts at closing, and wires the proceeds to the estate account. The personal representative then distributes per the will or intestacy.

Frequently Asked Questions

How long does probate take in Georgia?

6–12 months; can extend with contested wills. The slowest part is typically the mandatory creditor-claim period required by Georgia Code Title 53. We can sign a contract early and close once Letters are in hand.

Do I need a lawyer to sell an inherited Georgia property?

Not strictly required but common. Most personal representatives use counsel to navigate the probate filings, the title transfer, and any tax considerations. We coordinate directly with your attorney.

What is the small-estate threshold in Georgia?

No formal threshold; "no administration necessary" possible if all heirs agree and no debts. Most small-estate procedures focus on personal property and may not apply to real estate.

Can the property be sold before Letters Testamentary or Letters of Administration are issued?

A contract can be signed before Letters issue (conditioned on issuance), but the closing itself requires the personal representative to have authority. Title companies in Georgia confirm Letters via certified copy at closing.

What if there are multiple heirs in disagreement?

We provide a single transparent written offer all heirs can review with their counsel. We do not insert ourselves into family disputes — the offer stands or falls on its own terms. Many estate sales in Georgia resolve heir disagreements precisely because a clean cash exit removes the friction of a listed-sale process.

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We work with executors, administrators, and heirs in Georgia — no court order required, no commissions, no repairs.