Multiple heirs on a property

Selling a House With Multiple Heirs Without forcing the family apart.

You’ve inherited a property with your siblings. One wants to sell. One wants to keep it. One isn’t answering. You don’t want a partition lawsuit. You don’t want years of paying the taxes on a house no one’s living in. Sure Path is a family-owned firm that helps families like yours land somewhere everyone can live with.

5/5 from real families·Family-owned · Multi-state
It happens to almost every family

When siblings can’t agree, the house just sits.

The longer it sits, the harder it gets. Here’s what most families tell us.

"One sibling won’t sign anything"

You’ve sent emails, made calls, even mailed paperwork. They aren’t against the sale exactly — they just won’t move. Without their signature, nothing happens.

"We can’t agree on price or what to do"

One thinks the house is worth way more than it is. One wants to rent it out. One wants to keep it for the memories. Six months in, no decision and the property tax bill just came.

"It’s turning into a lawsuit and nobody wants that"

Somebody mentioned partition. Somebody else mentioned a lawyer. You can feel the relationships getting brittle. You just want this to be done before it costs the family more than the house is worth.

Our process

Four steps. Family kept intact.

You don’t need everyone on the first call. We start where you are.

  1. 1

    One heir starts the conversation

    Whoever called us. We listen, we look at the property, we get a sense of what the family is dealing with.

    ~15 minutes
  2. 2

    We put real numbers in front of the family

    Written offer, line by line. The other heirs can read it, ask questions, and decide. We’re happy to join a family call.

    3–5 business days
  3. 3

    Family decides together

    Sell to us. Or one sibling uses our offer as the baseline to buy out the others. Or you take more time. We don’t pressure.

    Your pace
  4. 4

    Close at the family’s pace

    If everyone’s ready, 14–21 days. If probate isn’t done, we close when letters testamentary issue. No artificial deadlines.

    14 days – 6 months
Real situation

Three siblings, fourteen months of arguing, twenty-eight days to close.

Composite case based on real Sure Path purchases. Names and county redacted for privacy.

Mom passed in 2024. Three adult siblings inherited the house. The youngest had moved back in to care for mom in her last year and wanted to keep living there. The other two wanted their share. Fourteen months of family group texts, an offer from a wholesaler that everyone hated, and a lot of unanswered emails later — still stuck.

The oldest sibling reached out. We talked through what each person wanted. We offered, in writing, a number that worked. The youngest sibling used our number as the baseline to apply for a mortgage and buy out her two siblings. We connected her with the lender. We never closed the deal ourselves.

The family group text now has photos of the holidays from the house. The two siblings who wanted their share got it. Nobody sued anybody.

What makes us different

Most buyers won’t engage until every heir agrees. We will.

The hardest part of multi-heir situations isn’t the paperwork. It’s the conversation. We start with the person who’s ready and help bring the rest on — or help them buy each other out if that’s the better answer.

Sure Path
Curative-title firm + family-owned cash buyer.
  • One heir starts — we don’t require every sibling at the table on day one
  • Buys mid-probate — letters testamentary not required to write a contingent offer
  • Acts as the neutral third party with real numbers when the family is stuck
  • Will help one sibling buy out the others using our offer as the baseline
  • No lawsuit, no partition action, no pressure to sell if the family’s answer is different
Typical cash-buyer or attorney
Wholesalers, attorneys recommending partition.
  • Requires all heirs to sign before they’ll discuss numbers
  • Will quietly walk away when family conflict gets messy
  • Attorneys often default to partition action — expensive and adversarial
  • No middle ground option — either everyone sells or nobody does
  • Lowball offers create more conflict, not less
Compare your options

Sure Path vs. partition lawsuit vs. just waiting it out.

Same family situation. Three different roads.

Wait it out
Hope someone changes their mind.
$300–$800/mo
Carrying cost while you wait
  • Property tax + insurance + utilities + maintenance every month
  • Family tension grows; relationships erode
  • Property value drops with deferred maintenance
  • ~ Sometimes works if there’s plenty of equity and patience
Recommended
Sure Path
Real numbers, family-led decision, no lawsuit.
$0
Out-of-pocket cost
  • One heir starts — others join when they’re ready
  • Written offer gives the family something concrete to decide on
  • Will support a sibling buyout if that’s the better outcome
  • Family-owned, no aggressive tactics, no pressure
Partition lawsuit
Force a court-ordered sale.
$10k–$30k+
Legal fees per side
  • 6–18 months in court — sometimes longer
  • Damages family relationships often permanently
  • ~ Court-appointed sale often gets below-market price
  • Both sides pay legal fees from their share of proceeds
We had been arguing about mom’s house for over a year. Sure Path didn’t take sides — they just put a number in front of us. That changed the whole conversation.
L. T., sibling
Multi-heir Florida property
Where we work

We help families across these states — and we’re growing.

TexasFloridaCaliforniaOregonWisconsin+ Expanding

Outside our current footprint? Reach out anyway — we’ll tell you honestly whether we can help.

Multi-heir questions

Questions families ask when siblings can’t agree.

See our full FAQ for everything else.

Do all heirs have to agree to sell the house?

Eventually, yes — to close, every heir with a legal interest has to sign. But to start the conversation, get a written offer, and see real numbers, only one heir needs to reach out. We do the rest from there. Many families find that having concrete numbers in front of them moves the holdouts off the fence.

Can one sibling force the sale of an inherited house?

Yes — through a partition action in court. It’s a legal proceeding that asks a judge to order the property sold and the proceeds split among heirs. It works but it’s expensive ($10k–$30k+ per side), slow (6–18 months), and tends to damage family relationships. We try to help families find an answer before it gets there.

What if one sibling wants to keep the house and the others want to sell?

Common situation. We give the family a written offer that acts as a baseline. The sibling who wants to keep the house can use that number to apply for a mortgage and buy out the others. We can connect them with a lender we’ve worked with. We’re happy to walk away without closing if that’s the better outcome — we don’t make money off you not selling.

What if one sibling won’t respond to calls or emails?

We’ve seen this many times. Often, having a written, time-bounded offer with a clear number is what gets the silent sibling to finally engage. If they still won’t, an attorney can serve them formally as part of probate or partition proceedings. We’ll suggest the right next step based on your specific situation.

Can we sell the house before probate is finished?

You can write a contingent contract before probate closes — we do this regularly. The actual closing happens when letters testamentary issue. So we can lock the price now and not lose months waiting for probate to finish.

What’s a partition action and when does it make sense?

A partition action asks a court to order the property sold and proceeds split among co-owners. It makes sense as a last resort when one heir absolutely refuses to engage and the other heirs need to move on. It’s expensive and adversarial — we recommend exhausting other options first. We can refer you to a partition attorney if it comes to that.

Do all the heirs need to be on the deed for us to sell?

They need to either be on the deed or have legal authority through probate (letters testamentary or letters of administration). If the deed still shows the deceased parent’s name, we work through your probate attorney — or refer you to one — to get the heirs properly recognized before closing.

What if one heir lives in the house and won’t leave?

This is a separate issue from the sale itself. We can write the offer and close once the occupancy issue is resolved. Sometimes a sibling buyout is the cleanest answer (the occupying sibling buys the house). Sometimes it requires a formal eviction process after the sale. We’ll discuss the realistic options for your specific situation.

How do you make sure the family doesn’t end up worse off?

By being honest. If our offer isn’t the best option for your family, we’ll tell you that. If a sibling buyout makes more sense, we’ll support it. If you need more time, we’ll wait. We’re a family-owned firm — we’ve sat at the same kitchen tables you have.

How fast can we actually close?

If probate is complete, all heirs agree, and title is clean: 14–21 days. If probate is open or there are title issues: 1–6 months depending on what needs resolving. The good news — we can lock the price now with a contingent contract, so the family decision doesn’t happen under time pressure.

Free, no-obligation evaluation

Stuck between siblings? Let’s give the family a real number to decide on.

One heir is all it takes to start. Tell us about the property and we’ll come back with a written offer within one business day.

100% free evaluation No pressure — we support sibling buyouts if that’s the better outcome Response within one business day, every time