Inheriting a home you didn’t ask for is hard. Layered with grief, paperwork, and family logistics, it can feel impossible to know where to start. Sure Path is a family-owned firm that buys inherited properties across Texas, Florida, California, Oregon, and Wisconsin — mid-probate, with back taxes, with disagreeing siblings, or with a title that hasn’t been clear since 1978. We handle the paperwork. You decide the pace.
If you’re reading this, something in here probably sounds familiar. None of it is your fault. And none of it is permanent.
Probate filings, property tax bills, homeowner’s insurance, utility shutoffs. Mortgage statements with someone else’s name on them. It feels disrespectful to have to think about any of it right now.
One wants to sell. One wants to keep it. One isn’t returning calls. The math doesn’t work to keep the house — but every decision needs three signatures and nobody’s in the same time zone.
Back taxes from before mom got sick. An old solar lien from 2019. A deed that lists a grandparent who passed in 1997. Realtors won’t list it. Most cash buyers won’t touch it. Stuck.
You’re not on a clock with us. We move when you’re ready, and we wait when you need to wait.
Quick call or form. Address, rough idea of what’s owed, what’s going on with the family. No documents needed. Free, no pressure.
We pull the deed, check probate status, identify back taxes and other liens. If you have a probate attorney we coordinate. If you don’t, we work alongside.
You see the full breakdown: purchase price, back-tax payoff, lien settlements, closing costs, net to the estate. No surprises at the table.
If probate is done, we can close in 7–14 days. If probate is still open, we close when letters testamentary issue. You set the pace.
Composite case based on real Sure Path purchases. Names, county, and exact dates redacted for privacy.
Mom passed in 2024. Three adult children — two living in Florida, one in Oregon. The house had $8,200 in back property taxes from before mom got sick, an old solar-panel lien from 2019 that everyone thought had been paid off, and probate hadn’t been opened yet. Twelve months of phone calls between the siblings and nothing moving.
The oldest sibling called us. We talked her through it on a single call. Over the next week we pulled title, identified the lien, and connected the family with a probate attorney we’ve worked with before. Probate opened in six weeks. Letters testamentary issued four weeks later. We closed three weeks after that.
What she told us at closing: “You were patient when we needed patience and decisive when we needed decisive. You handled the paperwork. We just had to say yes.”
Sure Path is a curative-title firm with a cash-purchase arm — not the other way around. We don’t flinch when an inherited property also has heir tangles, old liens, back taxes, or a chain-of-title gap. We resolve all of it at closing.
Same inherited property, three different paths. Here’s what each one actually costs — in dollars and in months.
When mom passed we didn’t know where to start. Sure Path was patient when we needed patience and decisive when we needed decisive. They handled the paperwork. We just had to say yes.
Outside our current footprint? Reach out anyway — we’ll tell you honestly whether we can help.
Plain-English answers. See our full FAQ for everything else.
Yes — with us. Many cash buyers require probate to be closed (letters testamentary in hand) before they’ll write an offer. We don’t. We’ll start the conversation, pull title, and write a contingent offer that closes when probate completes. If you don’t have a probate attorney, we can connect you with one we’ve worked with before.
No. One heir can start the conversation. We’ll walk you through the numbers and what would need to happen. When you’re ready to share with the other heirs, we’re happy to join a call with everyone or send the offer in writing for the group to review together. We won’t pressure anyone.
That’s the most common reason inherited properties sit empty for years. We’ll put a real number in front of the family so the decision isn’t abstract. If one heir wants to keep the house and the others want to sell, sometimes the keeper can buy out the others using our offer as the baseline. If agreement still isn’t possible, a partition action is a last resort — we can recommend an attorney who handles those.
To close, yes — you need legal authority to sign on behalf of the estate. To start a conversation, get an offer, or sign a contingent contract, no. We work with families before letters issue and close once they do.
Yes — this is one of our specialties. We pay the back taxes at closing out of the sale proceeds. The county releases its lien and the title transfers clean. More on selling with back taxes →
When you inherit a property, the IRS resets your “cost basis” to its fair market value on the date the previous owner died, not what they originally paid for it. That means if you sell soon after inheriting, you typically owe little or no capital gains tax. We’re not tax advisors — talk to your CPA for your specific situation — but step-up in basis is one of the main reasons selling an inherited property quickly can be tax-efficient.
Usually very little, thanks to step-up in basis (see above). You’d only owe capital gains on the appreciation between the date of death and your sale — not the lifetime appreciation of the property. For most families selling within a year or two of inheriting, the tax exposure is minimal. Confirm with your tax advisor.
This is exactly what curative title is. Inherited properties often have title issues: a deed that still shows a grandparent who passed years ago, an heirship affidavit gap, an old mortgage that was paid off but never released, or a probate that was opened decades ago and never closed. We resolve all of it at closing. You don’t pay a separate attorney; it’s part of what we do.
Yes. Leave anything you don’t want. We handle clean-out at our cost. If there are items you want to keep, take what you can. There’s no pressure to sort through everything before signing.
If probate is already complete and title is clean: 7–14 days from offer acceptance. If probate is still open: we close after letters testamentary issue, which means the total timeline depends on probate (typically 4–9 months) plus our 2–3 weeks. The good news is we can write the contract and lock the price now — you don’t lose your offer while you wait.
Tell us the basics — we’ll come back with a real number and a real plan within one business day. No pressure. No charge.
Free consultation. No obligation. We answer the hard cases other buyers walk away from.
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