The direct answer: Selling an inherited house in Texas involves the probate process, which typically takes 4–9 months from opening the estate to receiving court authority to sell. However, there are legal paths to sell faster — and a cash buyer can close within days of receiving the court’s authorization. This guide walks you through every step.
By Zareena Samidon | Samidon Realty Group | Colleyville, TX
What Is Probate and Do You Have to Go Through It?
Probate is the legal process through which a deceased person’s estate — including real property — is administered and distributed to heirs. In Texas, the probate court validates the will (if one exists), appoints an executor or administrator, and authorizes the transfer of assets.
Do you always have to go through probate to sell an inherited Texas home? Not always. Texas law offers several alternatives:
**Small estate affidavit** — Available if the total estate value (excluding homestead and exempt property) is $75,000 or less. This is a simplified process that avoids full probate.
**Muniment of title** — A faster form of probate available when there is a valid will and no unpaid debts (other than mortgage). The court simply admits the will to record, which serves as the instrument to transfer title without full estate administration. This can take as little as 2–4 weeks.
**Affidavit of heirship** — When there is no will and the property has passed through the family informally for years. Two disinterested witnesses who knew the deceased must sign the affidavit, which is then recorded with the county. This doesn’t require court involvement but can leave title issues that complicate sales.
**Living trust** — If the deceased had a properly funded revocable living trust, property inside the trust passes directly to beneficiaries without any probate. This is why estate planning attorneys push trusts so strongly.
For most DFW families dealing with a standard home with a will: Full probate or muniment of title will be required.
Step-by-Step: The Texas Probate Process for Real Estate
Texas probate is governed by the **Texas Estates Code**. The state allows up to **four years** from the date of death to file for probate before intestacy laws take over (meaning the state determines distribution regardless of the will’s contents).
**Step 1 — File the Will (or Application for Administration)**
The executor named in the will — or a family member if there’s no will — files an application to open the estate with the probate court in the county where the deceased lived. In DFW, this is typically Tarrant County Probate Court or Dallas County Probate Court.
**Step 2 — Court Hearing and Letters Testamentary**
The probate judge holds a brief hearing to validate the will and appoint the executor. Once approved, the court issues **Letters Testamentary** — the legal document that gives the executor authority to act on behalf of the estate. This is the document you’ll need to open bank accounts, transfer assets, and ultimately sell real property.
**Step 3 — Inventory and Appraisement**
The executor must document all estate assets and their values. For real property, this typically requires a professional appraisal (or an agreed market value in simpler cases). This document is filed with the court.
**Step 4 — Notice to Creditors**
The executor must publish a notice to creditors in the local newspaper for 2 weeks and individually notify known creditors of the estate. Creditors then have a certain period to file claims.
**Step 5 — Pay Debts and Expenses**
Before distributing assets to heirs, the estate pays valid creditor claims, taxes owed, and estate administration expenses (attorney fees, executor fees, etc.). Outstanding mortgages on the inherited property also factor into the net proceeds from a sale.
**Step 6 — Court Authorization to Sell (if needed)**
If the will grants the executor \”independent administration\” powers, they can typically sell property without going back to court for each transaction. If the will requires \”dependent administration\” or there is no will, the executor must petition the court for authorization to sell the specific property. The court will evaluate whether the sale is in the estate’s best interest.
**Step 7 — Close the Sale**
With Letters Testamentary in hand (and court authorization if required), the executor can execute the sale. The title company will require copies of the Letters Testamentary and the probate court order (if applicable) before issuing title insurance and clearing the transaction.
**Total probate timeline:** 4–9 months in most DFW cases. Contested estates, complex assets, or dependent administration can extend this to 12–24 months.
Documents You Need to Sell an Inherited Texas Home
Gather these before contacting any buyer or real estate professional:
- **Death Certificate** (certified copy)
- – **Letters Testamentary** (or Letters of Administration)
- – **Original Will** (if exists)
- – **Court Order Authorizing Sale** (if dependent administration)
- – **Inventory and Appraisement** (filed copy)
- – **Property Tax Records**
- – **Title/Deed Records**
- – **Mortgage Payoff Statement**
- – **HOA Documents** (if applicable)
- – **Photo ID** (executor)
What If There Are Multiple Heirs?
This is where most inherited property sales in Texas stall. When two or more heirs inherit a property, they all have an ownership interest — and typically all need to agree on what to do with it.
**Scenario 1: All heirs agree to sell**
This is the smoothest path. The executor (authorized by the court) handles the sale. All heirs sign any required documents (or give the executor power of attorney to sign on their behalf). Proceeds are distributed per the will or the court’s order.
**Scenario 2: Heirs disagree about whether to sell**
If some heirs want to sell and others don’t, the disagreement must be resolved through negotiation, mediation, or partition lawsuit.
**Scenario 3: Heirs can’t be located**
If the will or intestacy laws designate heirs who cannot be found, the court may appoint a guardian ad litem to represent absent heirs. This adds time and cost.
**Practical advice for multi-heir situations:**
A cash buyer removes many of the points of contention. When there’s one fair offer on the table — a specific dollar amount, a specific closing date, no repairs, no commissions — it’s much easier to get all heirs to say yes than when the alternative is a months-long traditional listing with its inherent uncertainty.
The Stepped-Up Basis: Your Biggest Tax Advantage
This is the single most valuable tax concept for heirs selling inherited property, and it’s widely misunderstood.
**What is stepped-up basis?**
When you inherit property, your tax cost basis is \”stepped up\” to the **fair market value on the date of the deceased’s death** — not what the deceased originally paid for it.
**Why this matters — an example:**
Your parent bought their DFW home in 1985 for $95,000. At the time of their death in 2025, the home is worth $420,000. Under normal capital gains rules, the gain would be $325,000 — and you’d owe capital gains tax on that entire amount.
But because of the stepped-up basis, your basis becomes $420,000 (the value at death). If you sell the home quickly — say, for $420,000 — your taxable gain is **$0**.
Even if the market rises slightly before you close and you sell for $440,000, you only owe capital gains tax on the $20,000 above the date-of-death value.
**The implication:** Every month you hold the pinherited property, you risk the value appreciating beyond the stepped-up basis — increasing your eventual tax liability. Selling quickly while the price is close to the date-of-death value minimizes your capital gains exposure.
**Texas does not have a state inheritance tax or estate tax.** Federal estate tax milies will not owe federal estate tax.
*Consult a CPA or tax attorney for analysis of your specific situation. These are general principles, not tax advice.*
Your Three Options for Selling an Inherited Home
**Option 1: List with a Traditional Real Estate Agent**
An agent lists the property on the MLS, scheduo in a fraction of the time.
How a Cash Sale Works for Probate Properties
We work with inherited and probate properties regularly. Here’s exactly what the process looks like:
**Before Letters Testamentary:** We can tour the property, discuss a preliminary offer, and get paperwork ready — but we cannot close until the executor has legal authority.
**After Letters Testamentary:**
- Executor contacts us (or we’re already in discussions)
- 2. We do a single walkthrough — as-is, no cleaning required
- 3. Written cash offer within 24–48 hours
- 4. We open title, order title search, confirm all liens and encumbrances
- 5. If depn typically 14–30 days after authorization
- 8. Title company disburses proceeds to the estate account
- 9. Executor distributes per the will or court order
- We can also work with out-of-state heirs. All signing can be done remotely via DocuSign and remote online notarization. You do not need to be in DFW to sell a DFW property.
- ## Common Challenges and How to Handle Them
- **The house has been vacant and needs major repairs.**
- Cash buyers purchase as-is. No repairs needed. Don’t invest money into a property you’re selling — you’re unlikely to recover the investment in a traditional sale, and a cash buyer will factor the condition into their offer regardless.
- **There’s a mortgage on the property.**
- The mortgage doesn’t transfer to heirs. It becomes a debt of the estate. At closing, the title company pays the outstanding balance from the sale proceeds. The heirs receive whatever equity remains.
- **There are unpaid property taxes.**
- Same as the mortgage — the title company handles the payoff from proceeds at closing. Texas tax liens have priority over almost everything else, so they must be resolved before title can transfer.
- **The home has title issues (old liens, missing deeds, disputed ownership).**
- This is common with older DFW properties, especially those that have been in families for decades. A good title company can resolve many title issues as part of the transaction. More complex issues may require an attorney.
- **One heir lives in the house and doesn’t want to leave.**
- This is one of the most emotionally fraught situations in inherited property. The heir living in the home technically has no greater legal right to stay than the other heirs — but eviction of a family member during a grieving period is difficult. A cash buyer who offers a fair price and a flexible move-ouly applies to estates over $13.61 million (2025 threshold). Most DFW fa