Sometimes yes, sometimes no — it depends on how the home was titled. A plain-English guide to when probate is required and when you can skip it.
Free guide · Updated July 2026 · about 2 min read
Probate is the court process that confirms who inherits and gives someone legal authority to handle the estate — including selling the home. Whether you need it comes down to one question: how was the house titled when the owner died?
If the home was in the deceased's name alone — with only a will, or no will at all — it almost always has to go through probate before it can be sold. The court needs to appoint an executor or administrator, and that person gets the legal authority (often called 'letters') that a title company and buyer will require at closing.
Often, yes. In many states the appointed executor can list and sell the home while probate is still open — sometimes with a quick court confirmation of the sale price, sometimes without, depending on the type of administration and your state's rules. You usually don't have to wait for the entire estate to close.
Getting an executor appointed can take a few weeks to a couple of months. Full probate can run anywhere from a few months to well over a year depending on the state, the county's backlog, and whether anyone contests. Because it's so local, the honest answer is 'it depends on where the home is' — which is exactly why we point you to someone who knows your county's process.
The home still passes to heirs, but the court appoints an administrator instead of an executor, and state 'intestacy' rules decide who inherits. Probate is almost always required in this case if the home was in the deceased's sole name.
In some states it does, in others it only covers bank accounts and personal property. Whether a house qualifies — and under what dollar limit — is state-specific, so confirm before relying on it.
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