Inheriting a House in California? What You Need to Know About Probate

Inheriting a House in California: What Heirs and Families Must Know About Probate, Property Taxes & Their Options

If you are inheriting a house in California, you are likely dealing with far more than just a property. You are managing legal responsibilities, emotional decisions, family dynamics, and major financial consequences — often all at the same time.

In my recent video, Inheriting a House in California? What You Need to Know About Probate, I walk through the most important things every heir and family should understand before making decisions that could cost them tens of thousands of dollars.

You can watch the full video here:
https://youtu.be/ppS5VU27gR8

This article expands on those key points so you can move forward with clarity, confidence, and protection.

Understanding Probate in California When You Inherit a Home

Probate is the court-supervised legal process required to transfer ownership of a property after someone passes away. In California, probate is often required when a home was owned solely by the deceased and not placed in a trust or held in joint ownership with rights of survivorship.

The probate process exists to:

  • Validate the will (if one exists)

  • Identify heirs

  • Settle debts

  • Transfer legal ownership of the property

In many California estates, probate can take 9 to 18 months or longer, especially when there are multiple heirs, disagreements, missing documents, or complex assets. During this time, the home is often frozen — it cannot be sold, refinanced, or transferred without court approval.

How the Property Was Titled Determines Your Entire Path Forward

One of the first and most critical steps after inheriting a house is determining how the home was legally held.

Different forms of ownership produce very different outcomes:

  • Living Trust: Often avoids probate completely

  • Joint Tenancy with Right of Survivorship: Transfers directly to the surviving owner

  • Transfer-on-Death Deed: Can allow the property to pass without probate if properly recorded

  • Sole Ownership: Typically requires full probate

Many families make costly mistakes because they do not confirm the title structure before acting. A real estate professional who understands probate and inherited property law can help you interpret this correctly from the start.

The Hidden Costs of Probate Most Families Are Not Prepared For

Probate is not just a legal process — it is a financial one. Court costs, executor fees, attorney fees, and extended holding costs can significantly reduce the value of an estate.

In California, statutory probate fees are based on the gross value of the estate, not the equity. That means a $1 million home with a $700,000 mortgage is still treated as a $1 million estate for fee purposes.

In addition, probate proceedings become public record, meaning personal family matters become publicly accessible.

This is why planning, guidance, and proper timing are essential.

Proposition 19: Why Property Taxes Are Now One of the Biggest Inheritance Decisions

One of the most misunderstood — and financially dangerous — changes in California inheritance law is Proposition 19.

Before 2021, children could inherit a home and keep the parent’s low property tax base, even if the child never lived there. Today, that is no longer the case.

Under Proposition 19:

  • Heirs must move into the property as their primary residence to preserve the low tax base

  • If the home is rented or sold instead, it is typically reassessed at full market value

  • This can increase annual property taxes by thousands or even tens of thousands of dollars

This single issue has changed the entire financial picture for many families deciding whether to keep or sell inherited property.

What Heirs Should Do First After Inheriting a House

If you are in the early stages of inheriting a home, here are the most important steps:

  1. Gather all estate and property documents

  2. Determine how the home is titled

  3. Confirm whether probate is required

  4. Understand the impact of Proposition 19

  5. Evaluate whether selling, keeping, or renting makes the most financial sense

  6. Speak with professionals who specialize in inherited homes, probate real estate, and senior transitions

Rushing into decisions without this clarity is one of the most common — and expensive — mistakes families make.

Why Guidance Matters During an Emotional Transition

Selling a home after a death, downsizing a longtime family property, or managing an inherited house is not just a transaction. It is an emotional transition layered with financial risk.

Families deserve support from professionals who understand both the technical complexity and the human side of these moments.

Final Thoughts

Inheriting a house in California is one of the most important financial crossroads a family will ever face. With the right information, proper planning, and experienced guidance, it can become a powerful opportunity rather than a painful burden.

If you or someone you love is navigating an inherited property, downsizing, probate, or senior real estate transition in Ventura County or Los Angeles County — or anywhere in California — you do not have to do this alone.

CONNECT WITH ME:

Real Estate Toolbox Team
Steve Hise • Tricia Garcia • Pat Saraceno
Serving Simi Valley, Ventura County & Los Angeles County

📞 805-424-6226
📧 Agents@RealEstateToolbox.com
🌐 www.RealEstateToolbox.com

eXp Realty — Licensed California REALTORS®
CA DRE #01702055 • CA DRE #02032007 • CA DRE #01052064

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