Multi-Heir Sales

Inherited a house with siblings? Here's how to move forward — together.

Multiple heirs, different opinions, and a property no one lives in. We've helped hundreds of families reach a fair sale that everyone can agree on.

The Landscape

What co-heirs can — and can't — do without unanimous agreement.

When multiple heirs inherit a property as tenants-in-common, all owners typically must consent to a sale. Disagreement is common — we structure transactions that protect every heir's interest and reduce family friction.

How We Do It

Clean, transparent, multi-heir transactions.

Separate acknowledgments

  • One closing letter per heir
  • Individual proceeds delivery
  • Each heir signs independently

Buyout solutions

  • When one sibling wants to keep the home
  • Financing referrals
  • Fair-market valuation included

Attorney coordination

  • We work with your estate attorney
  • Partition guidance referrals
  • Document all heir consents
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FAQ

Sibling-sale questions, answered.

Co-heirs typically must agree. If not, a buyout structure or — as a last resort — a partition action can resolve it. We'll point you to attorneys who specialize.
Free Cash Offer

Find out what your inherited house is worth — free, no obligation.

Takes less than 2 minutes. No commitment required.

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This is an illustrative estimate only. Actual offers depend on property condition, local market conditions, and due diligence. No offer is binding until a formal written agreement is signed by both parties.

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