Inherited or Probate Property in Lubbock
Inheriting a house brings paperwork, family dynamics, and decisions you probably did not ask for. Whether the property is in probate, already through the process, or you are trying to figure out what happens next, this page covers the practical side of selling an inherited house in Lubbock, Texas. We are not attorneys — this is not legal advice — but we can explain what the investor sale path looks like and when it makes sense.
The probate process in Texas
Probate is the court-supervised process of transferring a deceased person's assets. In Texas, the timeline and requirements depend on whether there was a will, the size of the estate, and whether the property is the only asset.
Key things to know:
- The court must appoint a personal representative (executor or administrator) before the property can be sold
- Some sales require court confirmation; others do not, depending on the authority granted
- Heirs may need to agree on the sale, which can create delays
- The process typically takes several months, sometimes longer if there are disputes
You do not need to wait until probate is fully closed to talk to us. Understanding the property's value and condition early helps with planning.
Common situations with inherited Lubbock properties
These are the scenarios we hear most often:
- The house has been vacant for months or years — Deferred maintenance, potential code issues, and security concerns
- Multiple heirs who disagree — Some want to sell, some want to keep, some want to rent
- The property needs significant repairs — The previous owner could not maintain it, and now the estate cannot afford to
- There is a mortgage still on the property — Payments may be behind, or the estate cannot cover them
- Out-of-state heir who cannot manage the property — Distance makes every step harder
- Hoarder situation or heavy cleanout needed — Decades of accumulation that the family cannot face
- Reverse mortgage that is now due — The loan must be settled, usually by sale or refinance
- Property taxes are delinquent — Tax liens or penalties are piling up
We have worked through all of these. The specifics change the timeline and the offer, but they do not eliminate the option.
Selling to an investor vs. listing the inherited house
Listing after cleanup and repairs: May get a higher price, but someone has to pay for cleanout, repairs, staging, and carrying costs during the listing. If multiple heirs are involved, agreeing on who pays and when can be complicated.
Direct as-is sale to an investor: Lower price, but no cleanout, no repairs, no showings, no commission, and a firm closing timeline. The estate gets a clear number and a specific date — which simplifies distribution and closes the chapter faster.
For many families, the time and emotional weight of fixing up and selling an inherited house makes a direct sale the practical choice. We explain both paths so you can decide.
What WeBuy Lubbock handles
When we buy an inherited property:
- We coordinate with the personal representative and any attorneys involved
- We review title, liens, and any outstanding debts attached to the property
- We account for cleanout, repairs, and deferred maintenance in the offer
- We provide a written offer with a clear closing timeline
- We can often work with the court schedule if probate confirmation is required
What we do not do: give legal advice, file probate on your behalf, or mediate family disagreements. We stay in our lane — which is the real estate and numbers side.
Questions heirs often ask
- Do all heirs need to agree to the sale? (Usually yes, or the personal representative needs court-granted authority)
- Can we sell before probate is finished? (Depends on the stage and the court's requirements)
- Who pays the closing costs? (We cover standard closing costs when we buy)
- What about the contents of the house? (Take what you want, leave the rest — we handle cleanout)
- Will there be a commission? (No agent commission when we buy direct)
- How long does closing take? (Our target is 21 days once title and court requirements are clear)
Common questions
Can you buy a house that is still in probate?
It depends on the stage. If a personal representative has been appointed with sale authority, we can often move forward. If the court must confirm the sale, we work within that timeline. We cannot buy before the court grants authority.
Do I need to clean out the house first?
No. Take what has personal or financial value. Leave the rest. We factor cleanout into the offer and handle it after closing.
What if there are multiple heirs?
All heirs with ownership interest typically need to sign off on the sale. We can work with the personal representative to make that process as smooth as possible.
What if the inherited house has a mortgage?
The mortgage needs to be paid off at closing from the sale proceeds. If the estate cannot cover payments before closing, we may be able to move quickly enough to prevent further damage.
Do you pay probate attorney fees?
No. Probate legal costs are the estate's responsibility. We cover our own closing costs but not the estate's legal fees.
Ready to talk?
Get a cash offer for your Lubbock inherited property. No obligation, no pressure. We look at the property, explain the numbers, and give you a written offer.