Most Homeowners Do Not Know Their Family Could Lose the House When They Die and Here Is Why

June 16, 20263 min read

Most Homeowners Do Not Know Their Family Could Lose the House When They Die and Here Is Why

The Real Estate Planning Gap That Is Costing Families Everything

Most homeowners spend years building equity in their home. Making payments. Watching the value grow. Building something meaningful that they intend to pass on to the people they love. And most of those same homeowners have no idea that without the right plan in place their family could lose that home entirely or spend months and thousands of dollars fighting a legal system to access what was meant for them.

Here is what actually happens in each scenario and why the difference between a will and a trust is more significant than most people realize.

Scenario One: No Plan at All

If you have a mortgage and no estate plan in place when you pass away the mortgage payments still have to be made. The bank does not pause the obligation because the homeowner has died. If your family cannot make the payments the bank will foreclose and take the home keeping all of the equity you spent years building in the process.

Even if the home is paid off without a plan the court decides who receives it through a process called probate. Not your family according to your wishes. A judge according to the laws of intestate succession. That process costs money in court and legal fees and it takes time that your family will spend waiting rather than receiving what you built for them.

Scenario Two: A Will

Most people who have thought about this issue at all believe that having a will means they are covered. It is a reasonable assumption and it is also incorrect.

A will does not avoid probate. It guides the probate process. Your family still goes to court. They still pay legal fees and court costs. They still wait months for the process to conclude before they can access the home or any other assets covered by the will. The will makes probate cheaper and more predictable but it does not eliminate it.

For a family that is also managing grief the burden of navigating even a streamlined probate process is real and the costs add up in ways that reduce the inheritance rather than protecting it.

Scenario Three: A Trust

A trust is the mechanism that changes the outcome entirely. When your home is held in a living trust the property transfers directly to the people you chose exactly the way you specified without going through probate at all.

No court involvement. No judge making decisions about what you intended. No months of waiting while legal processes unfold. No attorney fees eating into what you built. The home passes directly and efficiently to your beneficiaries according to the terms you established when you created the trust.

As Tom Seaman explains this is not a tool reserved for wealthy families. It is an estate planning structure that virtually every high-net-worth family uses specifically because it protects what they built from unnecessary cost, delay, and legal uncertainty. The same protection is available to any homeowner who takes the step of setting it up.

The Action Worth Taking Before It Is Too Late

The conversation about whether a trust makes sense for your situation is one worth having with an estate planning attorney before circumstances make it urgent. Setting up a trust while you are healthy and clear-headed is a completely different experience than navigating estate planning in a crisis or leaving the work undone for your family to manage after you are gone.

The equity you have built in your home over the years is a real and meaningful asset. Making sure it transfers to the people you intend in the way you intend without being consumed by probate costs and delays is one of the most important financial decisions a homeowner can make.

Share this with your family so the conversation can happen now rather than later. And reach out to Tom Seaman with any questions about how your mortgage and your home fit into your overall financial and estate planning picture.


Sources

AmericanBarAssociation.org
Investopedia.com
Forbes.com
NAR.realtor
ConsumerFinancialProtectionBureau.gov

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