CPR™ Reviewed
CIR-20260508-323C34
When heirs can't agree on selling an inherited home, the market doesn't wait for the family to figure it out
One heir wants to sell while inventory in Southmoor Park and Centennial is still relatively low. Another wants to hold and see what spring brings. That standoff is the most practical problem I see in probate situations right now — and waiting rarely makes the choices cleaner. Here's my honest take: the market isn't going to reward a family for resolving its disagreement slowly. The clearest path forward is getting everyone the same factual picture at the same time, so no one's operating on a different version of the situation. When each heir has steady, accurate information — current comps, realistic timelines, carrying costs — the conversation stops being about opinions and starts being about a real plan. If one heir in your family is pushing to hold an inherited property right now, do they actually have a number in mind, or are they just not ready to let go?