CPR™ Reviewed
CPR-20260620-5C082C
When heirs disagree on what to do with an inherited property in Denver, who actually breaks the tie?
When multiple heirs disagree on what to do with an inherited property, the property does not wait for everyone to get comfortable. Left unresolved, those disagreements become delays, and delays in a probate situation carry real financial weight. A neutral professional is not a tiebreaker — but they are often the only person in the room without a personal stake in the outcome. That distinction matters more than most families realize until they are already deep in the process. What I see in Denver probate situations is that the conflict is rarely about the property itself. It is about what the property represents to each person. One heir wants a quick sale because they need liquidity. Another wants to hold because they grew up there. A third lives out of state and just wants clarity. None of those positions are wrong. But without someone steady in the middle who can lay out the practical choices and the real costs of each path, the conversation tends to go in circles. The quotable truth: the property is not the problem — the lack of a clear plan that everyone can see in writing usually is. Respectful, clear representation does not take sides. It gives every heir the same complete picture so the decision can be made on facts, not feelings or family pressure. If you are currently in a situation where heirs are not aligned on a Denver property, are you working with someone who answers to all of you equally, or someone who was brought in by just one person in the family? — Kevin Lundy | The HomeBridge Group Brokered by eXp Realty