You inherited a house in Ohio. Maybe it's the family home. Maybe it's a property you didn't know existed until the will was read. Either way, you now have responsibilities you did not ask for, often during one of the hardest seasons of your life.
This guide explains how Ohio probate works, what the executor's role is, when court approval is required to sell, the tax implications, and the realistic options for selling the property. We are a real estate acquisition firm, not a law firm. Some readers will end up selling to a cash buyer. Many will not. Either path is legitimate. The point of this guide is to make sure you know which one fits your situation before anyone else tells you.
Probate is the legal process of administering a deceased person's estate under court supervision. In Ohio, this happens in the Probate Division of the Court of Common Pleas in the county where the decedent lived. The court oversees three things: validating the will (if there is one), appointing an executor or administrator, and ensuring the estate's debts are paid before assets are distributed to heirs.
For real estate specifically, probate matters because title to the property does not automatically transfer to the heirs upon death. The property is titled in the name of the estate until probate concludes, and a court-issued certificate of transfer is recorded with the county recorder.
That is why most heirs cannot simply put the house on the market the day after the funeral. Until the court appoints a fiduciary and grants authority, no one has the legal power to sign a deed.
Ohio gives you three procedural options depending on the size of the estate. Pick the right one and the rest of the process gets dramatically easier.
The fastest, simplest path. Available only when the estate is very small. Per Ohio Legal Help and Franklin County Probate Court, Summary Release is available in two scenarios:
For most inherited houses with meaningful equity, Summary Release will not apply because the property value alone exceeds the asset thresholds. But it is worth checking.
A middle path. Available for estates where total assets are under $35,000 (or under $100,000 if the surviving spouse is the sole beneficiary). Less paperwork than full administration, but still requires court filings.
Required for most estates that include a typical Ohio home. The court appoints a fiduciary (executor if there's a will, administrator if there isn't), inventory and appraisal of assets is filed, creditors are notified and given six months to make claims, and distributions occur after debts are settled.
The first conversation with the probate court clerk is free. They will not give legal advice but they will tell you which procedural path your situation likely fits. Call before you pay anyone for help.
If you were named executor in the will, you accept the role formally at the first probate court hearing. If there is no will or no surviving named executor, the court appoints an administrator. Either way, the person now has fiduciary responsibilities under Ohio Revised Code Chapter 2113:
This is not optional. Executors are personally liable for misconduct, even if unintentional. If the responsibilities feel beyond your bandwidth (most people in grief feel this way), you can decline the role and the court will appoint an administrator instead.
Whether you need probate court approval to sell the inherited property depends on one factor: does the will grant the executor a "power of sale" over real estate?
The executor can sign the deed and close the sale without a separate court order. This is the simpler path. Most well-drafted Ohio wills include this clause.
Court approval is required. Per Ohio Revised Code Chapter 2127, the executor or administrator must file a "land sale action" in the probate court. The process under ORC 2127.04 includes:
Land sale actions add 60 to 120 days to the timeline. They are formal civil proceedings. Some heirs choose to engage a probate attorney for this step specifically.
Locate the original will and read it for a power-of-sale clause. The exact language to look for: "I give my executor full power to sell, convey, lease, or mortgage any real or personal property of my estate." If that or similar language is in the will, you can sell without a separate court order. If it isn't, plan for the land sale action.
From date of death to closed sale, expect six to twelve months for a straightforward Ohio probate. Estate complexity, contested wills, creditor disputes, or required land sale actions can extend this to eighteen months or more. Per multiple Ohio probate practitioners and county court resources, the typical sequence runs:
If the will leaves the house to more than one person, all heirs listed on the title must agree to the sale before closing. This is the single biggest source of delay and friction in inherited-property sales.
Common patterns:
Mediation often resolves heir disputes faster and cheaper than litigation. Most Ohio counties have probate mediation programs.
Inherited property in the United States receives a step-up in basis for capital gains tax purposes. This is a significant benefit. Here is what it means in plain terms:
This is why many tax advisors recommend selling inherited property within a year of death rather than holding it. Holding can trigger capital gains on appreciation after the inheritance date.
Ohio does not have a state estate tax. Federal estate tax applies only to estates over the federal exemption (around $13.6 million per person in 2024, adjusted annually). For most inherited Ohio homes, no estate tax is owed.
Always confirm your specific tax situation with a CPA before selling.
Once probate authority to sell is in place, you have the same options any seller has, plus a few inherited-property-specific ones.
Highest sale price, longest timeline. Expect 60 to 120 days on market plus 30 days to close. You'll need to clean, possibly stage, and negotiate repairs after inspection. Agent commission is typically 5 to 6% of sale price. If the property is empty (no one living there), the holding costs of taxes, insurance, and utilities accumulate during this window.
Lower commission (often 1 to 2%) but you do more work. Useful when the property is move-in ready and located in a hot market.
Faster timeline (7 to 30 days), no repairs needed, no commission. The trade-off is a lower offer price. Per industry data, cash buyers typically offer 65 to 75 percent of "fixed-up retail" value, minus estimated repairs. For a property that needs significant work, this gap shrinks because the open-market price would also be lower. For a pristine, high-end property, the gap can be substantial.
Some Ohio counties offer probate auction options. Quick, transparent, but auction prices often run below appraised value. Useful when speed matters more than maximizing price.
If the property has positive cash flow potential and the heirs agree to be landlords, holding and renting is a valid path. Ohio is a relatively landlord-friendly state, but managing tenants from out of state is stressful. Many heirs who initially plan to rent end up selling within two years.
Ohio has several free resources for heirs navigating probate:
We are ProjectXRL. We are a real estate acquisition firm and we buy properties as-is, on the seller's timeline, for fair cash. For inherited properties, this often makes sense when:
We will not be the right fit for every inherited property. If your property is in pristine condition in a hot Ohio market, you will likely net more on the open market with an agent. We tell sellers this directly when we see it. Our purchase prices reflect the buyer network's investment criteria, not retail.
If you would like a no-obligation written cash offer for an inherited property, you can request one here. The offer is valid for fourteen days. We do not charge sellers any fee. We do not pressure follow-up. If our number does not work, you keep the offer letter and we move on.