When you inherit a house in Wilmington — whether it’s a beach cottage at Carolina Beach you spent every summer at, a Forest Hills bungalow filled with sixty years of belongings, or a place you’ve never set foot in — the last thing you need is a 90-day listing process and a contractor calling about repairs. We’re a Cape Fear cash buyer who handles inherited homes start to finish, including the messy parts: estate sale coordination, probate attorney communication, and out-of-state heirs.
Inheriting a home in Wilmington — what actually happens
North Carolina probate runs through the New Hanover County Clerk of Court, in the same downtown courthouse at 316 Princess Street where most county business gets handled. If the property has multiple heirs — siblings, step-siblings, cousins — every one of them has a legal interest in the home until the estate is settled. That’s why “just selling it” is rarely as simple as it sounds.
The Wilmington homes we buy from estates fall into a few common patterns: a parent’s primary residence, a beach property used by the family for decades, a rental that the heirs never wanted to manage, or a home in another county where the owner moved here near end-of-life. Each one has its own version of the same set of problems: distance, deferred maintenance, family disagreement, and a probate timeline that nobody fully understands.
The local detail most heirs miss: If the home was the deceased’s primary residence and you sell within roughly a year of the date of death, you typically owe little to no capital gains tax — because the property’s basis “stepped up” to the date-of-death fair market value. We can structure the closing date around your tax planning if helpful, and we encourage you to talk to your CPA before signing anything.
The North Carolina probate process for real estate
Petition for letters at the Clerk of Court
The named executor (or an heir, if there’s no will) files a Petition for Probate at the New Hanover County Clerk’s office. You’ll receive Letters Testamentary (with a will) or Letters of Administration (without one) — these are what give you legal authority to sign on the estate’s behalf.
90-day notice to creditors
NC requires the estate to publish notice to creditors in a local paper for four consecutive weeks and run a 90-day window for claims. Real estate can be sold during this window — you don’t have to wait for it to expire — but the proceeds are held until the period closes if there are creditor concerns.
Authority to sell
If the will gives the executor power of sale (most do), you can sell without further court approval. If not, the executor petitions the Clerk for an order authorizing the sale. We’ve worked with both — our closing attorney coordinates either path.
Heir consent (when needed)
If multiple heirs share the property and the estate isn’t fully through probate, all heirs may need to sign the deed. We send a Zoom-friendly contract package and use mobile notaries for out-of-state heirs at no cost to you.
Closing and disbursement
Proceeds wire to the estate account, the executor distributes per the will or NC intestate statute, and final accounting is filed with the Clerk. We provide a closing packet that satisfies the Clerk’s documentation requirements.
The real-world challenges of an inherited Wilmington home
Decades of belongings
Most inherited homes come full. We can either close as-is — leave whatever you want behind — or coordinate a local estate sale company (Caring Transitions, MaxSold) before closing. Your call.
Out-of-state heirs
About half of our estate sales involve heirs in other states or countries. We handle remote signing, mobile notaries, and Fedex closing packages. Nobody has to fly to Wilmington.
Deferred maintenance
Older homes in Forest Hills, Sunset Park, or Hollywood often have decades of small issues — old roof, dated electrical, cast-iron plumbing. We buy as-is. No inspection-driven price renegotiation.
Hurricane damage
If the home was damaged in Florence (2018) or any of the more recent storms and never fully repaired, we account for that in our offer rather than chasing insurance claims for you.
Tenants in place
Sometimes the deceased was renting the property out. We can buy with tenants in place and assume the lease, or coordinate cash-for-keys before closing.
Multiple heirs disagreeing
If the heirs aren’t aligned, we’ll wait until they are. Our offer stays valid for an extended window and we’ll re-comp at closing if more than 60 days pass.
Why a cash sale fits inherited homes
Traditional listing of an inherited home
- Have to clean it out, paint, and repair before listing
- Showings require trips to Wilmington (or a local helper)
- Inspection contingencies expose every old-home issue
- Multiple heirs all sign each negotiation round
- 60–120 days from list to close while estate carrying costs accrue
- 6% commission off the top before split among heirs
Cash sale to Tidal Offers
- Walk through once, leave anything you don’t want — sell as-is
- No showings, no public listing, no Open Houses
- One offer, one signature round, no inspection drama
- Remote heirs sign via mobile notary at no cost
- Close in 7–21 days; carrying costs stop fast
- No commission — every dollar goes to the estate
Working with your probate attorney
If your estate is being handled by a Wilmington probate attorney — Hutchens, Murchison Taylor, Block Crouch Keeter, or any local firm — we’re used to coordinating directly with them so you don’t have to play telephone. Common pieces:
- Letters Testamentary or Administration — we’ll need a copy for closing.
- Death certificate — certified copy goes in the closing file.
- Will (if any) and the powers it grants the executor.
- Estate account info for the wire disbursement.
- Creditor claim period status — we work around it.
- Final 1041 estate tax planning — your CPA can advise on closing-date timing.
One scenario we handle often: The home was a parent’s primary residence in a Wilmington neighborhood that’s appreciated dramatically — say, a 1970s rancher in Pine Valley that was bought for $42,000 and is now worth $475,000. The step-up in basis means the heirs owe little to no capital gains tax IF the sale happens reasonably close to the date of death. Cash sales close fast enough to lock that tax treatment in cleanly.
What we look at when we make an offer on an inherited home
Our pricing logic is the same as any cash purchase, but we’re more thorough about documenting it because the offer often goes into the estate file and is reviewed by other heirs and attorneys.
- Date-of-death valuation if requested. For estate tax filings (Form 706 for estates over $13.6M, Form 1041 for income), some heirs need a written DOD valuation. We can produce one alongside our purchase offer.
- Comparable sales in the specific Wilmington neighborhood — Forest Hills, Pine Valley, Mayfaire, Wrightsville Beach, wherever the home sits — using MLS data we share with you in writing.
- Condition. Photos and a walk-through tell us most of what we need. Older systems are factored into the price, not used to renegotiate.
- Liens, judgments, reverse mortgages. Our title attorney pulls a full report. Reverse mortgages are common on inherited homes — we handle the HECM payoff directly.
- Personal property. Whatever you want to leave, we take. Whatever you want to keep, you take. We’ll write the contract clearly.
Frequently asked questions about selling an inherited home in Wilmington
Can I sell before probate is finished?
Often, yes. Once you have Letters Testamentary or Administration from the New Hanover County Clerk of Court, you generally have authority to sell estate real estate. The proceeds wire to the estate account and are distributed at the end of probate. We’ve closed sales as early as week 4 of a probate case.
What if there’s no will?
NC’s intestate succession statute (NCGS Chapter 29) determines who inherits. The Clerk appoints an administrator (usually the surviving spouse or adult child) who gets Letters of Administration with the same selling authority as a testate executor. We’ve handled both routinely.
What if heirs disagree on the sale?
We wait. Our offer stays valid while you work through it. If consensus is impossible, NC has a partition process, but it’s slow and expensive. Most heir disputes resolve once everyone sees the actual offer and the actual numbers — knowing the cash split per heir tends to focus minds.
Do I need to clean out the home?
No. We routinely buy homes “as you walked away from it” — furniture, dishes, clothing, decades of papers. If you want family photos and personal items, take those. Everything else can stay. We coordinate haul-off with our partners after closing.
Is there a capital gains tax on an inherited home in NC?
Usually minimal. The IRS gives inherited property a stepped-up basis equal to the fair market value on the date of death. If you sell at or near that value, there’s little or no taxable gain. North Carolina follows federal treatment. Talk to your CPA — we can time closing to land in either tax year.
What if the home has a reverse mortgage (HECM)?
Common with elderly homeowners in Wilmington. The reverse mortgage becomes due when the borrower passes. Heirs typically have 6 months to settle it. We coordinate directly with the servicer for the payoff and close before any foreclosure timer expires. See our foreclosure page if you’re already getting servicer pressure.
Can multiple heirs receive separate wire transfers at closing?
Yes, with the executor’s signed disbursement instructions. Our closing attorney issues separate wires per heir on the day of closing. We’ve done up to 7 simultaneous heir disbursements without issue.