What happens to a house with a mortgage in probate?
In Washington, a house with a mortgage still goes through probate, but the mortgage stays attached to the property until it is paid off or refinanced. The key idea is: probate changes who owns the house, not whether the loan exists.
Big picture
- The mortgage does not disappear when someone dies. The lender still has a lien on the property, and payments are expected to continue.
- The home passes into the estate, and the court‑appointed personal representative (executor/administrator) is responsible for deciding whether to keep, sell, or let the lender foreclose, based on what’s best for the estate and heirs.
What usually happens
- Payments must be kept current
- The personal representative typically uses estate funds to keep the mortgage, taxes, and insurance paid during probate.
- If payments stop and no arrangements are made, the lender can eventually start foreclosure, even while probate is pending.
- If the house is sold during probate
- The sale proceeds first pay off the outstanding mortgage balance and any liens, plus selling costs (commission, closing costs).
- Whatever is left over becomes cash in the estate, which is then used to pay other debts and, ultimately, distributed to heirs according to the will or state law.
- If an heir wants to keep the house
- The heir typically takes it subject to the existing mortgage, meaning they either:
- Keep making the payments under the existing loan, or
- Refinance into a new loan in their own name (often required if they are not an eligible successor under federal rules or the lender’s policy).
- If there are multiple heirs, they may need to “buy out” the others’ interest, often with a refinance.
- The heir typically takes it subject to the existing mortgage, meaning they either:
- If the estate is short on cash
- The personal representative may be forced to sell the home just to pay the mortgage and other creditors.
- If the mortgage and costs exceed what the house is worth, they may negotiate with the lender (short sale or deed in lieu) rather than let it go through a full foreclosure.
Who is on the hook for the mortgage?
- The estate is responsible for the debt, not the heirs personally, unless someone co‑signed or is already on the loan.
- Heirs only “inherit” the payment obligation if they choose to take title to the property and keep it; they can also choose to walk away and let the estate sell or, in worst cases, let the lender foreclose.
If you’re looking at a specific Kitsap property in probate with a mortgage, the safest move is to have the personal representative talk with both a Washington probate attorney and, ideally, a local real‑estate agent who understands probate sales, so they can coordinate timing, payments, and the sale or transfer plan.
