Knowledge Center for Sellers – Probate

Selling a property through probate in Washington is manageable — but it moves on the court’s timeline, not yours. Understanding what has to happen legally before you can close, and in what order, makes the difference between a smooth estate sale and one that falls apart at the closing table. These resources are designed to help Personal Representatives, heirs, and families navigate the process with clarity.

January 1, 2019

Step 1: Open the estate and appoint a Personal Representative

Before anything else can happen, the Superior Court in the county where the deceased lived must formally appoint a Personal Representative and issue Letters Testamentary or Letters of Administration. This is the legal authority that allows someone to act on behalf of the estate — including signing listing and sale documents.

January 1, 2019
January 1, 2019

Step 2: Secure nonintervention powers where possible

Most Washington Personal Representatives seek nonintervention powers under RCW 11.68, which allow them to sell real estate without ongoing court supervision. Without them, the sale may require court confirmation, minimum price thresholds, and a Return of Sale filing — all of which add time. Your probate attorney handles this step.

January 1, 2019
January 1, 2019

Step 3: Prepare and price the property

Once authority is established, the home can be cleaned out, assessed, and prepared for sale. Pricing should reflect both current market conditions and the estate’s legal obligations — including the duty to act in the best interests of all heirs and creditors.

January 1, 2019
January 1, 2019

Step 4: List, accept an offer, and manage disclosures

Washington’s Seller Disclosure Act applies to estate sales. Form 17 must be completed based on the Personal Representative’s actual knowledge of the property. Buyers receive a review window after delivery and can walk away or renegotiate. The purchase and sale agreement should include probate-appropriate language coordinated between your agent and attorney.

January 1, 2019
January 1, 2019

Step 5: Close with a Personal Representative’s Deed

At closing, title transfers via a Personal Representative’s Deed — typically a bargain and sale deed — rather than a standard statutory warranty deed. The title company will need confirmation of the PR’s authority, copies of the Letters, and documentation that all required notices to heirs and creditors have been handled. Nothing closes until the legal side is fully in order.

January 1, 2019

Probate in Washington is a Superior Court process under RCW Title 11 that appoints a Personal Representative and gives them legal authority to manage the estate’s assets — including real estate. The court issues Letters Testamentary if there’s a will, or Letters of Administration if there isn’t. Those letters are what allow someone to legally sign on behalf of the estate.

Here’s the practical answer: you can usually start cleaning out, valuing, and listing the home once a Personal Representative is appointed. But you can’t close and transfer title to a buyer until that person has their formal letters — and in some cases, court approval or nonintervention powers. Getting those pieces in place before you accept offers isn’t a formality. It’s how you avoid a deal falling apart at the closing table.

Only the court-appointed Personal Representative of the estate can sign — listing paperwork, purchase and sale agreements, closing documents, all of it. Their authority comes from the Letters Testamentary or Letters of Administration issued by the Superior Court in the county where probate is filed.

Being named in the will doesn’t give someone signing authority. Neither does being the closest family member. Until the court has formally appointed someone and issued those letters, nobody can legally sell or transfer the property. That’s not a technicality — it’s the thing that determines whether your transaction actually closes.

The marketing and offer process looks similar on the surface. The legal authority, timelines, and paperwork are a different story.

Most Washington Personal Representatives aim to secure nonintervention powers, which allow them to sell real estate without ongoing court supervision — as long as they follow notice requirements and act in the estate’s best interest. Without those powers, the sale may require formal court confirmation under RCW 11.56: minimum price thresholds (typically at least 90% of appraised value), a Return of Sale filing, and more time.

At closing, you’re also not using a standard statutory warranty deed. Title transfers through a Personal Representative’s Deed — usually a bargain and sale deed — which carries more limited warranties on behalf of the estate. Title companies know what to look for. Your agent and attorney should too.

This is one of the most common things I see in estate sales — and one of the most emotionally charged. Someone wants to keep the house. Someone else needs the money. Someone has strong opinions about what it’s worth. None of that is unusual.

The most common practical solution is a buyout: one heir purchases the others’ interests based on an independent market valuation. It keeps the process moving and avoids court involvement. If that conversation breaks down completely, the Personal Representative or an interested heir can ask the Superior Court for guidance — or in serious cases, seek a court-ordered sale or partition. That path is slower, more expensive, and increases legal exposure for everyone. It’s a last resort for a reason.

Most families are best served by having both — and trying to navigate one without the other tends to create problems that are expensive to unwind.

The attorney handles the court side: opening the estate, obtaining letters, securing nonintervention powers where possible, managing required notices to heirs and creditors, and advising on when court approval is needed before you move forward.

The agent handles the real estate side: pricing the home with probate-appropriate comps, making sure the purchase and sale agreement includes the right probate language, coordinating timing around court milestones, and working with escrow to make sure the closing documents and the Personal Representative’s Deed satisfy both the title company and the court.

One without the other leaves gaps. The deals that go sideways in probate sales usually do so because someone assumed the pieces would figure themselves out.

Name
Address

I agree to be contacted by Revival Realty LLC via call, email, and text. To opt-out, you can reply ‘stop’ at any time or click the unsubscribe link in the emails. Message and data rates may apply. View Privacy Policy.

Contact consent (required)