Close Menu
  • Breaking News
  • Business
  • Personal Finance
  • 2nd Amendment
  • Videos
  • Forum
  • More
    • Prepping & Survival
    • Health
    • Top Stocks
    • Stocks Portfolio

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest news and updates directly to your inbox.

Popular Now
No, Lamar Jackson doesn’t deserve to be ranked among the NFL’s top 10 quarterbacks Breaking News

No, Lamar Jackson doesn’t deserve to be ranked among the NFL’s top 10 quarterbacks

By Dewey LewisJuly 16, 20260

Is Lamar Jackson no longer even a top 10 quarterback in the NFL?According to at…

Dave & Buster’s moves further into nightlife with nationwide rave series

Dave & Buster’s moves further into nightlife with nationwide rave series

July 16, 2026
Nevada Lt. Gov.: Elon Musk could make space tourism state’s next big industry

Nevada Lt. Gov.: Elon Musk could make space tourism state’s next big industry

July 16, 2026
Bloodhound K-9 unit helps bring Georgia manhunt to end with arrest of suspect accused of shooting woman

Bloodhound K-9 unit helps bring Georgia manhunt to end with arrest of suspect accused of shooting woman

July 15, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Trending
  • No, Lamar Jackson doesn’t deserve to be ranked among the NFL’s top 10 quarterbacks
  • Dave & Buster’s moves further into nightlife with nationwide rave series
  • Nevada Lt. Gov.: Elon Musk could make space tourism state’s next big industry
  • Bloodhound K-9 unit helps bring Georgia manhunt to end with arrest of suspect accused of shooting woman
  • Trump says US rebuilding military as Iran’s IRGC loses 90% of weapons capability
  • Tom Brady sends clear message to Raiders rookie Fernando Mendoza: Earn your opportunity
  • America’s Gerontocracy Goes Deeper than Aging Politicians
  • ‘Baywatch’ star Carmen Electra shares what men must avoid when pursuing middle-aged women
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram LinkedIn VKontakte
Thursday, July 16
Republican Investor
Banner
  • Breaking News
  • Business
  • Personal Finance
  • 2nd Amendment
  • Videos
  • Forum
  • More
    • Prepping & Survival
    • Health
    • Top Stocks
    • Stocks Portfolio
Subscribe
Republican Investor
You are at:Home » When leaving the house to your heirs backfires
Personal Finance

When leaving the house to your heirs backfires

Dewey LewisBy Dewey LewisJuly 14, 2026No Comments5 Mins Read
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Tumblr Reddit WhatsApp
When leaving the house to your heirs backfires
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

Americans have trillions of dollars of wealth locked up in their homes, and passing it on at death can get messy quickly.

The typical way of outlining who should get the house in a will can cause delays after death—so much so that most states have set up a new way for homeowners to document their wishes. It is called a transfer on death deed, and it has taken off in the past 15 years. New York and New Hampshire added the option last year.

These are blunt instruments, however, and they don’t account for all the complications of life. People make mistakes filling out the forms. Heirs get cut out inadvertently. The overall estate plan can conflict with the deed.

AMERICA’S HOUSING CRISIS: REALTOR.COM CEO SAYS THERE IS WAY TO SOLVE IT

And then it can go really wrong.

A Minnesota man named his niece as the beneficiary on one of these forms, but his ex-wife torched the home a few days after he died. That left his niece with just the land, and she lost a fight to get the insurance proceeds for the house. Courts ruled that he was the one insured but the form made the niece the sole owner, and the insurance didn’t cover her.

More people are having to decide whether to sell a home that has soared in value and pay a big capital-gains tax bill, or hold on to it to give to their children tax-free after they die.

Baby boomer homeowners hold $17 trillion in home equity. Three-quarters of them are planning to leave their current home or the proceeds from its sale to their children or other relatives, according to Freddie Mac.

A person using a calculator and another person pointing at a sheet of paper

“There are so many pitfalls that you can step in,” said Frank Pugh, a lawyer in Leesburg, Va.

Traditionally, people with wealth write a will to outline what they want to happen with their property when they die. After death, a court then supervises the transfer of assets, a process known as probate that can be time-consuming and expensive.

To avoid probate, some people will set up a trust, and put their home and other assets in it, with detailed instructions for the trustee. But trusts, whereby the trustee distributes assets at death without court involvement, require attention to make sure assets are titled properly.

IS THE US HOUSING MARKET BECOMING A BUYER-FRIENDLY MARKET?

Transfer on death deeds were created as a no-fuss option to avoid probate. It is akin to listing a beneficiary on a 401(k) or on a payable-on-death form for a brokerage account. When the homeowner dies, the beneficiary named on the deed gets the house right away.

“It’s the difference between off-the-rack and custom tailoring,” said Thomas Gallanis, a professor at George Mason University’s law school who was the principal drafter for a model law on TOD deeds in 2009.

Rules vary by state, but in most cases the deed needs to be notarized and recorded at the local courthouse where the property is located.

Rows of homes

Homeowners can revoke a transfer on death deed at any time—which is unlike adding someone to a deed as a joint owner.

Lawyers use these deeds often, typically in conjunction with a trust, said Jen Gumbel, an estate planner in Rochester, Minn. She has seen deeds being invalidated because do-it-yourself owners fill them out themselves, failing either to describe the property accurately or to get a spouse to sign off. “These are really technical documents,” she said.

States are still making tweaks to the deed laws. Minnesota updated its law last year in response to the case in which the owner’s ex-wife torched the house. Beneficiaries are now covered by insurance for up to 30 days, as long as the owner gave a copy of the deed and beneficiary information to the insurer before dying.

Things can get more complicated when there is outstanding debt on the property. Skyler Woodard, a 32-year-old welder, has been in a fight for the roughly 200-acre family farm in Nodine, Minn., since 2018, when his father died of cancer.

His parents bought the farm on a rent-to-own contract from his maternal grandparents in 1994. His father got it in a divorce settlement in 1999, and continued making the payments to the grandparents. His father named Woodard as beneficiary of the farm on a transfer on death deed, but the grandparents asserted it violated an anti-transfer provision in the contract and canceled the contract. The Minnesota Court of Appeals agreed with the grandparents, allowing them to take back the farm. The state Supreme Court declined to review the case.

“He was trying to give me the farm,” Woodard said. He is pursuing an unjust enrichment case against his grandmother now, because his father had made payments on the farm for 23 years. The lawyer for the grandmother had no comment.

A transfer on death deed might successfully pass along the house but still complicate how expenses, debts and taxes are paid, said Stacy Singer, national practice leader for trust and wealth advisory services at Northern Trust. Those are all things that can be spelled out in a will or trust but not in a deed.

CLICK HERE TO READ MORE ON FOXBUSINESS.COM

In one case that Singer handled, an 80-year-old man left his girlfriend his $700,000 house via a transfer on death deed. She got a surprise $25,000 tax bill to pay her share of the Illinois estate tax.

She probably could have avoided that tax bill if her boyfriend had just left her the house as a specific bequest in his will.

Read the full article here

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
Previous ArticleWATCH: Elissa Slotkin says SAVE America Act would make it ‘hard for any Democrat’ to win an election
Next Article Hochul’s Halt of Data Center Construction in New York Is Met With Dismay

Related Posts

Fed holds interest rate steady as it waits to see impact of tariffs

Fed holds interest rate steady as it waits to see impact of tariffs

July 14, 2026
How Trump’s tax bill will affect your money

How Trump’s tax bill will affect your money

July 14, 2026
Financial expert warns against the hidden traps of ‘buy now, pay later’ services

Financial expert warns against the hidden traps of ‘buy now, pay later’ services

July 14, 2026
Retirement account balances dip in 1st quarter, but savers keep contributing

Retirement account balances dip in 1st quarter, but savers keep contributing

July 14, 2026
Expert debunks common social media myths about saving, debt and buy now pay later

Expert debunks common social media myths about saving, debt and buy now pay later

July 14, 2026
Expert debunks common social media myths about saving, debt and buy now pay later

Americans increasingly abandon financial planning as economic pressures mount

July 14, 2026
Add A Comment
Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Follow us
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Instagram
  • Pinterest
Highlights
Dave & Buster’s moves further into nightlife with nationwide rave series Business

Dave & Buster’s moves further into nightlife with nationwide rave series

By Press RoomJuly 16, 20260

Dave & Buster’s is taking its arcade experience deeper into nightlife with a new nationwide…

Nevada Lt. Gov.: Elon Musk could make space tourism state’s next big industry

Nevada Lt. Gov.: Elon Musk could make space tourism state’s next big industry

July 16, 2026
Bloodhound K-9 unit helps bring Georgia manhunt to end with arrest of suspect accused of shooting woman

Bloodhound K-9 unit helps bring Georgia manhunt to end with arrest of suspect accused of shooting woman

July 15, 2026
Trump says US rebuilding military as Iran’s IRGC loses 90% of weapons capability

Trump says US rebuilding military as Iran’s IRGC loses 90% of weapons capability

July 15, 2026

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest news and updates directly to your inbox.

About
About

Republican Investor is one of the top news portals to cover business, personal finance and second amendment news, follow us to get the latest news.

We're social, connect with us:

Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram LinkedIn VKontakte
Popular Posts
No, Lamar Jackson doesn’t deserve to be ranked among the NFL’s top 10 quarterbacks

No, Lamar Jackson doesn’t deserve to be ranked among the NFL’s top 10 quarterbacks

July 16, 2026
Dave & Buster’s moves further into nightlife with nationwide rave series

Dave & Buster’s moves further into nightlife with nationwide rave series

July 16, 2026
Nevada Lt. Gov.: Elon Musk could make space tourism state’s next big industry

Nevada Lt. Gov.: Elon Musk could make space tourism state’s next big industry

July 16, 2026
Latest News
Bloodhound K-9 unit helps bring Georgia manhunt to end with arrest of suspect accused of shooting woman

Bloodhound K-9 unit helps bring Georgia manhunt to end with arrest of suspect accused of shooting woman

July 15, 2026
Trump says US rebuilding military as Iran’s IRGC loses 90% of weapons capability

Trump says US rebuilding military as Iran’s IRGC loses 90% of weapons capability

July 15, 2026
Tom Brady sends clear message to Raiders rookie Fernando Mendoza: Earn your opportunity

Tom Brady sends clear message to Raiders rookie Fernando Mendoza: Earn your opportunity

July 15, 2026
Copyright © 2026. Republican Investor. All rights reserved.
  • Privacy
  • Terms of use
  • Press Release
  • Advertise
  • Contact

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.