Probate Checklist

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California Probate Real Estate Checklist — San Gabriel Valley & Orange County

Step-by-step guide for personal representatives in Diamond Bar, Walnut, Chino Hills, Brea & surrounding communities

A step-by-step reference guide for personal representatives, executors, and families navigating the real estate side of probate in California. Use this alongside guidance from your probate attorney — not as a substitute for it.

Key fact: Once Letters Testamentary or Letters of Administration are issued by the court — typically within 5–6 weeks of filing — the personal representative has legal authority to list and sell the property. You do not need to wait for the full probate process to complete. Contact a probate REALTOR early, even before letters are issued, so you are ready to move immediately.
Important: This checklist is a general educational resource only. California probate procedures vary based on estate complexity, IAEA authority granted, and other factors. Always work with a qualified probate attorney for your specific situation.

Phase 1 — Immediate Steps After Death

  • Secure the property — Change locks, ensure the home is safe and not accessible to unauthorized parties.
  • Maintain insurance coverage — Contact the homeowner’s insurance carrier to notify them of the death and ensure coverage remains active.
  • Continue paying property expenses — Mortgage, property taxes, utilities, and HOA dues should continue to be paid.
  • Locate the will and all estate documents — Search for the original signed will, trust documents, deeds, and financial account records.
  • Do not remove or dispose of personal property — Wait until proper legal authority is established.

Phase 2 — Opening Probate

  • Hire a probate attorney — Essential for navigating California’s court requirements. We can refer you to trusted probate attorneys.
  • File the petition for probate — Your attorney files with the California Superior Court in the county where the deceased resided.
  • Publish notice of petition — Required notice in a local newspaper per California probate code.
  • Obtain Letters Testamentary or Letters of Administration — Court-issued document granting you authority to act on behalf of the estate.
  • Contact a probate real estate specialist — Once letters are issued you can list immediately. Call us at 909.610.5188 for a free evaluation.
  • Obtain the estate’s tax ID (EIN) — Required to open an estate bank account and manage estate finances.
  • Open an estate bank account — All estate funds should flow through this account for proper accounting.

Phase 3 — Property Evaluation

  • Request a free property evaluation — Call us at 909.610.5188 for a no-obligation market analysis.
  • Obtain a formal appraisal — A court-approved appraisal (date-of-death value) is typically required. We can coordinate this.
  • Review title — Confirm how title is held, check for liens, judgments, or encumbrances against the property.
  • Assess property condition — Walk through with your real estate agent to identify needed repairs and deferred maintenance.
  • Determine IAEA authority — Confirm with your attorney whether full or limited authority applies, which determines if court confirmation of the sale is required.

Phase 4 — Preparing the Property

  • Organize and document personal property — Inventory all belongings before removal for estate accounting purposes.
  • Coordinate estate sale or liquidation — We can refer trusted estate liquidators and appraisers for valuables.
  • Arrange property cleanout — Professional cleanout crews can be coordinated through our vendor network.
  • Arrange charitable donations — Unclaimed items can often be donated, providing potential tax advantages for the estate.
  • Determine repair strategy — With your agent, decide which repairs add more value than they cost. Avoid over-improving.
  • Consider staging — Staged properties typically sell faster and for more money.

Phase 5 — Listing and Marketing

  • Establish listing price — Based on appraisal, market analysis, and estate goals (speed vs. maximum value).
  • Sign listing agreement — Formal agreement with your probate real estate agent.
  • Complete required disclosures — California requires specific disclosures even in probate sales.
  • List on MLS and begin marketing — Active marketing to qualified buyers, agents, and investors.
  • Notify all heirs and beneficiaries — Required under California law regardless of IAEA authority level.
  • Review offers with attorney — All offers should be reviewed with your probate attorney before acceptance.

Phase 6 — Under Contract and Closing

  • If court confirmation required (limited authority) — File petition for court confirmation. Your attorney manages this process.
  • Open escrow — Your agent coordinates with an escrow company experienced in probate transactions.
  • Complete buyer inspections — Typically sold as-is but buyer inspections still occur for informational purposes.
  • Clear title — Work with title company to resolve any liens or encumbrances prior to close.
  • Close escrow — Funds are disbursed to the estate account.

Phase 7 — Closing the Estate

  • File final accounting with the court — Detailed record of all income, expenses, and proposed final distributions.
  • Pay remaining creditors and taxes — All valid claims must be settled before final distribution.
  • Distribute remaining assets to heirs — Per will provisions or court-ordered distribution plan.
  • File estate tax returns — Work with a CPA familiar with estate taxation. Deadlines apply.
  • Petition for final discharge — Your attorney files to formally close the estate and discharge the personal representative.

We’re With You at Every Step

From free property evaluation to coordinating cleanout, repairs, listing, and closing — we handle the real estate side so you can focus on the family.

This checklist is for general educational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Jack Ma | REALTOR® | DRE #01869426 | Century 21 Masters | Certified Probate & Trust Specialist