We Coordinate with Your Attorney — You Don't Carry the Property Alone
Get Your Cash Offer in 24 Hours
Yes, you can sell a house in probate in Wisconsin. Under Wisconsin Statute 851, the personal representative of an estate has the authority to list, accept offers on, and close on real property while probate is ongoing. The exact steps depend on whether the estate is in formal or informal probate, and the court typically authorizes the sale before closing. A cash buyer removes the months-long retail listing process and closes on the estate's timeline — whether the family needs that to be quick or wants to take longer to handle other affairs first.
Updated May 2026. Informational only — not legal advice. Consult a Wisconsin attorney for case-specific guidance.
We're not a national call center. We're a local, veteran-owned Wisconsin business that's spent 10 years helping families resolve probate properties without making it their second job.
We buy the property directly for cash, working alongside the estate's attorney and the Wisconsin probate court's requirements. We don't fight the timeline — we work within it. Probate has steps that need to happen in order, and our job is to make our side of the transaction as smooth as possible so the family can focus on everything else.
We buy as-is. The house can be packed, dated, in rough condition — none of it matters. The estate proceeds go where they need to go under the court's direction. Heirs get distributions. Debts get settled. The property stops costing the estate money every month it sits.
Wisconsin probate has stages, and where you are in those stages affects what's possible. Here's the map.
The process is beginning. The personal representative is being appointed, assets are being inventoried, and the family is just starting to absorb everything. Knowing the house has a buyer ready removes one major decision from a long list of decisions — even if the sale doesn't actually close for several months.
Wisconsin offers both formal and informal probate. Informal is faster and less court-intensive. Formal involves the court at most steps. Either way, the property can typically be marketed and put under contract while probate is in progress — with the sale closing once the court authorizes it.
Once the court has authorized the sale, we close on whatever timeline the estate needs. The proceeds go to the estate to be distributed under the will or under Wisconsin intestate succession law. We work at the pace the family wants — faster if you need to settle and move on, longer if there are other estate matters still being handled.
Many families dealing with Wisconsin probate live elsewhere. We handle the local side entirely — the property, the closing logistics, the coordination with the attorney. You don't need to keep flying back.
Common in probate. A fair cash offer often becomes the option that finally works for everyone because it's clean, fast, and stops the ongoing cost of holding the property. We can walk you through how to bring an offer to the family.
If you've inherited a property that's tied up in Wisconsin probate — whether you live in state or out — here's what we do to make it simple.
An empty house in probate doesn't pause its bills. Taxes, insurance, utilities, and upkeep all keep running while the estate works through court. Meanwhile the property often needs work no one has the time or money to do, and heirs may disagree about what to do.
We carry the parts we can. We coordinate with the attorney. We work at the pace the court allows. We don't add to anyone's stress. When the court authorizes the sale, we close and the family moves forward.
There's more than one way to handle a Wisconsin probate property. Here's how the most common options compare.
Your situation is complicated. The path out doesn't have to be. Here's exactly what happens when you reach out.
Where probate stands, who's involved, and the condition of the property. You don't need every document — just enough for us to understand the picture.
We work alongside the estate's attorney and the court's requirements. We've done this before and we move at the pace probate allows without creating extra work for you.
Once probate permits the sale, we close on a timeline that works for the estate — as-is, no repairs, with the proceeds going where they need to go.
We're not a national call center. We're a Wisconsin business that's been here, with these homeowners, through ten years and hundreds of conversations.
Brendan Piper served before he closed his first deal. The same discipline and integrity he brought home is the standard we work to every day.
A decade of doing this in one state. We know the courts, the lenders, the timelines, and what's actually possible at every stage.
If it's not a fair outcome for the homeowner, we don't do the deal. That's not a marketing line. It's why our reputation is what it is in this state.
These are the people we've helped. Every situation is different, but the principle is the same: we listen, we move fast, we treat people right.
"They made the process so easy. I was facing foreclosure and they helped me close in just 10 days. Highly recommend!"
"Fair offer, no hassle, and they closed on my timeline. Couldn't ask for a better experience."
"I inherited a property that needed a lot of work. They bought it as-is and saved me thousands in repairs."
Probate is unfamiliar territory for most families, and bad information makes a hard time harder. Here's what's actually true under Wisconsin law.
"You can't sell a house until probate is completely finished."
Wrong. Wisconsin Statute 851 allows the personal representative to list, accept offers on, and close on real property during probate. Sales during probate are common — and often the cleanest way to settle the estate.
"Probate sales always require months of court hearings."
Not necessarily. Informal probate in Wisconsin moves faster than most families expect, with fewer court appearances. Even formal probate can move at a reasonable pace once the personal representative is appointed and authorized.
"We have to clean out the house before anyone will buy it."
Not with us. We buy as-is, contents and all. Take what's meaningful to the family — the photos, the documents, the heirlooms — and leave the rest. We handle what stays behind.
"If the heirs can't agree, the house just has to sit there."
Often a fair cash offer is exactly the option that gets everyone to yes. It's clean, fast, and removes the ongoing financial pressure of holding the property. We can help you bring an offer to the family in a way that works.
Straight answers for executors, personal representatives, and heirs.
You're dealing with enough. The property doesn't have to be one more thing you handle alone. A short, no-pressure conversation tells you what's possible.