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What Connecticut Probate Law Actually Says About Selling an Inherited Home
Connecticut probate is its own animal. Under Connecticut General Statutes § 45a-376, within fourteen days of the fiduciary's appointment by the Probate Court, the court publishes notice to creditors. From that publication date, creditors have one hundred and fifty days to present claims against the estate. The fiduciary — that is the executor named in the will, or the administrator the court appoints if there was no will — cannot sell real estate during that window unless the will explicitly grants the power to sell, and even then most fiduciaries wait until the creditor period closes before conveying the property.
In practice, that means a Connecticut estate that owns real property runs nine to twelve months from the date of death to the date the property can close at the absolute earliest. Many estates run longer if there is a dispute among heirs, an estate tax filing required under § 45a-273 thresholds, or contested creditor claims handled under § 45a-378. The traditional advice is to wait, list with an agent, and accept whatever the timeline becomes. The cash sale advice is different: get the offer in writing now, and align the close date with the Probate Court's release. The decision becomes a single yes-or-no, not a year of compounding decisions.
The Real Cost of the Alternative — Why "Just Listing It" Adds Up Faster Than You Think
Fairfield County's median single-family home sold for roughly $654,000 in January 2026, with the typical home value running closer to $799,000 in commuter towns. On a $654,000 home, a standard 5.5% agent commission is $35,970. Add seller-paid closing costs of around 1% to 2%, which is another $6,500 to $13,000. If the home needs a buyer-inspection concession — and inherited homes almost always need some kind of concession because of deferred maintenance — that is another $5,000 to $15,000.
Then there are the carrying costs. Connecticut has the highest property tax burden in the United States, with the statewide average mill rate at 28.22 and many Fairfield County towns running higher. On a typical Naugatuck Valley single-family home, that is roughly $7,000 to $12,000 per year in property tax alone. Add homeowner's insurance on a vacant property — which costs more, not less, than insurance on an occupied one — utilities to keep the heat on so pipes don't freeze, and the lawn-care contract to keep the town from citing you. The traditional listing route on a $654,000 inherited Fairfield County home easily exceeds $55,000 to $75,000 in total cost over a six-month timeline before either you or your siblings see a dollar.
CT Homeowners Love Us!
Here’s how HHB helped people move forward—quickly, quietly, and on their own terms.
Sharon Kiraly
Fairfield, CT
..he made a very fair and equitable offer to purchase my home of 30 years and was sensitive to all my cherished memories of living there, raising my family, and then parting, making it a bearable transition.
I’m very grateful to Daniel Riccio.
Louis - Macdonald
Road Trumbull, CT
The entire process ran smooth and the company was extremely accommodating to our family's needs. They were understanding and gave us the opportunity to have extra time after the sale to sort through our belongings. Whatever we no longer wanted they kindly let us keep on the property and they took care of it for us.
I would highly recommend working with them!
Karen Mavilia
Howe Ave Shelton, CT
Second time with Dan Riccio and and his all-star team -- a rental property in 2019, now my home in January 2025. Flawless synchronicity from start to finish. Downright upright ethics -- so rare today. All commitments met and expectations exceeded. 24/7 project management, impressive array of skilled contractors resolved all issues in a timely professional manner. Best of all, I simply took what I wanted and left all remaining contents.
How Selling a House in Probate Can Save You Money
Connecticut has the fifth-oldest housing stock in the country. In Bridgeport, the typical home was built in 1965, and roughly one in four was built before 1950. The Naugatuck Valley corridor — Shelton, Derby, Ansonia, Seymour, Stratford — concentrates exactly that post-war single-family inventory. The original owners of those homes bought them in the late forties, fifties, and sixties. They are now in their eighties and nineties, or they have already passed.
The result is a wave of inherited Connecticut homes arriving on the Probate Court docket at the same time that the heirs — adult children now in their forties, fifties, and sixties — have neither the time nor the proximity to manage the renovation those homes need. Many of those heirs live in New York City. They are commuting up I-95 or the Metro-North on Saturdays. They are reading contractor estimates from across the kitchen table at home in Brooklyn. They are losing momentum on every front. Helpful Home Buyers is in Shelton, knows the Naugatuck Valley housing vintage, and has been buying these exact properties for fifteen years.
What a Cash Sale With Helpful Home Buyers Actually Looks Like
Five steps. No commissions. No showings. No buyer-financing fall-through risk.
- Step 1 — You reach out. Fill out the form below, or call Dan or Meghan directly. We will ask three or four basic questions about the property — Shelton or Bridgeport or Stamford location, approximate square footage, whether the estate is still in Probate Court, and what condition the house is in. Five minutes.
- Step 2 — One property visit. We come to the property once, on your schedule, walk through with you, and make our own assessment. You do not clean it. You do not stage it. You do not move anything you do not want to move — whatever you decide to leave behind, we will handle. One visit, and we will not renegotiate after.
- Step 3 — Written cash offer within 24 to 48 hours. A real number, in writing, no contingencies. You take that offer to your siblings, to the Probate Court fiduciary, to your attorney — whomever needs to see it before the estate can sign.
- Step 4 — Close on your timeline. We close when the Probate Court releases the property — whether that is two weeks after you accept the offer or two months. Connecticut probate runs on its own clock; we wait on you, not the other way around. We can close as fast as ten days from court release if your estate is ready.
- Step 5 — Proceeds at closing. No commission deducted. No seller-paid closing costs. No inspection concessions. The number on the written offer is the number that funds at closing — and the funds go directly to the estate, to be distributed by the fiduciary according to the will or by intestacy under CGS § 45a-437.
Read More About Your Specific Situation
Inherited home sales fall into three common patterns. We have written a dedicated guide for each one. Pick the one that matches where you are.
→ How long does Connecticut probate actually take? — the real timeline from filing to closing the estate, step by step.
→ Selling your parents' Connecticut house from out of state — for heirs in NYC, Boston, or anywhere outside CT, managing the property remotely.
→ Multiple siblings inherited a Connecticut house — now what? — when the heirs disagree, how a single written cash offer breaks the deadlock.
Ready to Get a Number and Make One Final Decision?
One offer. One closing date. One decision. That is the entire transaction. Whether you are managing the estate from Shelton or from Brooklyn, whether the house needs $80,000 in repairs or $8,000, whether you and your siblings agree on everything or nothing — Helpful Home Buyers can put a written cash offer in front of you within forty-eight hours.