That vacation cabin in the mountains or the rental condo near the beach might be a key part of your retirement dream. It’s an asset you’ve worked hard for, and naturally, you want it to benefit your family for generations. But here is the reality check: if you hold real estate across multiple states, you might be inadvertently creating a legal and administrative maze for your beneficiaries.
Owning property outside your home state introduces layers of complexity to your estate plan that are easy to overlook until it is too late. Without the right strategy, what should be a generous inheritance can turn into a costly, time-consuming burden for the people you care about most.
To understand the risk, we have to talk about probate. This is the court-supervised process of administering your estate after you pass away. Generally, if real estate is titled in your name, that property must go through probate in the state where it is physically located.
This rule creates a multiplier effect on headaches for your heirs. If you own your primary residence in California, a vacation home in Nevada, and a rental property in Oregon, your estate could face three separate probate proceedings.
This scenario, often called "ancillary probate," creates significant friction:
Fortunately, there is a smart way to bypass this multi-state gridlock. A common and effective strategy is transferring your out-of-state properties into a revocable trust, often referred to as a "living trust."
The concept is straightforward. When you transfer real estate into a trust, you are technically changing the ownership. You no longer own the property as an individual; the trust owns it. Because the trust is a legal entity that doesn't "die," the property held within it generally does not have to go through probate.
Your trustee—the person you appoint to manage the trust—can distribute or manage the property according to your specific instructions without needing a judge's permission in every state where you own land. A single revocable trust can hold real estate in multiple states, consolidating your estate into one manageable bucket and potentially eliminating the need for ancillary probate entirely.
While a trust is a powerful tool, it isn't a magic wand. You cannot simply sign a document and assume everything is sorted. As your partners in financial strategy, we know that the execution is just as important as the idea.
Transferring real estate to a trust requires preparing a new deed for each property and recording it in the appropriate county. If this step is missed or done incorrectly, the trust won't work as intended.
Furthermore, you need to consider the broader financial picture before making these transfers. We always recommend looking at the specific implications for each property:
Your estate plan should be a roadmap for your family’s future, not an obstacle course. If you currently own real estate in multiple states, or if you are eyeing a purchase across state lines, now is the time to review how that asset fits into your broader financial picture.
At SD Mayer & Associates, we help you look beyond the immediate purchase to see the long-term impact on your estate. We can assess the tax and financial implications of your holdings and work alongside your legal advisors to structure a plan that protects your family and preserves your hard-earned assets. Let’s make sure your legacy is as straightforward as it is generous. Contact us today.