The Florida Probate Reality.
Florida probate typically follows one of two tracks: Summary Administration and
Formal Administration. Summary Administration is generally used for estates valued under $75,000
(excluding exempt property) or when the decedent has been gone for more than two years. It can be faster, but
it still requires a court-approved petition and careful documentation.
Formal Administration is more common for higher-value estates or complex family structures. The court appoints a
personal representative, creditor windows must run, and the case can extend for months depending on county
backlogs, title defects, disputes among heirs, or required approvals for sale.
If the house is the largest estate asset, waiting for the "perfect" retail listing can conflict with fiduciary duties.
In many cases, the better strategy is a clear, cash-backed disposition that helps close probate efficiently and
protects beneficiaries from additional carrying risk.
Summary vs. Formal Administration.
In Florida, if the estate is valued under $75,000 (excluding the primary home) or the decedent has been passed for 2+ years,
you may qualify for Summary Administration, a faster track. If not, Formal Administration is required, which needs a
Personal Representative (PR).
The Cost of Waiting.
While probate progresses, the property keeps billing the estate. Property taxes continue,
HOA and condo dues keep accruing, utilities remain active for showings or security, and lawn or
code-compliance maintenance often becomes mandatory.
The biggest wildcard in 2026 is insurance. Vacant-home policies are harder to secure, often carry
strict exclusions, and can jump dramatically at renewal. One missed payment or underwriting issue can leave the
estate exposed to storm, water, or liability losses while the home sits empty.
Each extra month can quietly erase equity that should have gone to heirs. A direct, as-is sale can stop recurring
costs, convert uncertainty into liquidity, and shorten the estate's administrative burden.
The Insurance Leak.
2026 Insurance Crisis: Vacant probate homes are now almost impossible to insure through traditional carriers. We buy homes
with lapsed policies or high-risk status, removing the liability from the heirs immediately.