TL;DR — Key facts before you read further:
- Arizona probate typically takes 6–12 months; informal (uncontested) is 6–8 months, formal (contested) is 12+ months.
- You cannot close a sale until the Personal Representative has court-issued authority — but you can market the home while probate is pending.
- Arizona has no state inheritance tax and no state estate tax. Federal estate tax only hits estates above $15 million (2026).
- The stepped-up basis (IRC § 1014) resets your cost basis to the date-of-death value — if you sell quickly, capital gains tax is often near zero.
- If estate real property equity is under $300,000, you may bypass full probate using a Small Estate Affidavit (effective Sept. 26, 2025).
- Multiple heirs who disagree can delay a listed sale by months — a cash sale to a single buyer often resolves disputes faster.
Selling an inherited house in Arizona means navigating two separate processes at once: the legal probate process that transfers title, and the real estate decision about how and when to sell. Most families can sell within 6–12 months of the owner's death, depending on whether the estate goes through informal or formal probate, how many heirs are involved, and whether the home needs repairs before it can compete on the open market.
Not legal or tax advice. This guide explains how Arizona probate and home sales typically work, based on publicly available Arizona statutes and IRS rules. Every estate is different. Before making decisions, consult a licensed Arizona probate attorney for legal questions and a CPA or tax advisor for your specific capital gains situation.
Step 1: Understand the Arizona Probate Process
Probate is the court-supervised process that legally transfers a deceased person's assets — including real estate — to their heirs. In Arizona, you cannot transfer title to a buyer and close escrow until the probate court grants the Personal Representative (PR) authority to sell. The good news: you can list the home, accept offers, and even sign a purchase contract while probate is pending. You simply cannot fund and close until the authority is in place.
Informal Probate (6–8 months, most common)
Informal probate applies when the decedent left a valid will and all heirs agree on who should serve as Personal Representative, or when there is no will but the heirs are cooperative. There are no required court hearings — the PR is appointed administratively within a few weeks of filing. From there, the mandatory 4-month creditor-claim window (required by ARS Title 14) runs, during which the PR publishes a notice to creditors. Once that window closes and debts are settled, the PR can deed the property to the buyer. Total realistic timeline: 6–8 months.
Formal / Supervised Probate (12+ months)
Formal probate is required when heirs disagree about who should serve as PR, when the will is contested, or when a creditor disputes a debt. The court holds hearings, which adds months — and if parties take depositions or discovery, the timeline can stretch to 18–24 months. If you are selling an inherited home that is in formal probate, plan for a long wait, or consult your attorney about mediation options that might resolve heir disputes faster.
When You Can Skip Probate Entirely
Three situations allow a home transfer without opening a probate case:
- Beneficiary (Transfer-on-Death) Deed: If the deceased recorded a beneficiary deed naming you, the property transfers directly on death. You record the deed plus a certified death certificate with the county recorder — no court involved.
- Living Trust: Property held in a revocable living trust passes to beneficiaries outside of probate. The successor trustee has authority to sell immediately.
- Small Estate Affidavit (ARS § 14-3971, updated Sept. 26, 2025): If the net equity in Arizona real property is $300,000 or less, heirs may file an Affidavit of Succession to Real Property no sooner than six months after the date of death, bypassing full probate entirely. This threshold was raised from the prior $100,000 limit by HB 2116, signed March 31, 2025.
Maricopa County note: The Maricopa County Superior Court handles the vast majority of Arizona residential estate probate. Their Probate Resource Guide is available at superiorcourt.maricopa.gov and includes all required forms.
The Arizona Probate Timeline for Home Sales at a Glance
| Track | Typical Duration | Can You List? | Can You Close? | Court Hearings? |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Beneficiary Deed / Living Trust | 2–4 weeks (deed recording) | Yes, immediately | Yes, once deed recorded | None |
| Small Estate Affidavit (equity ≤ $300K) | 6 months minimum after death | Yes | Yes, after affidavit filed | None |
| Informal Probate (uncontested) | 6–8 months | Yes | After PR has Letters Testamentary | None required |
| Formal Probate (contested) | 12–24+ months | Yes | After court order authorizes sale | Yes — multiple |
Taxes on an Inherited Arizona Home — What You Actually Owe
Taxes on inherited property are one of the most misunderstood parts of this process. Here is the plain-language breakdown of what Arizona heirs actually face at the federal and state level.
Arizona Has No Inheritance Tax and No Estate Tax
Arizona eliminated its state estate tax in 2005. There is no Arizona inheritance tax — heirs owe nothing to the state simply for receiving property. This is not a gray area; it is settled Arizona law. The only tax exposure for most Arizona heirs comes from the federal level.
Federal Estate Tax: Only Very Large Estates
The federal estate tax applies only to estates exceeding the basic exclusion amount. As of 2026, that exclusion is $15 million per individual (or $30 million for married couples), permanently raised by the One Big Beautiful Bill signed on July 4, 2025. The vast majority of Arizona estates — including homes worth $500K, $800K, even $1.5 million — owe zero federal estate tax.
The Stepped-Up Basis: The Most Important Tax Concept for Heirs
Under IRC Section 1014, when you inherit a home, your cost basis is "stepped up" to the property's fair market value on the date the original owner died — not what they originally paid for it. This is the rule that eliminates most capital gains for heirs who sell quickly.
Without the step-up, you would have owed capital gains on $355,000 ($435,000 minus the original $80,000 purchase price). With the step-up, you owe gains only on the $15,000 appreciation that occurred after the date of death. Sell fast, and that number often rounds to zero.
If you hold the home for years before selling, the appreciation during your ownership period becomes taxable. This is one reason many heirs — particularly those dealing with a vacant Phoenix home — benefit from selling promptly rather than waiting.
For a deeper look at how the step-up calculation works in practice, see our companion guide: Stepped-Up Basis on an Inherited Home in Arizona — What It Means for Your Taxes.
What Happens When There Are Multiple Heirs
Multiple heirs are the single most common source of delays — and disputes — in Arizona inherited-home sales. The legal framework is straightforward; the human dynamics often are not.
The Personal Representative's Authority
The Personal Representative (PR) — sometimes called the executor — has a fiduciary duty to manage estate assets for the benefit of all beneficiaries. Under ARS Title 14, the PR has authority to sell real property without the unanimous consent of every heir. A single dissenting sibling cannot simply veto a sale.
However, any heir can petition the probate court to review the PR's actions, or allege breach of fiduciary duty. Even a petition that ultimately fails can delay a closing by several months while the court schedules and hears the challenge. This is not an uncommon tactic when one heir wants to keep the home or believes it is being sold below market value.
Why Cash Sales Simplify Multi-Heir Situations
A listed MLS sale on an inherited home requires ongoing coordination: scheduling showings around multiple family members' preferences, agreeing on a list price, negotiating repair requests, and then dividing proceeds at closing. Any breakdown in coordination can stall or kill the deal.
A cash sale to a buyer like SellFastAZ means one contract, one closing date, one check that the PR distributes to heirs according to the will or intestate law. There are no open houses to coordinate, no repair negotiations, and no buyer financing contingencies that can fall apart. For families spread across multiple states — common in Arizona estate situations — this simplicity has real value.
For a full breakdown of how multiple-heir disputes play out and how to resolve them, see: Selling an Inherited House with Multiple Heirs in Arizona.
Carrying costs add up fast. A vacant inherited home in Phoenix or Scottsdale typically costs $1,500–$3,500 per month to hold: property taxes, homeowner's insurance, utility minimums, and any HOA dues. Every month of delay between death and closing is money the estate is spending. Factor this into any comparison between a fast cash sale and a longer listed sale.
Your Options for Selling an Inherited Arizona Home
Once you have (or are close to having) legal authority to sell, you face a real estate decision: list on the MLS with an agent, or sell to a cash buyer. Neither is universally better. Here is what each looks like in practice for inherited homes.
Option 1: List With a Licensed Arizona Agent
A traditional listing gets the home in front of the widest pool of buyers and typically produces the highest gross sale price — assuming the home is in competitive condition and you have time. The tradeoffs for inherited homes specifically:
- Pre-sale repairs are often required to compete. Inherited homes frequently have deferred maintenance, dated finishes, or estate contents that must be cleared before listing.
- Carrying costs (taxes, insurance, utilities) accumulate during the 30–90 days the home sits on market plus a standard 30–45 day escrow period.
- Agent commissions typically run 5–6% of the sale price. On a $450,000 Phoenix home, that is $22,500–$27,000 off the top.
- Buyer repair requests after inspection can reopen negotiations — a particular friction point when multiple heirs must agree.
Option 2: Sell to a Cash Buyer As-Is
A cash offer on an inherited home is typically below full retail market value — cash buyers account for the repairs they will make, plus their margin. But the gap between a cash price and a net listed price (after commissions, repairs, carrying costs, and extended timelines) is often smaller than it first appears:
- No pre-sale repairs — cash buyers buy in current condition, contents and all in many cases.
- Close in 7–14 days after probate authority is in hand, stopping the carrying-cost clock.
- No agent commissions, no buyer repair demands, no financing contingencies.
- One clean transaction that the PR can execute and distribute without ongoing heir coordination.
The homes that benefit most from a cash sale: properties with significant deferred maintenance, estates with multiple heirs who live out of state, situations where the probate has already been drawn out and the family wants to close the chapter, and homes in areas where a quick cosmetic renovation would dramatically change the value (meaning the cash buyer's ARV math is working in your favor).
Option 3: Rent the Property
Some heirs consider renting the inherited home rather than selling. This can make sense if the market is soft, if the PR wants time to resolve estate matters, or if the heirs genuinely want to hold the asset. The downsides: it adds ongoing landlord obligations, it complicates the stepped-up basis tax advantage if you hold for years, and it delays the estate's final distribution. Renting also typically requires that the home be in habitable condition, which may still require investment.
Comparing Your Options: The Real Numbers
| Factor | List With Agent | Cash Sale (As-Is) | Rent & Hold |
|---|---|---|---|
| Gross sale price | Highest (retail) | Below retail (65–80% of ARV minus rehab) | N/A (no sale) |
| Commissions / fees | 5–6% of sale price | None | Property mgmt 8–10%/mo if hired |
| Pre-sale repairs | Often required ($5K–$50K+) | None required | Habitability repairs required |
| Time to close (once PR has authority) | 60–120 days (list + escrow) | 7–21 days | Ongoing — no close |
| Carrying costs during sale | $1,500–$3,500/month | Minimal (1–3 weeks) | Offset by rent (if occupied) |
| Heir coordination required | High (repairs, price, showings) | Low (one contract, one close) | High (ongoing decisions) |
| Capital gains risk | Low if sold within months of death | Low if sold within months of death | Increases with time held |
Scott's Approach to Inherited Homes in Arizona
When a family calls me about an inherited home, the first conversation isn't about price — it's about where the estate stands legally, who the heirs are, and what outcome actually makes sense. I've bought inherited homes where the PR needed to close in two weeks because the estate was hemorrhaging carrying costs. I've also referred families to a listing agent when the home was turnkey and the heirs had plenty of time and agreement.
If a cash offer is the right move, I'll show you the comps I used, the rehab estimate, and exactly how I got to the number. You can disagree — and if you have data that supports a higher price, I want to see it. The goal is a number that's fair given the actual condition of the home and the actual situation the estate is in.
→ See how SellFastAZ works with inherited properties
→ Inherited a Scottsdale home? How probate and cash sales work in Maricopa County's luxury market
→ How Scott's offer process works — step by step
→ About Scott Durham
Frequently Asked Questions About Selling an Inherited House in Arizona
Can you sell an inherited house before probate is complete in Arizona?
Generally no. In Arizona you cannot transfer title to a buyer until probate grants the Personal Representative authority to sell and the deed is properly recorded. There is one narrow exception: if the estate qualifies as a small estate (real property equity under $300,000 as of late 2025), an Affidavit of Succession to Real Property may be filed six months after death, bypassing full probate. If the home was held in a living trust or transferred via a beneficiary deed, probate is also skipped entirely. Otherwise, you must wait for Letters Testamentary or the court's order before you can close.
How long does Arizona probate take when you want to sell the house?
Informal probate (uncontested will or intestate with agreeable heirs) typically runs 6 to 8 months. Formal or supervised probate — triggered by a disputed will, contested heirship, or creditor complications — can take a year or longer. The mandatory 4-month creditor-claim window runs from the first notice publication and cannot be shortened regardless of which track you are on. Marketing the home while probate is pending is allowed; you simply cannot close escrow until the court-issued authority is in hand.
Do you pay capital gains tax when you sell an inherited house in Arizona?
Usually very little or none if you sell soon after inheriting. Under IRC Section 1014, your cost basis is stepped up to the property's fair market value on the date of the original owner's death. If you sell immediately at that value, your taxable gain is zero. Arizona has no state inheritance tax and no state estate tax. Federal estate tax only applies to estates exceeding $15 million per person as of 2026. If the home appreciates between the date of death and your sale date, only that appreciation is taxable as capital gains.
What happens when multiple heirs disagree on selling an inherited Arizona home?
The Personal Representative (executor) has authority under Arizona law (ARS Title 14) to manage and sell estate assets for the benefit of all beneficiaries. A dissenting heir cannot unilaterally block a sale, but they can petition the probate court to review the PR's actions or allege breach of fiduciary duty. In practice, one uncooperative heir can delay a sale by months through court motions. A cash sale to a single buyer — rather than a listed sale requiring unanimous cooperation — often resolves these disputes faster because the PR can execute the transaction without ongoing coordination among heirs.
Is it better to list an inherited Arizona home or sell it for cash?
It depends on the home's condition, the number of heirs, and how much time and money you want to invest. A listed sale typically nets more on paper but requires pre-sale repairs, ongoing carrying costs (taxes, insurance, utilities on a vacant home), agent commissions of 5–6%, and a 30–60 day escrow. A cash sale closes in as little as 7–14 days, requires no repairs, eliminates carrying costs, and simplifies the split among multiple heirs. Estates where probate is already drawn out, the home needs significant work, or heirs live out of state tend to benefit most from the cash route.
Does Arizona have an inheritance tax or estate tax on inherited property?
No. Arizona eliminated its state estate tax in 2005 and has never had a separate inheritance tax. The only estate tax you could owe is the federal estate tax, which as of 2026 applies only to estates exceeding $15 million per individual (permanently raised by the One Big Beautiful Bill, signed July 4, 2025). The vast majority of Arizona estates — including homes worth $500K, $800K, even $1.5 million — owe no estate tax at any level.
Sources cited in this guide:
Maricopa County Superior Court — Probate Resource Guide ·
Arizona Revised Statutes Title 14 (Trusts, Estates & Protective Proceedings) ·
ARS § 14-3971 Small Estate Affidavit (updated 2025) ·
HB 2116 — New Small Estate Limits Analysis (Gottlieb Law) ·
IRS — Estate and Gift Tax Updates ·
2026 Estate Tax Exemption: $15M Per Person (Lawvex) ·
Inheritance Tax in Arizona (HagEstad Law Group)