Three adult siblings are gathered in their late mother’s Brooklyn brownstone. For decades, this house was the center of their family. Now, it’s the center of a legal problem. Their mother died without a Will, and while she always said she wanted the house to be “split evenly,” her words have no legal force. The siblings now face a nine-to-twelve-month journey through Kings County Surrogate’s Court, where a judge—not their mother’s wishes—will dictate the future of their family’s most significant asset.
I see this situation far too often. The family home is more than real estate; it’s a vessel for memory and a cornerstone of generational wealth. But goodwill and assumptions are not a legal plan. In New York, the question of who gets the house is answered by documents and statutes, not by conversations around the dinner table.
The Last Will: Your Parent’s Final Instructions
The clearest path to inheriting a home is through a valid Last Will and Testament. If your parent left a properly executed Will, that document acts as a direct instruction to the Surrogate’s Court. The Will names an executor—the person entrusted to manage the estate—and specifies who should inherit the property, known as the beneficiary.
But the Will is not a magic key. The document itself doesn’t transfer the deed. The Will must first be admitted to probate, a court process that validates the document and officially appoints the executor. Once appointed, the executor has the authority to pay the estate’s debts and, ultimately, sign a new deed transferring the house from the estate to the designated heir or heirs. This process is public and can take many months, but it provides a clear, court-supervised transfer of title.
Without a probated Will, you cannot legally sell or refinance the property. The chain of title is broken, and only the court can mend it.
No Will? New York Law Decides for You.
When a person dies without a Will, they are said to have died “intestate.” In these cases, New York law provides a rigid formula for who inherits property. This is governed by the Estates, Powers and Trusts Law (EPTL), specifically EPTL § 4-1.1. This statute does not consider your parent’s intentions or verbal promises; it simply follows a predetermined order of succession.
For a parent who dies with a spouse and children, the spouse inherits the first $50,000 of the estate plus half of the remainder, with the other half split among the children. If there is no surviving spouse, the children inherit everything in equal shares.
This forced co-ownership can create serious friction. I have worked with families where one sibling wants to sell the house for its cash value, another wants to live in it, and a third wants to rent it out for income. Because they are all equal owners by law, they must all agree on a course of action. When they can’t, their only recourse is often a costly and emotionally damaging court action to force a sale of the property.
Intestacy removes your family’s control and hands it to the state legislature. A deliberate plan ensures your family’s legacy is not left to a statutory default.
Beyond the Will: The Power of the Deed and Trusts
Sometimes, the answer to who gets the house isn’t in the Will at all—it’s written on the deed itself. The way title is held can override any instructions in a Will because it creates an automatic transfer upon death.
There are two common forms of co-ownership:
- Joint Tenants with Rights of Survivorship (JTWROS): If the deed lists two owners as “joint tenants with rights of survivorship,” the surviving owner automatically absorbs the deceased owner’s share. The property does not pass through the estate and is not subject to probate. This is common for married couples.
- Tenants in Common: This is the default form of co-ownership in New York. Each owner holds a distinct, separate share (e.g., 50/50). When one owner dies, their share does not automatically go to the other owner. Instead, it passes to their beneficiaries through their Will or, if there is no Will, through intestacy.
Another powerful tool for directing the transfer of a home is a trust. By placing the house into a revocable or irrevocable trust, your parent could have designated a trustee to manage the property and specified exactly who receives it upon their death. A transfer via a trust is private, avoids Surrogate’s Court entirely, and can provide for more complex wishes—such as allowing a surviving spouse to live in the home for their lifetime before it passes to the children.
Inheritance Is More Than Just a Deed
Receiving the keys to the family home is just the beginning. Inheritance comes with financial responsibilities. A house may still have a mortgage, requires property tax payments, and needs ongoing maintenance. During the months—or years—of estate administration, who pays these bills? These costs are typically paid from the estate’s assets, but if the estate has little cash, the heirs may have to front these expenses to protect the property from foreclosure or neglect.
The most prudent estate plans create a contingency for this, setting aside funds to maintain the home until it can be sold or formally distributed. A failure to plan for these carrying costs can force a premature sale, often at a price below market value, simply to stop the financial drain.
The transfer of a family home is a significant moment in a family’s history. It can be a source of stability or a catalyst for conflict. The difference often lies in whether a parent was intentional in their planning.
If you are now the custodian of your family’s legacy, the first step is clarity. We can begin with a review of the current deed to your family’s property to confirm how it is titled and discuss its likely path through a future estate.




