
When a client dies, real estate is often the first asset their family starts asking about. It is frequently the largest single asset in the estate, and it is the one most likely to create confusion, delay, and family conflict when the legal structure was not considered carefully during planning. For financial advisors working alongside clients on long-term wealth transfer, understanding how Alabama handles real property at death is a meaningful part of serving those clients well.
The core principle is straightforward. In Alabama, what happens to a home after death is determined by how the property was titled, not by what the family assumes, not by who lived there, and not by what a will says if the title structure bypasses probate entirely. That disconnect between expectation and legal reality is where most problems begin.
Ownership Structure Drives the Outcome
Each form of property ownership in Alabama produces a different result at death, and those results have real implications for estate administration, family dynamics, and the overall plan.
A home held solely in one person’s name becomes part of the probate estate. The personal representative, often called the executor, takes authority over the property, follows either the will’s instructions or Alabama’s intestate succession laws if no will exists, and manages the property through the court process until it can be transferred. That process takes time. The property is effectively in a holding pattern until the probate court concludes its work.
Joint tenancy with right of survivorship operates differently. When two owners hold title this way, the surviving owner receives the deceased owner’s interest automatically at death by operation of law. A certified copy of the death certificate is recorded to clear the title, and no probate proceeding is required for that asset.
Here is where advisors need to be particularly careful on behalf of Alabama clients. Alabama does not presume survivorship. Under Alabama law, joint ownership defaults to tenancy in common unless the deed clearly and specifically states otherwise. Tenancy in common means each owner holds a separate share. When one owner dies, their share does not pass to the surviving co-owner. It becomes part of the deceased owner’s estate and goes through probate. A deed prepared years ago that does not include the right language may not produce the outcome the client always assumed it would.
A home placed into a revocable living trust during the owner’s lifetime transfers according to the trust’s terms at death. No court involvement is required. The successor trustee steps into legal authority immediately and carries out the distribution as the trust directs.
Where Advisor Conversations Get Complicated
For advisors, the titling question is not just a legal technicality. It connects directly to the overall wealth transfer strategy and to the experience the client’s family will have when the time comes.
A surviving spouse living in a home that was titled solely in the deceased spouse’s name does have certain homestead rights under Alabama law that may allow them to remain in the property during estate administration. Those rights are real and meaningful. They do not, however, resolve the question of legal ownership or eliminate the need for probate. The surviving spouse may face a period of genuine uncertainty about a home they have lived in for years.
In blended family situations, this becomes even more complicated. If a client owns real estate as a tenant in common with children from a prior relationship, those children are legal co-owners with equal standing in any decision about the property. A surviving spouse’s interests and those children’s interests may not align.
When the titling structure does not match what a client intends, the mismatch does not get discovered until it matters most, usually in the middle of loss and grief.
What This Means for Clients You Work With
The practical question for advisors is how to identify where this kind of mismatch might exist.
Clients who purchased a home decades ago may not know how it is titled. Clients who inherited real estate may own it as tenants in common with siblings without fully understanding what that means. Clients who moved to Alabama from another state may carry assumptions from different legal frameworks. Clients who have remarried may have outdated title structures that no longer reflect their current family situation.
Any of these scenarios is worth flagging when reviewing a client’s overall plan. The titling question is not separate from the financial plan. It is part of it, and when it is overlooked, the consequences fall on the family left behind and on whoever is responsible for carrying out the estate.
Working Together for Your Clients
For professionals who work with clients on financial, tax, or long-term planning decisions, the titling question is worth understanding clearly. When a client’s situation suggests a mismatch between what they own and how it is structured, knowing where to direct that conversation is part of serving them well.
Heircraft Planning welcomes those referral conversations. Reach out or learn more at heircraftplanning.com.
