
When someone dies, a home is often the first thing families start asking about. It may be the most valuable asset in the estate. It may also be where a surviving spouse is still living, where grown children have sentimental attachments, or where multiple family members believe they have some claim. The question of what happens to the house is understandable, and in Alabama, the answer depends almost entirely on one thing: how the property was titled at the time of death.
That distinction matters more than most people realize, and it is worth understanding clearly before a situation requires it.
Ownership Structure Is the Starting Point
In Alabama, the legal outcome for real estate after a death follows the structure of ownership, not the assumptions of family members. A spouse who has lived in a home for decades does not automatically own it simply by virtue of that relationship. A child who has been helping maintain the property does not gain legal rights to it because of that involvement. What controls the outcome is what the deed says and how ownership is legally structured.
This is one of the more common points of confusion in estate administration. Families often discover that a property was titled differently than they expected, and that discovery changes the entire process they face.
When the Home Goes Through Probate
If a person owns a home solely in their own name at the time of death, that property becomes part of their probate estate. Probate is the court-supervised process through which a deceased person’s assets are identified, debts are addressed, and property is transferred to the appropriate people.
In Alabama, that process runs through the probate court in the county where the property is located. The personal representative of the estate, sometimes called the executor, takes on legal authority to manage the property during that process. That person cannot simply transfer the home to a family member because it seems like the right thing to do. They must follow the legal process, which means either carrying out the instructions in the will or, if there is no will, distributing the property according to Alabama’s intestate succession laws.
Real estate held solely in one name does not move quickly. The probate process takes time, and the property is effectively in a holding pattern until the court process concludes.
When the Home Passes Without Probate
Not all real estate has to go through probate. The way a property is titled can allow it to transfer to another person automatically at death, without any court involvement.
Joint tenancy with right of survivorship works this way. When two people own property as joint tenants with right of survivorship, the surviving owner receives the deceased owner’s interest automatically at death. The transfer happens by operation of law. The surviving owner typically records a certified copy of the death certificate with the probate court to create a clear chain of title, but the property itself does not become part of the estate and does not require a probate proceeding.
It is worth noting that 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, and 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. This catches many families off guard, particularly when a deed was prepared years ago without careful attention to that specific language.
When Property Is Held in a Trust
A home that has been properly transferred into a revocable living trust during the owner’s lifetime does not go through probate at death. It passes according to the terms of the trust, administered by the successor trustee named in that document.
When the person who created the trust dies, the successor trustee steps into a role with clear legal authority to manage and distribute the property. There is no court proceeding required. There is no waiting period tied to a probate process. The successor trustee follows the trust’s instructions and carries out the transfer accordingly.
This is one reason families choose to place real estate into a trust as part of their planning. When it is done correctly, the person responsible for the property has immediate authority to act.
Where Confusion Most Often Arises
One of the most frequent issues in estate administration involves assumptions about how property was titled that turn out to be incorrect. A home purchased by a married couple decades ago may still be titled solely in one spouse’s name. Property inherited from a parent may be owned as tenants in common with siblings, making those siblings co-owners with equal legal standing in any decision about the property.
Surviving spouses face a specific and often misunderstood situation in Alabama. A surviving spouse has certain homestead rights that may allow them to remain in the family home during estate administration. Those rights are real and meaningful. They do not, however, automatically resolve the question of who owns the property or how it will be transferred once the estate is settled. The legal title still controls the ultimate outcome.
The point is not that any of these situations are unusual. Most of them are completely ordinary. The point is that the outcome is driven by legal structure, and families often do not find out how that structure works until they are already in the middle of navigating a loss.
Why the Titling Decision Is a Planning Decision
How a home is titled is not a default. It is a choice, and that choice carries real consequences. Deciding between sole ownership, joint tenancy with right of survivorship, tenancy in common, a transfer on death deed, or placing the property in a trust leads to meaningfully different outcomes for the family left behind.
The person responsible for carrying out that plan, whether a personal representative or a successor trustee, will deal directly with whatever structure exists at the time of death. If the titling creates ambiguity or requires extended court involvement, that person’s role becomes more difficult and the process becomes longer and more costly for everyone involved.
Thinking through how real estate is titled is a natural and important part of building a complete estate plan. It is not a separate concern. It connects directly to every other decision a person makes about their family, their assets, and what they want to happen after they are gone.
Understanding the System Before You Need It
Real estate is often where families feel the most uncertainty during an already difficult time. The legal system has clear rules for how property transfers at death. Understanding those rules in advance makes the process more predictable, and it gives the people carrying out the plan a clearer path forward.
If you would like to learn more about how your property is currently titled and what that means for your estate plan, Heircraft Planning is here to help. You can schedule a consultation at heircraftplanning.com or by phone at 251-398-0081.
Free Resources from Heircraft Planning
For Alabama families who want to explore these topics further, Heircraft Planning offers several free resources. You can download our free estate planning guide for Alabama families, watch an on-demand webinar, or browse the blog library at heircraftplanning.com. Free in-person seminars are held throughout the year in Mobile. View upcoming dates and register at heircraftplanning.com/upcoming-events.
