Can You Sell a House Before Probate Is Granted in the UK? (2026 Guide)

📋 Key Information — Selling a House Before Probate

✓  In most cases: No — you cannot legally complete a property sale before probate is granted

✓  However: you CAN market the property, accept offers and prepare the sale in parallel

✓  Exceptions exist: jointly owned property (joint tenants) and trust-held property may not require probate

✓  Completing a sale without probate exposes the executor to serious personal legal liability

✓  IHT must be paid before probate is granted — even if the estate has no liquid funds yet

✓  Average time from application to Grant: 16+ weeks in 2026

✓  Scotland operates differently — ‘Confirmation’ replaces probate and rules vary

✓  NPS Law can apply for probate and manage the property sale simultaneously

Losing someone you love is difficult enough without the added pressure of managing their property. If you are an executor — or a family member waiting for an estate to be resolved — one of the most pressing questions is often: can we sell the house now, or do we have to wait?

The short answer is that in most cases you cannot legally complete a property sale before probate is granted. But that does not mean you have to sit and do nothing. Understanding exactly what you can and cannot do — and when — is the difference between a 9-month administration and an unnecessary 18-month delay.

This guide sets out the legal position clearly, explains the exceptions, walks through what you can do in the meantime, and addresses the IHT funding problem that catches many executors off guard.

1. The Short Answer: Can You Sell Before Probate?

The legal position in England and Wales is clear: you cannot transfer legal ownership of a deceased person’s property — and therefore cannot complete a sale — until the Grant of Probate (or Letters of Administration, where there is no Will) has been issued by the Probate Registry.

However, there is an important distinction between completing a sale and preparing for one. The two are legally very different, and understanding this distinction can save you months.

Legal PositionPractical Notes
Market the property✅ Yes — permittedList as 'subject to probate'
Instruct an estate agent✅ Yes — permittedInform agent of probate status
Commission a RICS valuation✅ Yes — recommendedRequired for IHT calculation
Accept an offer✅ Yes — permittedMust disclose probate pending
Instruct a conveyancing solicitor✅ Yes — recommendedBegin preparation in parallel
Exchange of contracts❌ Not until Grant issuedLegal commitment requires authority
Legal completion❌ Not until Grant issuedTitle cannot transfer without Grant
Transfer title at Land Registry❌ Not until Grant issuedLR requires sealed Grant

[Infographic Needed: Can you sell before probate? — YES / NO / MAYBE 3-state visual]

2. When Does Probate Apply — and When Is It Not Needed?

Not every estate requires probate. Whether it is needed depends primarily on how the deceased’s assets were owned. Here is how to assess your situation.

Probate Is Required When:
  • The deceased owned property in their sole name — Land Registry will not transfer title without a sealed Grant
  • A bank or financial institution holds assets above approximately £50,000 in the deceased’s sole name — most banks require a Grant before releasing funds
  • Shares or investments are held in the deceased’s sole name
  • There is a Will and it needs to be formally proved as valid
Exception 1 — Jointly Owned Property: Joint Tenants

If the property was owned as joint tenants, the surviving co-owner automatically inherits the deceased’s share under the right of survivorship. No probate is required to transfer ownership — a death certificate and an application to Land Registry is sufficient.

This is the most common exception and applies to many married couples and civil partners who bought their home together

📋 Fact-Checked: The right of survivorship in joint tenancy is a fundamental principle of English property law, confirmed under the Land Registration Act 2002. The surviving joint tenant applies to Land Registry using Form DJP. Source: GOV.UK — Land Registry Practice Guide 6.

Exception 2 — Tenants in Common: Probate IS Required

⚠️  Joint tenants and tenants in common are legally very different. If the property was owned as tenants in common, each owner holds a defined share — and the deceased’s share passes under their Will or intestacy rules, not automatically to the survivor. Probate is required before that share can be sold or transferred.

If you are unsure how the property was owned, check the Title Register at HM Land Registry. A restriction reading ‘No disposition… unless…’ indicates tenants in common.

Exception 3 — Property Held in Trust

Property held in a trust does not form part of the deceased’s estate for probate purposes. The trustee(s) hold legal title and can deal with the property in accordance with the trust deed, without a Grant. However, the trust documentation must be carefully reviewed by a solicitor before any action is taken.

Exception 4 — Grant Ad Colligenda Bona (Emergency Grant)

This is a little-known but important exception that most online guides overlook entirely.

In circumstances where there is an urgent need to protect or realise estate assets before full probate can be granted — for example, where a property is at risk of deterioration, where mortgage arrears are accumulating, or where a time-sensitive sale opportunity would be lost — it is possible to apply for a limited Grant Ad Colligenda Bona (‘to collect the goods’).

This emergency grant authorises specific actions only — it does not grant full administration powers. A full Grant of Probate or Letters of Administration must still be obtained afterwards. The application requires a sworn affidavit setting out the urgency.

📋 Fact-Checked: A Grant Ad Colligenda Bona is issued under the Non-Contentious Probate Rules 1987 (Rule 52). It is discretionary and granted only where genuine urgency can be demonstrated. Source: Non-Contentious Probate Rules 1987, Legislation.gov.uk.

[Infographic Needed: When is probate required? — decision tree flowchart]

3. What CAN You Do Before Probate Is Granted?

The probate process in 2026 typically takes 16 weeks or more from the date of application — and that is before the application is even submitted. Waiting passively is not necessary, and in some cases not advisable. Here is what you can and should do in the meantime.

Step 1 — Commission a Probate Valuation

A probate valuation is a formal RICS (Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors) assessment of the property’s open market value at the date of death. This is different from an estate agent’s marketing valuation, which reflects current market conditions.

The probate valuation is required for the IHT400 (or IHT205) inheritance tax form and must be submitted to HMRC before probate can be granted. Instructing a RICS surveyor early avoids this becoming a bottleneck later.

📋 Fact-Checked: HMRC requires the value of property at the date of death for inheritance tax purposes, assessed at ‘open market value’. HMRC may challenge valuations it considers understated. Source: HMRC — Inheritance Tax Manual IHTM09703.

Step 2 — Instruct an Estate Agent

You can instruct an estate agent and list the property for sale before probate is granted, provided you make clear to all parties that the sale is ‘subject to probate’. Most buyers in this position will understand the position — and a motivated buyer who is prepared to wait can be a significant advantage.

Choose an estate agent with experience of probate sales. They will understand the timeline, manage buyer expectations effectively, and avoid the wasted time of buyers who cannot or will not wait.

Step 3 — Accept an Offer (Subject to Probate)

Accepting an offer is not legally binding in England and Wales until contracts are exchanged. You can therefore accept an offer, agree a price, and begin the conveyancing process — all before probate is granted. Exchange of contracts must wait until the Grant is in hand.

The risk here is buyer fatigue: if probate takes longer than expected, a buyer may withdraw. Your estate agent and solicitor can manage this by keeping buyers informed and setting realistic timeline expectations from the outset.

Step 4 — Apply for Probate in Parallel

The single most effective thing you can do is start the probate application as early as possible — ideally at the same time as you begin preparing the property for sale. Every week saved in the probate process is a week saved before completion.

💬 NPS Law handles probate applications and property sales simultaneously, under one roof. While we progress your Grant application, our conveyancing team prepares the sale — so the moment probate is granted, completion can follow within weeks, not months. Contact us today for a free initial consultation.

Step 5 — Protect and Maintain the Property

As executor, you have a legal duty to preserve the estate’s assets — including the property. This means ensuring the property is secure, maintaining appropriate insurance cover, and keeping the building in reasonable condition throughout the administration period.

⚠️  Many standard home insurance policies become invalid within 30 to 90 days of the policyholder’s death, or when the property becomes unoccupied. As executor, you must notify the insurer immediately and arrange probate/unoccupied property cover. Failure to do so could leave the estate uninsured — and expose you personally to liability if something goes wrong.

[Infographic Needed: Timeline: what you can do before and after probate is granted — parallel track visual]

4. The Inheritance Tax Trap: The Chicken-and-Egg Problem

This is the issue that causes the most anxiety for executors dealing with property — and it receives far too little attention in most guides.

The problem works like this: HMRC requires inheritance tax to be paid before the Probate Registry will issue a Grant. But the estate’s main asset is a property that cannot be sold until probate is granted. And probate cannot be granted until IHT is paid. The result is a circular dependency that can leave executors feeling completely stuck.

The ProblemWhy It HappensSolution
IHT must be paid before GrantHMRC rule — no exceptionsUse one of the funding options below
Property cannot be sold before GrantLand Registry / legal requirementBegin sale prep in parallel
No liquid funds to pay IHTAll value tied up in propertyInstalment option, bank scheme, probate loan
Solution 1 — IHT Instalments on Property

Where an estate includes property, HMRC allows inheritance tax attributable to that property to be paid in 10 annual instalments rather than as a single lump sum. Interest is charged on the outstanding balance, but this option removes the requirement to find a large cash sum before probate can be granted.

📋 Fact-Checked: IHT instalment payments on qualifying property are permitted under the Inheritance Tax Act 1984, section 227. Interest accrues on unpaid instalments at the official rate. Source: HMRC — IHT400 Notes, GOV.UK.

Solution 2 — Direct Payment Scheme

If the deceased held bank or building society accounts, some institutions participate in the Direct Payment Scheme, allowing funds to be transferred directly to HMRC to cover the IHT liability — without the executor needing to access those funds personally. This can resolve the cash-flow problem where there are sufficient funds in accounts, but not enough liquid assets outside the property.

 
Solution 3 — Probate Loan

A probate loan (sometimes called estate administration finance) allows executors to borrow against the anticipated value of the estate to fund the IHT payment. The loan is repaid from the estate proceeds once the property is sold. This is a specialist product — NPS Law can refer you to an appropriate provider as part of our estate administration service.

💬 Struggling with the IHT funding problem?  NPS Law works through the options with you at your first consultation — at no charge. We handle the IHT calculation, HMRC correspondence, and probate application so you are not navigating this alone.

[Infographic Needed: The IHT-Probate funding cycle — and how to break it (circular diagram)]

5. What Happens If You Complete a Sale Without Probate?

The consequences of completing a property sale without a valid Grant of Probate are serious — for the executor personally, and for the transaction itself.

  • The sale may be legally void — a conveyance without proper authority is unenforceable, and the transaction could be set aside
  • The executor faces personal liability — acting outside the authority of a Grant exposes the executor to civil claims from beneficiaries and, in serious cases, criminal liability for fraud
  • The buyer cannot obtain clean title — a buyer who completes without a Grant cannot be registered at Land Registry and will be unable to sell or mortgage the property in future
  • Title insurance will not cover the defect — insurers will not indemnify a transaction that was completed in knowing breach of probate requirements
  • Beneficiaries may sue — if the estate suffers a loss as a result of an unlawful sale, the executor can be held personally responsible for the shortfall

⚠️  If you are under pressure from a developer, buyer, or family member to complete a sale quickly — before probate is granted — take specialist legal advice immediately. The short-term convenience is not worth the long-term personal and financial risk.

6. How Long Does Probate Take in 2026?

Understanding the timeline helps you plan the property sale realistically. The figures below reflect 2026 processing times at HMCTS, which have been subject to significant delays in recent years.

StageTypical DurationNotes
Gathering documents & valuations2–4 weeksDeath certificate, Will, asset schedule, RICS valuation
IHT calculation & HMRC submission2–8 weeksLonger if estate is complex or IHT payable
HMRC clearance (if IHT payable)4–8 weeksRequired before Probate Registry accepts application
Probate Registry processing12–20 weeks2026 average; can be longer for complex estates
Grant issued — sale preparationAlready underway (if started in parallel)Exchange within days of Grant if buyer is in place
Exchange to completion4–8 weeksStandard conveyancing timeline post-Grant
Total — simple estate6–9 monthsFrom date of death to completion
Total — complex estate12–18 months+IHT disputes, missing beneficiaries, contested Will

📋 Fact-Checked: HMCTS Probate Service processing times for 2025/26 have averaged 14–20 weeks from application receipt to Grant issue, following a period of significant backlogs. Source: HMCTS — Probate Service performance data, GOV.UK.

The most effective way to reduce the total timeline is to run probate and sale preparation in parallel from the outset. At NPS Law, this dual-track approach is standard practice.

7. Does This Apply in Scotland?

The process described in this guide applies to England and Wales. Scotland operates under a separate legal system, and the equivalent of probate is called Confirmation.

In Scotland, the executor must apply to the Sheriff Court for Confirmation before dealing with most estate assets, including heritable property (the Scottish equivalent of real property). The process broadly mirrors probate in its effect, but the procedure, timelines, and forms are entirely different.

Key differences include: smaller estates (under £36,000) may qualify for a simplified Small Estates procedure; fees are calculated on a sliding scale rather than a flat rate; and the legal profession in Scotland has a different structure, with solicitors holding rights of audience in the Sheriff Court.

📋 Fact-Checked: Confirmation in Scotland is governed by the Succession (Scotland) Act 1964 and the Requirements of Writing (Scotland) Act 1995. Source: Legislation.gov.uk.

NPS Law specialises in England and Wales. If you are dealing with a Scottish estate or a property in Scotland, we can refer you to a trusted Scottish solicitor.

8. Your Situation: Four Common Scenarios Explained

The legal position is the same for everyone — but your practical circumstances make a significant difference to how you should approach the process.

Scenario A — You Are the Executor (Typically 40s–50s, First Time)

This is the most common situation. You may be dealing with probate for the first time, managing this alongside full-time work and family commitments, and feeling the weight of responsibility for getting it right.

The most important thing you can do is start early and take specialist advice. The probate process is manageable with the right support — and starting the sale preparation immediately while probate is progressing can save months.

  • Instruct a RICS valuer and an estate agent on day one
  • Instruct a probate solicitor to begin the Grant application in parallel
  • Keep the property insured and secure throughout
  • Keep beneficiaries informed at every stage — it reduces pressure and prevents disputes

💬 First time acting as executor? NPS Law offers a free initial consultation to walk you through every step — what needs to happen, in what order, and what we can take off your plate entirely.

Scenario B — Surviving Spouse or Civil Partner

If you owned the property as joint tenants with your spouse or civil partner, you can sell without probate — the property passed to you automatically on their death. You need to register the change of ownership at Land Registry using Form DJP and a certified copy of the death certificate, then instruct a conveyancing solicitor as normal.

If you owned as tenants in common, your spouse’s share passes under their Will or intestacy rules, and probate will be required before that share can be dealt with. Check your Title Register if you are unsure.

Scenario C — Beneficiary Waiting for the Estate to Be Resolved

If you are a beneficiary rather than the executor, you have no direct power to sell the property or speed up the probate process — but you do have legal rights. Executors are required to administer the estate within a reasonable time. If the executor is failing to act, or acting improperly, beneficiaries can apply to the court for an order compelling action.

If you are concerned that the estate is being mismanaged or unreasonably delayed, specialist legal advice is strongly recommended before taking any formal steps.

Scenario D — Mortgage Outstanding on the Property

If the deceased had an outstanding mortgage on the property, the debt does not disappear on death. The mortgage passes to the estate and continues to accrue interest. The lender must be notified promptly — most lenders will allow a period of forbearance while probate is progressed, but this is not guaranteed and must be negotiated.

⚠️  If mortgage payments are missed and the lender begins possession proceedings, the estate could lose the property entirely — leaving beneficiaries with nothing. Notify the lender immediately, and instruct a solicitor to manage the correspondence.

[Infographic Needed: Which scenario are you in? — personalised guide visual for 4 situations]

9. Why Use a Specialist Probate Solicitor for Property Sales?

Acting as executor for an estate that includes property is one of the most legally complex roles a private individual can take on. The risks of getting it wrong — personal liability, invalid transactions, HMRC penalties — are real and significant.

A specialist probate solicitor does more than fill in forms. They calculate the IHT liability, manage the HMRC correspondence, apply for the Grant, handle the conveyancing for the property sale, distribute the estate to beneficiaries, and protect the executor from personal risk at every step.

At NPS Law, our probate and conveyancing teams work together under one roof. This means we can progress your Grant application and the property sale simultaneously — so the moment probate is granted, completion can follow quickly.

  • Free initial consultation — no obligation, no charge
  • Specialist probate and conveyancing under one roof
  • Simultaneous Grant application and sale preparation
  • IHT calculation and HMRC correspondence handled
  • Fixed, transparent fees — no hourly billing surprises
  • Personal liability protection for the executor throughout

📞 Dealing with a probate property? Contact NPS Law today. We will assess your situation, explain your options clearly, and give you a fixed-fee quote within 24 hours. Free initial consultation — no obligation.

Frequently Asked Questions

The questions below are among the most commonly searched by people dealing with probate property in the UK. If your question is not answered here, our specialist team is happy to help — free of charge at your initial consultation.

Q1: Can you market a house for sale before probate is granted?

Yes. You can instruct an estate agent, commission a valuation, list the property and accept offers before probate is granted. The listing should be described as ‘subject to probate’ and all parties must be made aware of the position. What you cannot do is exchange contracts or complete the sale until the Grant of Probate has been issued.

Q2: How long does probate take before you can sell a house?

In 2026, the Probate Registry is taking 12 to 20 weeks to process applications after submission. Add 2 to 8 weeks for IHT calculation and HMRC clearance, plus time to gather documents and valuations, and the total time from death to Grant is typically 6 to 9 months for a straightforward estate. Starting the sale preparation immediately — in parallel with the probate application — can significantly reduce the total time before completion.

Q3: What happens if you sell a house without probate?

Completing a sale without a valid Grant of Probate is a serious legal error. The sale may be void, the buyer cannot obtain clean title or register at Land Registry, and the executor faces personal liability for any loss suffered by the estate or beneficiaries. If you are under pressure to complete before probate is granted, take specialist legal advice immediately.

Q4: Do you need probate to sell a house if it was jointly owned?

It depends on how the property was owned. If the deceased owned the property as a joint tenant with a surviving co-owner, the property passes automatically by survivorship and probate is not required — the surviving owner can sell using a death certificate and a Land Registry application. If the property was owned as tenants in common, the deceased’s share passes under their Will or intestacy rules and probate is required.

Q5: Can you pay inheritance tax before selling the house?

Yes — and in fact you must. HMRC requires IHT to be paid before the Probate Registry will issue a Grant, which creates a practical problem when the main estate asset is a property that cannot be sold before probate. Solutions include paying IHT in annual instalments (available for property), using the Direct Payment Scheme to transfer funds from the deceased’s bank accounts directly to HMRC, or taking a probate loan secured against the estate.

Q6: Can a beneficiary force the sale of a probate property?

A beneficiary cannot directly force a sale — only the executor has authority to deal with estate assets. However, if an executor is unreasonably delaying the administration or failing to act in the beneficiaries’ best interests, beneficiaries can apply to the court for an order requiring action. If you are a beneficiary concerned about the conduct of the estate, specialist legal advice is recommended before taking any formal steps.

Q7: What is a Grant Ad Colligenda Bona?

A Grant Ad Colligenda Bona is a limited emergency grant that authorises specific actions to protect estate assets before full probate can be obtained. It may be available where a property faces urgent risks — such as mortgage arrears accumulating, building deterioration, or a time-sensitive sale opportunity. The application requires a sworn affidavit demonstrating urgency. A full Grant of Probate must still be obtained separately. This is a specialist area — if you think this applies to your situation, speak to a probate solicitor immediately.

💬 Still have questions? NPS Law’s specialist probate team offers a free initial consultation — no obligation, no charge. We will assess your situation and give you clear answers on next steps.

Disclaimer

This article is for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. The law described applies to England and Wales unless otherwise stated. Individual circumstances vary — please consult a qualified solicitor before taking action.

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