Whether the estate has been sitting for years or you are in the middle of it right now, we look at your specific situation and tell you exactly what is possible. No pressure to do anything. Just a clear picture of where things stand.
Who You Are Talking To
I am Caleb Goforth. I grew up in Western NC. Before real estate, I spent years working in the medical field, which means I have been around a lot of families going through some of the hardest moments of their lives. Grief does not look the same for everyone. Some people are in the thick of it when they call. Some lost someone years ago and the property has just been sitting there because no one knew where to start, or the family could not agree, or there was always something else that came first. All of that is more common than people realize.
I lost my grandmother not long ago. She was someone who made the world feel more grounded just by being in it. She had dementia in her final years, and if you have been through that with someone you love, you know what that kind of grief looks like. You lose them slowly, over time, before you lose them all at once. I know what it means to carry something like that while still having to show up and handle everything else.
I have worked with a lot of families who were doing exactly that when they reached out to me. Trying to figure out a property situation while still processing losing someone. There is no instruction manual for it. Nobody teaches you this. Most people have never been through anything like it before, and they feel like they should know more than they do. They do not. That is not a failure on their part.
I am a licensed real estate broker, not an attorney. When the honest answer is that you need to talk to a probate attorney before anything else, I will tell you that before you sign a single thing. The decision always stays yours.
Licensed NC Real Estate Broker #315473 · Not a law firm · Not an attorney
Who We Work With
Most of the people who call us have never dealt with anything like this before. These are the situations we see most.
Sometimes years. Sometimes decades. The house is still in a deceased person's name and no one knew what to do first. That is where we start.
What looks like a disagreement about money is often something older and harder than that. We have sat in the middle of those conversations. We know how to move through them.
Foreclosure timelines are specific and they move fast. If this is where you are, call or text rather than fill out the form. The sooner we talk, the more doors stay open.
Old liens, a deed that was never transferred, a deceased owner still on record. We work through these with attorneys who know how to clear them.
Most of what needs to happen can be coordinated remotely. We handle the local piece so you do not have to travel to get things moving.
This is the most common place people find themselves. Mapping out what the situation actually looks like and what would need to happen in what sequence is exactly what we help with.
Start Here
You do not have to know what you want to do yet. Just describe the situation and we will take it from there.
After you submit: Caleb reviews it personally and calls or texts you the same day. No call center. No sales pitch. Just a conversation about what is actually in front of you.
Real Outcomes
"My mother passed without a will and the house had been in foreclosure for months. Caleb knew exactly what needed to happen, got the estate opened, and we closed before the auction. I didn't even have to come down from Virginia."
"Three of us inherited the property and we could not agree. Caleb sat down with all three of us separately, laid out exactly what a court dispute
"The title had problems going back 30 years quit claims, a deed from a deceased owner, unpaid taxes. He found the attorneys who knew how to fix it and still got us a cash offer. I had no idea that was even possible."
What We Can Do
If selling makes sense, we can make a cash offer and coordinate everything: probate attorneys, title work, the closing. If it does not make sense, or you are not ready, or the right first step is getting a probate attorney involved before anything else, we will tell you that too. We are not here to push you toward a sale. We are here to give you a clear picture and let you decide what to do with it.
What we do not do: pressure you, follow up trying to close you, or pretend to be something we are not. Licensed real estate brokers, not attorneys. We will always tell you when the first step is to talk to someone else.
NC Estate Resources
Straight answers on probate, inherited property, and heir rights in NC written for families, not attorneys.
Whether probate is required, how title passes to heirs, and what you need to do before any sale can happen.
Read MoreHow heirs' property works, why it's different from standard ownership, and the legal risks that come with it.
Read MoreThe short answer is yes but the steps depend on how the estate was set up. Here's what the process actually looks like.
Read MoreSituations We Have Worked Through
These are representative situations based on the kinds of cases we handle regularly in Western NC. Details have been changed and no identifying information is included.
Burke County
Situation: Three adult siblings inherited a home after their father passed without a will. No probate had been opened. Two siblings wanted to sell. One was living in the house and resistant. Title was still in the father's name from 1987.
What happened: We coordinated with a local probate attorney to open the estate. While that was moving, we worked with all three siblings separately to understand what each one actually needed. The sibling living there needed time and a clear plan, not a forced exit. We structured the sale with a 60-day occupancy agreement that gave everyone room to breathe.
Outcome: Property closed. All three siblings received their share. Nobody ended up in court.
McDowell County
Situation: A family inherited a home that was behind on the mortgage. Foreclosure proceedings had already started. The out-of-state heirs had no idea how far along the process was and had been getting letters they did not fully understand.
What happened: We looked at the foreclosure timeline and identified there was still a reinstatement window. We worked with the foreclosure attorney handling the case to get a clear payoff number, then structured a cash purchase that covered the reinstatement and allowed the family to receive the remaining equity.
Outcome: Property sold before the auction date. Family received equity they would have lost. No foreclosure on the record.
Watauga County
Situation: A mountain property had passed through three generations without a formal deed transfer. The current generation wanted to sell but discovered the title showed an owner who had been dead for over 30 years. There were also two quit claim deeds in the chain that had created gaps in the ownership history.
What happened: We brought in a title attorney who specialized in heir property situations. The process took several months and required locating and getting signatures from heirs across three states. We stayed involved through the whole process and kept the buyer engaged while the title work moved.
Outcome: Title cleared. Property sold. A situation that had been unresolved for decades finally closed.
Every situation is different. If yours does not look exactly like any of these, that does not mean it is not workable.
Tell Us What You Are Dealing WithCommon Questions
Inherited a home in one of these North Carolina counties? Each guide walks you through probate, property taxes, local offices, and free help, in plain language.