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What Happens to Your Rental Properties When You Die in Georgia

When you die, your Georgia rental properties freeze in probate for 9 to 18 months. Your family cannot collect rent, sign leases, or authorize repairs until a court appoints someone. A revocable living trust with deed transfers gives a successor trustee authority on day one — no court required.

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When you die, your rental properties go where the title says. If they are held in your personal name or inside an LLC, they become estate assets — and your family has no legal authority to collect rent, renew leases, or authorize repairs until a Georgia probate court appoints someone. That process takes 9 to 18 months.

Not every ownership structure works this way. Properties held inside a properly funded revocable living trust transfer to a successor trustee on the day you die — no court, no delay, no frozen rent checks.

This article explains exactly what happens to Atlanta rental properties under each ownership structure, why a will does not prevent probate, and what Georgia investors need to do to keep their portfolios running after they are gone.

Properties in Your Personal Name

Probate is a court-supervised process where a judge takes control of your assets and oversees their distribution. In Georgia, the probate court appoints a personal representative — the person who manages your estate. That appointment takes time. Until it happens, no one has legal authority to act on your properties.

During those 9 to 18 months, your tenants still live in the properties and still owe rent. But there is no authorized person to collect it. No one can sign a lease renewal. No one can authorize the property manager to make repairs. No one can direct mortgage payments.

A lease expires during the probate proceeding. The property manager has no authorized person to work with. The tenant asks whether to renew. No one can sign. The tenant leaves. The property goes vacant. The mortgage still runs every month. The income stops. The expenses do not.

Properties in an LLC

Many Atlanta investors hold rental properties inside LLCs to separate liability from their personal assets. When you die, the LLC still technically owns the property. But you owned the LLC — your membership interest is now an asset in your estate and goes through probate.

The LLC exists but has no authorized owner. No one has authority to act as the LLC’s member. No one can vote on decisions, sign contracts, manage the LLC’s bank account, or direct the property manager. The entity is intact — it just has no one in charge for 9 to 18 months.

For a full explanation of how LLC ownership interacts with probate, see Problems With an LLC Without a Trust for Georgia Rental Properties.

Why a Will Does Not Fix This

Many investors assume their will fixes the probate problem. It does not. A will is a probate document — it tells the court what to do after the court takes charge. The properties are still frozen during the proceeding.

Your will names your spouse or your adult children as beneficiaries. That does not give them legal authority to collect rent, sign leases, or authorize repairs. Not until the court says so. Not until the 9–18 month process finishes. For a full breakdown of what that costs your family, see What It Costs to Leave Rental Properties Through a Will Instead of a Trust.

What a Trust Does Instead

A revocable living trust names a successor trustee — the person who steps in when you die or become incapacitated. At the moment of your death, the successor trustee has immediate legal authority over everything inside the trust. No court appointment. No waiting period.

1

Successor trustee steps in immediately

No court appointment required. The trust document gives the successor trustee legal authority from the moment of death — day one, not month 18.

2

Rent is collected, mortgages are paid

The successor trustee can collect rent, pay property expenses, authorize repairs, and manage property managers without any court involvement.

3

Leases continue without interruption

Tenants deal with an authorized person from day one. No gap in management authority. No risk of vacancy caused by an ownership transfer stuck in court.

4

Properties transfer to heirs on the trustee’s timeline

No court approval needed for distribution. The trust document specifies who gets what and when — the trustee follows those instructions without waiting for a judge.

For this to work, the properties must be funded into the trust before your death. That means a deed transfer for each property held in your personal name, or an assignment of LLC membership interest for properties held through an LLC. Signing the trust document is not enough. For the step-by-step process, see How to Transfer Rental Properties Into a Trust in Georgia.

The Unfunded Trust Problem

Atlanta investors regularly sign a revocable trust, file it away, and never complete the deed transfers. Three years later, the rental properties are still in the investor’s personal name. All of them go through probate. The successor trustee named in the trust has no authority over those properties — because they were never inside the trust.

The deed transfer is the step that puts a property inside a trust. Without it, the trust does not cover the property. The holding structure that was supposed to protect the portfolio does nothing at all. For the full breakdown of why this happens and how to prevent it, see Common Mistakes Georgia Real Estate Investors Make With Estate Planning.

What Your Family Sees When the Trust Works

Your spouse is the successor trustee. You die on a Tuesday. By Wednesday, they have legal authority over every property inside the trust. They call the property manager. They confirm the leases. They authorize the repair on the unit that needs a new water heater. The mortgage payments go out on schedule. The tenants do not know anything changed.

The rental portfolio keeps running. The income keeps coming in. Your family does not lose a single month of rent to a court proceeding. This assumes the trust was funded — every property re-deeded into it, every LLC interest assigned to it. A trust that was signed but never funded provides the same protection as no trust at all. For the five ways a signed trust can still break down at death, see Why Most Georgia Rental Property Estate Plans Fail.

When multiple heirs inherit the same property, any one of them can force a court-ordered sale under O.C.G.A. § 44-6-160 — regardless of ownership percentage. For a full overview of how Atlanta real estate investors structure their portfolios, see Estate Planning for Real Estate Investors in Georgia.

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Melissa Breyer

Melissa Breyer

Georgia Estate Planning Attorney

Melissa Breyer is a Georgia-licensed estate planning attorney focused exclusively on trust-based planning for individuals and families. She personally meets with every client and designs every plan from scratch. No templates. No associates handling your case. Every plan is built for your specific family, your specific assets, and your specific wishes.

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Frequently Asked Questions

When a Georgia rental property owner dies, the properties do not transfer automatically. They go through probate — a court-supervised process that takes 9 to 18 months. During that period, no one has legal authority to collect rent, sign leases, authorize repairs, or manage the properties. The income stops, but the mortgage payments and expenses continue.

No. An LLC does not avoid probate when the owner dies in Georgia. The LLC owns the property, but the owner’s membership interest in the LLC is an estate asset that goes through probate. The LLC entity survives, but no one has authority to act as its member until the probate court appoints a personal representative and the estate is settled — a process that takes 9 to 18 months.

No. A will is a probate document — it instructs the court what to do after the court takes charge. The properties are still frozen during the probate proceeding. A will tells the court who receives the properties when the process ends. It does not give anyone authority during the 9 to 18 months it takes to get there.

A revocable living trust names a successor trustee who steps in immediately at the owner’s death with full legal authority over all trust-held properties — no court appointment required. The successor trustee can collect rent, pay expenses, authorize repairs, and manage property managers from day one. The rental portfolio keeps running without a single month of interruption. The properties must be transferred into the trust before death for this protection to apply.

An unfunded trust is a trust document that was signed but never had assets transferred into it. For rental properties, funding requires a deed transfer for each property held in the owner’s name, or an assignment of LLC membership interest for properties held in an LLC. Without the deed transfer, the property is not inside the trust — it stays in the owner’s personal name and goes through probate when they die, as if the trust never existed.

Probate for rental properties in Georgia typically takes 9 to 18 months. During that entire period, no one has legal authority to manage the properties without court approval. If the estate has creditor claims, disputes among heirs, or a contested will, the timeline extends further. A properly funded revocable living trust eliminates the probate delay entirely — the successor trustee has authority on the day of death.

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