Inheriting a home sounds like a gift — until you realize it might come with a legal bill you can’t afford.
That’s exactly the situation the owners of a home on Claymont Road found themselves in. The property had value. The desire to sell was there. But standing between them and a closing table was one of the most misunderstood obstacles in real estate: probate.
And the clock wasn’t going to wait.
The Problem Nobody Prepares For
When a property owner passes away without a clean title transfer in place, the home typically can’t be sold until it goes through probate — a legal process that clears the estate and establishes who has the right to sell.
For this family, that meant two very real problems:
First, they didn’t have a probate attorney. Not just any attorney, either — they needed someone who specifically handled Georgia probate cases and knew how to move through the process efficiently. Finding the right person without a referral is harder than it sounds.
Second, even if they found the right attorney, they couldn’t cover the upfront retainer fee. At $3,000 just to get started, the cost of beginning the probate process was out of reach — before a single document was filed.
This is a situation that stops a lot of inherited home sales before they ever start. Sellers get stuck not because the home isn’t sellable, but because the path to selling it requires money they simply don’t have.
What Myers House Buyers Actually Did
This is where working with the right cash buyer makes all the difference.
Paul Myers and his team didn’t just make an offer on the home and walk away when complications arose. They rolled up their sleeves.
Step one: Myers House Buyers connected the sellers with a local probate attorney they trust — someone who specializes in Georgia probate cases, moves quickly, and doesn’t charge the bloated fees of a generalist firm.
Step two: Myers House Buyers paid the $3,000 retainer fee directly. Out of pocket. Before the deal was done.
Step three: They made a verbal commitment to the attorney to cover any additional cost increases that came up during the process — no matter what.
That last part is worth pausing on. Probate cases don’t always go as planned. Paul knows this firsthand. One of the most complex cases his team has worked through started with a $5,000 estimate and ended up costing $14,000 over the course of 14 months — on a property they purchased for around $40,000. That’s a $9,000 overrun they absorbed without passing the burden back to the sellers.
That’s not a footnote. That’s the kind of commitment that most buyers simply aren’t willing to make.
The Outcome
It worked.
The sellers were able to move through the probate process with a qualified attorney handling every detail — and they never had to write a single check to make it happen.
Myers House Buyers closed on the Claymont Road property on November 7, 2023, paying cash. The team completed a full renovation on the home and resold it to a new owner-occupant on February 27, 2024.
From stuck in probate to a family in a renovated home — in under four months.
What This Means If You’re in a Similar Situation
If you’ve inherited a property and aren’t sure where to start, you’re not alone. Probate is one of the most common reasons inherited homes sit vacant for months or years. Many sellers assume they have to figure it out on their own, front the legal costs themselves, or simply wait.
Working with Myers House Buyers means you don’t have to do any of those things.
Paul and his team have navigated Georgia probate from start to finish — multiple times, including cases that cost far more than anticipated. They have trusted attorney relationships in place, they understand the process, and they’re willing to carry the upfront costs so you don’t have to.
If you’re sitting on an inherited property and wondering whether it’s even possible to sell, the answer is almost certainly yes. The question is just who you call to help you get there.
Myers House Buyers purchases homes for cash throughout the greater Atlanta area and surrounding Georgia communities. If you’re dealing with probate, liens, deferred repairs, or any other complicated situation, reach out to Paul directly to talk through your options — no pressure, no obligation.

