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· 8 min read· By Ryan Solberg, Broker #BK3354351

Selling an Inherited House in Marion County, FL: Probate to Sale

Inheriting a house in Marion County means clearing probate in the Fifth Judicial Circuit before you can sell — plus title questions, the stepped-up basis, and often several heirs. Here's how it actually works, from Ocala to the north end of The Villages.

Inheriting a house is rarely simple, and in Marion County it usually starts with a question most people don't expect: before you can sell it, can you even transfer clear title to a buyer? The answer runs through Florida probate — and once you know how the house passed to you, the path is predictable.

Here's the honest, step-by-step version for a house anywhere in Marion County, from Ocala and Belleview to Dunnellon, Summerfield, Silver Springs Shores, and the retirement communities north and west of the city.

Where probate happens in Marion County

Marion County sits in Florida's Fifth Judicial Circuit (which it shares with Citrus, Hernando, Lake, and Sumter counties). Probate is handled by the Circuit Court, and filings go to the Marion County Clerk of Court and Comptroller, Probate department. Cases are filed at the Marion County Judicial Center at 110 NW 1st Avenue in Ocala, the county seat, and — like all Florida probate matters — are submitted through the state e-filing portal.

It doesn't matter which town the house is in. An Ocala pool home, a Belleview ranch, a Dunnellon riverfront cottage, or a Summerfield 55+ villa all go through the same Marion County probate process, because Florida probate is filed in the county where the real estate is located.

First: how did the house pass to you?

Before anything else, you need to know how you received legal title, because it determines whether you need probate at all:

  • Jointly owned with right of survivorship — if a surviving spouse or co-owner is still living, they take full title automatically and record an affidavit of survivorship with the county clerk. No probate.
  • Revocable living trust — the trustee can sell the house under the trust's terms, outside of probate. Often the fastest path.
  • Lady Bird deed (enhanced life estate deed) — the named beneficiary receives the property automatically at death, bypassing probate.
  • Solely in the deceased's name — the common case, and it requires probate (or Florida's simplified Summary Administration) before you can sell.

Pull the deed and the death certificate first. If you're not sure how the property was titled, a title search — something we can help order — answers it quickly.

Do you need probate, and which kind?

If the house was solely owned, Florida offers two main paths, both filed with the Marion County Clerk:

  • Summary Administration — the simplified, faster route, available when the probate estate is worth under $75,000, or when the owner has been deceased more than two years. Many inherited homes qualify, especially when time has passed.
  • Formal Administration — the standard process for larger or more complex estates, which appoints a personal representative to manage and eventually convey the property. Florida requires an attorney for formal administration.

Either way, the goal is the same: get the court's authority to transfer clear, insurable title to a buyer.

The tax picture: the stepped-up basis is your friend

When you inherit a house, your cost basis steps up to the property's value on the date of death — not the original purchase price. Combined with Florida having no state income tax and no state capital gains tax, that usually means little or no tax when you sell near the date-of-death value.

Order a date-of-death appraisal to document that number. It protects your basis if the IRS ever asks and gives every heir an objective starting point for pricing.

When several heirs inherit together

If everyone agrees, selling is straightforward. If they don't, any single heir can file a partition action asking the court to order a sale and split the proceeds by ownership share. It works — but it's slow, costly, and adversarial. A cooperative sale where everyone sees the same honest valuation and net-proceeds math is almost always the better outcome.

Homestead and property taxes

Florida's homestead exemption and Save Our Homes cap end when the original owner dies and the property is no longer their homestead (unless a surviving spouse remains on title and in the home). For an inherited house you plan to sell, that mainly affects the tax proration at closing. If instead an heir moves in and makes it their primary residence, they can apply for a new homestead exemption — but the Save Our Homes cap resets, which can mean a higher assessed value than the prior owner enjoyed.

Selling the house in Marion County

Once title is clear, you have the same options any seller has — with a few that fit inherited situations especially well:

  • Sell as-is. Many inherited homes are dated or full of a lifetime of belongings. You don't have to renovate or even clean it out; as-is sales are common and buyers price accordingly.
  • List on the market for the strongest price when the house shows reasonably well and time allows.
  • Coordinate remotely. Many Marion heirs live out of state. Probate, cleanout, sale, and closing can all be handled without you flying back and forth.

Marion values vary widely by area — a horse-country estate northwest of Ocala, an in-town Ocala bungalow, and a Summerfield retirement villa are three different markets — so the right pricing and strategy is property-specific.

Two guides that pair with this one: the statewide Selling an Inherited Property in Florida walkthrough for the full probate-and-tax detail, and, if the house is closer to the Orlando metro, Selling an Inherited House in Orlando.


Inherited a house in Marion County and not sure where to start? There's no rush and no pressure. Tell Ryan where things stand — probate status, whether there are other heirs, where the house is — and you'll get straight answers on the process and the simplest path to selling. Start a conversation or call 321-373-3536.

Frequently asked questions

Where do I file probate for a house in Marion County, Florida?
Probate for a Marion County property is filed with the Marion County Clerk of Court and Comptroller, Probate department, which serves the Circuit Court in Florida's Fifth Judicial Circuit (the circuit also covers Citrus, Hernando, Lake, and Sumter counties). Filings are made at the Marion County Judicial Center at 110 NW 1st Avenue in Ocala, the county seat, and — like all Florida probate matters — cases are submitted through the state e-filing portal. This applies whether the house is in Ocala, Belleview, Dunnellon, Summerfield, or an unincorporated area. Florida requires a licensed attorney for formal administration, so most heirs work with a probate attorney.
Do I have to go through probate to sell an inherited house in Marion County?
It depends on how the house was titled. If it was in a revocable living trust, the trustee can sell it without probate. If it had a valid Lady Bird deed (enhanced life estate deed), it passed automatically to the named beneficiary. If it was jointly owned with right of survivorship and one owner is still living, the survivor takes title by recording an affidavit of survivorship with the Marion County Clerk. But if the house was solely in the deceased's name, probate — or Florida's simplified Summary Administration — is required before you can transfer clear title to a buyer.
My parent lived in The Villages — does the estate probate in Marion or Sumter County?
It depends which county the house sits in, because The Villages spans three counties. Most of The Villages — including the newer, southern growth — is in Sumter County and probates in Bushnell. But the older, northern section of The Villages (north of CR-466) is in Marion County, and those homes probate in Ocala through the Marion County Clerk. A smaller portion sits in Lake County and probates in Tavares. All three counties are in the same Fifth Judicial Circuit, but each has its own clerk and courthouse, so the house's actual parcel and county determine where you file. Ocala's other large 55+ communities, like On Top of the World west of the city, are squarely in Marion County.
How does the stepped-up basis work when I sell an inherited Marion County home?
When you inherit a house, your cost basis resets to the property's fair market value on the date the owner died — not what they originally paid. Example: a parent bought an Ocala home in 1998 for $110,000, and it's worth $290,000 when they pass. You inherit it with a $290,000 basis. Sell it near that value and your capital gain — and your federal capital gains tax — is close to zero. Florida has no state income tax or state capital gains tax, so the stepped-up basis is usually the single biggest financial fact for heirs selling an inherited Marion County home. Get a date-of-death appraisal to document that value.
My siblings and I inherited a house in Marion County and can't agree — what happens?
If co-heirs can't agree on whether to sell, the price, or timing, any one of them can file a partition action in the Circuit Court. The court can order the property sold and the proceeds divided by each heir's fractional interest. Partition works, but it's slow and expensive — typically 6–18 months and thousands in legal fees — and it takes the decision out of the family's hands. Reaching agreement and selling cooperatively almost always nets everyone more money.

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