Debts from a deceased estate are paid from the assets held in the estate during the probate process, usually following a specific priority order. Administration costs, funeral/burial expenses, and taxes are typically paid first. Next, secured debts (mortgages, car loans) are covered, followed by unsecured debts (credit cards, medical bills).
Debts before heirs. The most important thing to understand is that you must pay the estate's debts before you distribute anything to the heirs. And debt doesn't just mean credit card bills or mortgage payments from before the deceased died. Debt also includes any money the estate owes currently.
The Insolvent Estate: When Bills Exceed Assets
Expenses for the funeral, last illness, and administration of the estate are paid first. Government debts, like taxes, are next in line, followed by secured debts, such as mortgages. Unsecured debts, like credit card bills and personal loans, are last.
Debts are usually paid in a specific order, with secured debts (such as a mortgage or car loan), funeral expenses, taxes, and medical bills generally having priority over unsecured debts, such as credit cards or personal loans.
Ongoing Medical Bills: Medical expenses incurred before death are considered valid debts of the estate and should be paid from estate funds, not by family members personally. Funeral and Burial Costs: These expenses are typically given priority and paid directly from the estate.
Debts are usually paid in a specific order, with secured debts (such as a mortgage or car loan), funeral expenses, taxes, and medical bills generally having priority over unsecured debts, such as credit cards or personal loans.
Usually, children or relatives will not have to pay a deceased person's debts out of their own money. While there are plenty of exceptions, common types of debt do not automatically transfer to heirs when someone dies.
The Basic Rule: Debts Before Distributions
Before any assets can be distributed to beneficiaries, the estate must first pay off its debts, expenses, and taxes. If an estate lacks sufficient assets, beneficiaries may receive nothing until all valid creditor claims have been addressed.
Gift of an Existing Life Insurance Policy.
If an individual gifts a policy he or she owns on his or her life and continues to pay premiums and dies within three years of the transfer, the full death proceeds will be included in the insured's gross estate.
Things to keep in mind about creditor claims
Surviving family members are generally legally entitled to take over a mortgage if they've inherited property. While most of the time creditors cannot take your home itself, they can make claims in an amount that might require you to sell your loved one's house.
Other types of debt that cannot be alleviated in bankruptcy include debts for willful and malicious injury to another person or property. If you don't list a debt on your bankruptcy, it won't be alleviated. Income tax debt can only be discharged in rare cases.
If they breach this duty, they can face legal consequences. If the executor is not performing their required duties, family members will probably want to talk to a lawyer. A beneficiary's attorney can take legal action. The chosen executor can be removed and sued for financial harm they caused.
After death, a person's credit card debt is paid by their estate (assets like property, savings), managed by an executor, not family members, unless they were a joint account holder, co-signer, or live in a community property state where spouses share marital debt; otherwise, if the estate can't pay, the debt generally goes unpaid, and debt collectors can't pursue personal funds from relatives, only the estate's assets.
The deceased person's estate (their assets and property) is primarily responsible for medical bills, managed by an executor or administrator. Family members are usually not personally liable unless they co-signed the debt, lived in a community property state (like CA, TX, AZ), or if specific state "filial responsibility" laws apply (PA, NC, SD). If the estate runs out of money, the bills often go unpaid, but debt collectors can't pursue family members who aren't legally responsible, notes the CFPB.
Want to make your assets virtually untouchable by creditors and lawsuits? Equity stripping may be the answer. This advanced technique involves encumbering your assets with liens or mortgages held by friendly creditors, such as an LLC or trust you control.
In general, you cannot inherit someone else's debt. But since California is a community property state, when one spouse dies, the other is responsible for those debts. Debts will be paid with estate funds in legally mandated order during the probate process.
The "40-day rule after death" refers to traditions in many cultures and religions (especially Eastern Orthodox Christianity) where a mourning period of 40 days signifies the soul's journey, transformation, or waiting period before final judgment, often marked by prayers, special services, and specific mourning attire like black clothing, while other faiths, like Islam, view such commemorations as cultural innovations rather than religious requirements. These practices offer comfort, a structured way to grieve, and a sense of spiritual support for the deceased's soul.
The most common way banks find out is when family members contact them directly. Relatives can call or visit the bank to report the death and ask about next steps. The bank will typically request a death certificate and the deceased person's Social Security number to begin the process.