Have more questions? Email us at: team@wealthwarandrealestate.com if you cannot find an answer to your question.
The Great Wealth Transfer refers to the historic movement of assets — estimated at
$124 trillion — from the Baby Boomer generation to Gen X, Millennials, and Gen Z over
the next two decades. Much of this wealth is held in real estate, making it the single
most consequential force in the housing market today.
Probate real estate refers to property that is part of a deceased person's estate and must pass through the probate court process before it can be transferred or sold. These properties often come to market under time pressure, complex title situations, or family disputes — creating a distinct segment of the real estate market with its own rules and opportunities.
We define luxury not by a specific dollar amount, but by the quality of the experience, the strategy behind the transaction, and the level of service and expertise involved. Whether you're buying a $500,000 home or a $5 million estate, the principles of luxury real estate — precision, discretion, and vision — apply.
Divorce is one of the most common triggers for forced real estate transactions. When a marriage dissolves, the family home — often the couples largest asset — must be valued, negotiated, and either sold or transferred. Divorce proceedings can create unique buying opportunities and significant challenges for sellers. We explore both sides.
Full season episodes are available on YouTube at @WealthWarandRealEstate. The
podcast is also available on major streaming platforms. Live recordings are announced on our website and social channels.
This Podcast is for the women who do not have a team of lawyers, accountants, or strategist to support them through life transitions.
If you inherit a house, do not rush to sell, transfer, renovate, rent, or promise anything before you understand what you actually own.
Start with the documents: deed, trust, will, mortgage, insurance, tax records, and any court or probate paperwork. Then determine who has authority to act and whether other heirs, beneficiaries, creditors, or co-owners are involved.
Inherited property can become emotional quickly. The strongest move is to get clear before the conflict begins. Speak with qualified legal, tax, estate planning, and real estate professionals before making decisions.
Title is the battlefield most people do not look at until it is already too late.
It determines who owns the property, how it is owned, who may have rights, and what happens during divorce, probate, inheritance, refinance, sale, or conflict.
A name on a deed, a trust, a business entity, or a right of survivorship can change everything. Before you fight over a property, understand how it is titled.
No. Wealth, War & Real Estate is educational only.
We discuss the real estate decisions women and families face during divorce, probate, inheritance, trusts, wealth transfer, and major life transitions, but our content is not legal, financial, tax, estate planning, investment, or real estate advice.
The war over wealth is personal. Your strategy should be too. Always consult qualified professionals for your specific situation.
Real estate gets complicated during divorce, death, inheritance, probate, trusts, blended families, and wealth transfer.
These answers help you know what to ask before conflict begins.
Educational only. Not legal, financial, tax, estate planning, or real estate advice. Consult qualified professionals.
Wealth, War, and Real Estate is for educational and informational purposes only. Content on this website, Podcast, Blog, videos, downloads, emails, and social media does not constitute legal, financial, tax, investment, estate planning or real estate advice.
Always consult qualified legal professionals regarding your specific situation.
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