Definitions
A probate loan is a real estate secured loan made to an estate during probate. The estate borrows money against the value of real property it holds, a deed of trust is recorded, and the loan is repaid with interest when the property sells or when the estate closes. It is a true loan with a stated rate, a defined term, and a lender who expects repayment of principal plus interest.
An inheritance advance (also called an inheritance funding or heir advance) is a different product entirely. A third-party company gives a cash payment directly to an heir in exchange for an assignment of a portion of that heir's future inheritance. It is structured as a purchase, not a loan. The company buys a slice of what the heir expects to receive, and when the estate settles, the company collects directly from the estate or from the heir's distribution.
The key structural difference is this: a probate loan is debt. An inheritance advance is a sale of a future asset. Because it is structured as a purchase rather than a loan, inheritance advance companies argue that consumer lending laws and interest rate caps do not apply to them. That argument is contested in some legal circles, but it means the effective cost can be far higher than any regulated loan.
How Each One Is Priced
A probate loan is priced like any other real estate loan. You pay an origination fee at closing (at North Coast Financial, 1.25 to 1.95 points) and interest accrues on the outstanding balance at a stated annual rate (9.5% to 10.95%). If you borrow $200,000 and pay it off in 9 months, you pay 9 months of interest on $200,000, plus the origination fee. The math is transparent and predictable.
Inheritance advances are priced differently. The company advances a portion of your expected inheritance and takes back a larger portion when the estate settles. The typical structure is that the heir receives, say, $150,000, but the company collects $200,000 (or sometimes more) from the estate upon distribution. The company often describes this as a "fee" rather than interest. That fee may be fixed regardless of how long the probate takes, or it may compound over time.
From the heir's perspective, what matters is the effective annualized cost. On short probates, that cost can be stratospheric on an annualized basis. On longer probates, the total dollar cost to the heir grows continuously.
Real Cost Comparison: The Dollar Math
Let us use a concrete example. An heir expects to receive $200,000 from a California estate. Probate is expected to close in approximately 9 months.
Inheritance advance scenario
An inheritance advance company offers $200,000 today in exchange for $250,000 from the eventual distribution. The fee is $50,000. The heir receives their money now but gives up $50,000 of their inheritance. On an annualized basis, $50,000 over 9 months on $200,000 is an effective rate of approximately 33% per year. If probate takes 12 months instead of 9, the effective rate drops to about 25%, but the dollar cost is the same: $50,000 gone from the inheritance.
Probate loan scenario
The estate borrows $200,000 against the estate's real property at 10.5% per year with 1.5 points origination. The origination fee is $3,000. Monthly interest on $200,000 at 10.5% is approximately $1,750 per month. Over 9 months, total interest is approximately $15,750. Total cost of financing: $3,000 + $15,750 = $18,750.
The Comparison in One Line
Inheritance advance: $50,000 in fees for $200,000 over 9 months. Probate loan: approximately $18,750 total for $200,000 over 9 months. The difference is more than $31,000. That is money that stays in the estate under the loan structure.
| Feature | Probate Loan | Inheritance Advance |
|---|---|---|
| Product type | Real estate secured loan | Purchase of future inheritance |
| Who is the borrower | The estate | The individual heir |
| Security | Deed of trust on real property | Assignment of inheritance rights |
| Cost structure | Stated rate + origination points | Upfront fee taken from inheritance |
| Example total cost on $200k / 9 months | Approx. $18,750 | Approx. $50,000 |
| Recourse if estate shrinks | Property secures the loan | Heir may still owe full amount |
| Regulated as lending | Yes, licensed lender required | Often structured to avoid lending regulations |
Recourse and Risk
With a probate loan, the lender's recourse is the real property. If the estate sells the property, the lien is paid from proceeds. If the estate value is somehow less than expected, the lender may not recover fully, but the heir is not personally on the hook for the difference.
With some inheritance advances, the structure is more aggressive. If the estate's value drops and the company cannot collect its full advance amount from the heir's distribution, some agreements require the heir to make up the difference personally. The fine print matters enormously. Some advance companies are reputable and structured fairly; others are not. Read everything before signing.
When an Inheritance Advance Actually Makes Sense
Inheritance advances are not always the wrong choice. They make the most sense when a probate loan is not possible, specifically when the estate holds no real property and there is no collateral for a secured loan. If the estate consists only of financial accounts, personal property, or other non-real-estate assets, there is nothing to secure a deed of trust against. In that scenario, an inheritance advance may be the only way for an heir to access cash before distribution.
They can also make sense for very small amounts where the overhead of arranging a secured loan does not make economic sense, or in situations where the heir needs cash personally (rather than the estate needing it) and cannot wait for distribution.
The key is to understand what you are paying. Calculate the effective annualized cost before agreeing to any advance, and compare it honestly to the cost of a probate loan if that option is available.
Frequently Asked Questions
Get a Real Cost Comparison
Call North Coast Financial at 760-722-2991. We will give you an honest quote for a probate loan against the estate's property so you can compare it to any advance offer you have received.