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Passing the Family Home to Your Kids in Michigan: A Practical Guide for Parents

For many Michigan parents, the family home is more than an asset. It is where the kids grew up, where the holidays happen, and the one piece of the family’s story they most want to hand down intact. Yet the way most homes actually pass to the next generation, through probate court, is slow, public, and expensive, and the way many parents try to shortcut it, by gifting the house early, often backfires. Here is what actually works.

The goal, stated plainly: your children should receive the home quickly, privately, without court involvement, without unnecessary taxes, and without you giving up control while you are alive. Michigan law makes all of that achievable, but only if the transfer is structured correctly.

Why Gifting the House Early Backfires

Signing the house over to the kids now feels generous and simple. Tax law punishes it. A child who receives the home as a lifetime gift takes your original cost basis, so if you bought the house for $60,000 and they sell it for $360,000, they may owe capital gains tax on $300,000 of gain. A child who inherits the same home instead generally receives a stepped-up basis to its value at your death, often wiping out that tax entirely. Early gifting also exposes the home to your child’s creditors and divorce, and leaves you living in a house you no longer legally control.

Probate, the default alternative, is better than a bad gift but still costly: months of court supervision, inventory and filing fees, and every detail on the public record.

The Michigan Advantage Most Parents Have Never Heard Of

Michigan is one of the few states that recognizes the enhanced life estate deed, widely known as a Lady Bird Deed. With it, you record a deed today naming your children as beneficiaries, while you keep complete ownership and control for life. You can sell, refinance, rent, or revoke the deed at any time without their consent. When you pass, the home transfers to them automatically, no probate, and they still receive the stepped-up basis, because for tax purposes the home is inherited, not gifted. The deed can also help protect the home from Medicaid estate recovery later in life. This straightforward explanation of the Lady Bird Deed Michigan covers the mechanics, costs, and common questions parents ask.

Properly structured transfers to close family can also preserve Michigan’s property tax cap when statutory conditions are met, sparing your children a surprise jump in their tax bill.

Talk to Your Kids Before You Sign Anything

The legal instrument is only half the plan. If one child expects to live in the home and the others expect it sold and split, the deed will not resolve that conflict; it will deliver it. Decide, and communicate, whether the home goes to one child with equalizing gifts to the others, or to all children together with an understanding about what happens next.

A deed of this kind must be drafted and recorded precisely to deliver its benefits, so treat it as attorney work, not a download-and-sign form. This guide is general information, not legal advice. A Michigan estate planning attorney can confirm the right structure for your family.

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