What To Do With a Parent's House in Denver
When a parent moves to assisted living or memory care, has a health crisis, or can no longer safely live at home, families are often left with one enormous question…
What do we do with the house?
Simple Answer
Realistically, there are
four options:
sell the house,
keep it,
rent it, or
wait before deciding.
The right choice depends on your parent's care needs, finances, the condition of the home, family circumstances, and whether returning home is realistically possible
Start With the Decision In Front of You
In the midst of all of the other decisions being made, this is the most emotional. That’s because the house is an emotional issue for everyone involved in this decision. There are…
This isn't a rare situation. While only a portion of Colorado homes are owned by seniors, older adults own nearly 30% of the state's detached homes. Many have lived there for decades. As Colorado's population ages, more families are facing difficult decisions about aging in place, senior living, and what happens to the house next.
Most Families End Up Exploring One of Four Options…
Selling the house may make sense because the home is no longer needed or has become another responsibility the family has to manage.
This happens if…
Your parent is unlikely to return home,
The proceeds may help pay for care,
The home requires significant maintenance or repairs,
Monthly carrying costs become a burden, or
No family member wants to keep the property or is not willing to maintain it
Explore: When Selling a Parent’s Home Makes Sense
See what it involves: What Selling a Parent’s Home Actually Looks Like
Renting the House may make sense because your family wants to keep the property and can create income from it.
It’s possible when…
The home is in rentable condition
Rental income could help offset care or housing costs
The family wants to retain long-term ownership
Someone is prepared to manage the property or hire a property manager
The financial return justifies the work, risk, and expense involved
Explore: When Renting Their House Makes Sense
See what it involves: What Renting a Parent’s Home Actually Looks Like
Keeping the house may make sense if your family is willing and able to and there is a clear reason to own it.
It’s possible if…
Returning home remains a realistic possibility,
A family member may eventually live there,
The family can comfortably afford the ongoing expenses,
The home has emotional or long-term value, or
There is a clean plan for maintenance and managing the property.
Explore: When Keeping the House Makes Sense
See what it involves: What Keeping a Parent’s Home Actually Looks Like
Waiting to Decide may make sense when there is not enough information to make a confident long-term decision.
This option works when…
Your parent’s care needs are still changing
Returning home is still a realistic possibility
The family needs time to understand finances or legal authority
Siblings or other decision-makers need time to reach agreement
There is a specific reason that waiting will provide useful information
Explore: When Waiting to Decide Makes Sense
Understand the tradeoffs: What Waiting to Decide Actually Looks Like
Why the Decision is Harder Than it Looks
A parent’s house is rarely just a house.
It may be the place where your family gathered for holidays, where the grandkids learned which cabinet had the snacks, or where your parents spent decades building a life. Even when selling makes perfect financial sense, it may not feel that simple.
Families are often trying to make a practical decision while dealing with some very emotional realities...
Mom or Dad may still believe they are going home
Siblings may disagree about what should happen
The house may be filled with decades of belongings
Selling can feel like closing a chapter before anyone is ready
Keeping the house may feel easier than making a permanent decision
Everyone may be exhausted from dealing with the crisis that started the conversation in the first place
That is why the question is not always simply…
What should we do with the house?
Sometimes the real question is…
What are we ready to decide right now?
Explore more about What Families Are Really Deciding
What It’s Really About
A parent’s house is rarely just a house.
It may be the place where your family gathered for holidays, where the grandkids learned which cabinet had the snacks, or where your parents spent decades building a life. Even when selling makes perfect financial sense, it may not feel that simple.
Families are often trying to make a practical decision while dealing with some very emotional realities...
Mom or Dad may still believe they are going home
Siblings may disagree about what should happen
The house may be filled with decades of belongings
Selling can feel like closing a chapter before anyone is ready
Keeping the house may feel easier than making a permanent decision
Everyone may be exhausted from dealing with the crisis that started the conversation in the first place
Additionally, you need to understand…
Whether returning home is realistically possible
Who has the legal authority to make decisions about the property
How much the house costs to keep each month
Whether repairs or maintenance are becoming difficult to manage
Whether the home's equity may be needed to help pay for care
Whether family members agree about what should happen next
You do not need every answer before taking the next step. But the clearer these questions become, the easier it is to separate
we aren't ready yet
from
we don't know what to do.
The Cost of Keeping the House While You Decide
Waiting can be the right choice, but time doesn’t stop if you decide waiting makes sense.
Bills still need to be paid,
Lawns still need to be maintained,
Insurance needs to be up-to-date, and
The home cannot sit unattended for months.
Some of the costs people I’ve worked with who decided waiting is right include…
An empty or lightly used house does not stop costing money just because the family has not made a decision.
Mortgage payments
Property taxes
Homeowners insurance
HOA dues
Utilities
Lawn care and snow removal
Repairs and routine maintenance
Security and vacancy-related concerns
There are also a lot of non-monetary costs that surprise a lot of the families I’ve helped, including…
Checking the house,
Deal with repairs,
Clean the house,
collect the mail,
Talk with contractors, and
Worry about what might go wrong next.
Do Not rush a decision - Instead, understand what waiting is actually costing so your family to decide
Find out more of The True Cost of Keeping a Parent's House
Do you know When Waiting to Decide Makes Sense
What About the Stuff??
What Happens to Everything Inside the House?
People accumulate stuff! Your mom or dad especially do. So now, you’ll have to decide what to do with everything they’ve accumulated in the past 20, 30, 40, or 50 years.
There may be family photographs, important documents, furniture, collections, everyday household items, and things nobody wants to throw away but nobody has room to keep.
Spoiler Alert: It cannot always be emptied in a weekend.
To do this, you’ll need to…
Identifying important documents and valuables,
Setting aside sentimental items for family members,
Deciding what children or grandchildren want to keep,
Donating usable belongings,
Selling items that have actual value, and finally
Removing what remains
You don’t have to sort every drawer before deciding - often, the house and the belongings decision move forward together.
Where Is Your Family Right Now?
You don’t need another giant checklist, you just simply need to find the question that is most like your situation.
My parent may still return home
Before making a permanent decision about the house, determine whether returning home is realistically possible and what would need to change for it to be safe.
Find out if Your Mom or Dad Can Go Home Safely?
We know the house probably needs to be sold
If returning home is unlikely and the house has become an expense or responsibility, start by understanding when selling makes sense and what the process actually involves.
Learn more about When Selling a Parent's Home Makes Sense
We are thinking about keeping the house
Keeping the home can be the right choice when there is a clear reason, a realistic financial plan, and someone willing to take responsibility for it.
Does Keeping a Parent's Home Makes Sense
We are considering renting the house
Rental income may sound appealing, but becoming a landlord adds responsibilities, expenses, risks, and legal considerations that should be understood first.
Sometimes, Renting a Parent's Home Makes Sense
We honestly do not know yet
It’s more common than you may think. That’s because you may not realize exactly what your family is actually deciding and which questions need answers before a permanent choice is made.
Find out What Families Are Really Deciding
What Most Families Eventually Discover
At first, families often believe they are making a real estate decision.
Eventually they realize they are making a family decision.
The house is connected to care needs, finances, memories, inheritance questions, family dynamics, and future planning.
That is why the decision often feels much bigger than the property itself.
Why I Understand This Decision Is About More Than Real Estate
I help Denver families navigate decisions about a parent's home, but my understanding of this process did not begin with real estate.
My own family has had to deal with memory loss, senior living, care decisions, belongings, and the question of what happens next. I have also helped families sort through homes filled with decades of memories, make donation runs, deal with dumpsters, coordinate repairs, and work through the practical details that rarely fit neatly into a real estate transaction.
I have learned that the house is often only one piece of a much bigger transition.
Sometimes a family needs to sell. Sometimes they need more information. Sometimes they need a little time to catch their breath.
My job is not to convince you to sell a house. It is to help you understand your options, what each one involves, and what the next step may look like.
Find out more about Why I Do This
Questions I Have Asked When Helping
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Most families choose to sell, keep, rent, or wait before deciding. The right choice depends on whether returning home is realistic, the cost and condition of the property, your parent's financial needs, and what the family is prepared to manage.
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Selling may provide funds that can help pay for assisted living, memory care, or other expenses, but the decision should be based on the family's full financial and legal situation. Before selling, make sure the person making the decision has the proper authority and understands how the sale may affect the parent's finances.
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There is no universal timeline. Waiting may make sense while care needs are changing or returning home remains realistic. The important question is whether waiting is providing useful information or simply delaying a decision while expenses and responsibilities continue.
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This can make the decision especially difficult. Before making permanent decisions, families may need input from doctors, care professionals, and others involved in the parent's care to understand whether returning home is realistically possible.
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Often, yes. The best approach depends on the amount and type of belongings, the condition of the home, and how the property will be sold. Families do not always need to completely empty or renovate a house before beginning the selling process.
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Start by identifying what the disagreement is actually about. One sibling may be focused on finances, another on preserving memories, and another on avoiding a decision they are not emotionally ready to make. Understanding the reason behind the disagreement often makes the practical options easier to discuss.
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Selling as-is may make sense when repairs would take too much time, money, or energy. In other situations, a few strategic improvements may make the home easier to sell or improve the outcome. The goal is not to fix everything. It is to understand which work, if any, is worth doing.
You Do Not Have to Decide Everything Today
If you are trying to figure out what to do with a parent's house, you may be dealing with much more than real estate.
You may be worried about Mom or Dad. You may be trying to understand care costs, sort through decades of belongings, keep siblings on the same page, and make decisions you never expected to be making.
You do not have to solve everything at once.
Sometimes the next step is selling the house. Sometimes it is understanding what the house costs to keep. Sometimes it is finding out whether returning home is realistic. And sometimes it is simply getting enough information to make the next decision with a little more confidence.
I help Denver families understand the house, the options, and what needs to happen next.
I’d love to get together for coffee and help you find the right path
No pressure. No obligation. Just a conversation about your family's situation.