Can You Inherit Your Parent’s Debt? What the Law Actually Says
π° The calls from collectors start fast. Here’s what you’re actually responsible for β and what you’re not.
Your parent just died. You’re still processing the grief. And then the phone rings β a collector asking about a credit card balance you didn’t know existed. Your stomach drops. Am I on the hook for this?
It’s one of the most common questions people ask after a parent dies, and it’s one of the most misunderstood. Debt collectors know this. Some count on your confusion β and your guilt β to get you to agree to payments you don’t legally owe.
So let’s be clear about what the law actually says.
In most cases, you do not inherit your parent’s debt. Their debt belongs to their estate β not to you personally. But there are important exceptions, and knowing the difference can save you thousands of dollars.
βοΈ How Estate Debt Actually Works
When someone dies, their assets and debts go into what’s called their “estate.” During probate, the executor (or administrator, if there’s no will) is responsible for inventorying everything and paying valid debts from the estate’s assets before distributing anything to heirs.
Here’s the order of operations:
The key principle: creditors get paid from the estate, not from the children’s personal funds. If the estate runs out of money, the remaining debt usually dies with the person.
π³ Credit Card Debt
This is the one people panic about most β and it’s usually the simplest answer.
If your parent was the sole account holder, the credit card debt belongs to the estate. If the estate can pay it, it will be paid during probate. If the estate can’t, the credit card company writes it off. You owe nothing.
If you were an authorized user on the card (meaning your parent added you so you could use it), you’re still not responsible in most states. Authorized users can use the card but didn’t agree to the debt contract.
π Mortgage Debt
Mortgages work differently because they’re “secured debt” β meaning the loan is tied to the property itself. If your parent dies and you inherit the house, you inherit the mortgage too. But that’s not as scary as it sounds.
Under the Garn-St. Germain Depository Institutions Act, the lender cannot call the entire loan due just because the borrower died. As an heir, you have the right to:
Assume the Mortgage
Keep making payments under the existing terms. You don’t need to refinance or re-qualify. Contact the servicer to transfer the account into your name.
Sell the Property
Sell the home and use the proceeds to pay off the mortgage. If there’s equity, you keep the remainder. If the home is underwater, you may be able to negotiate a short sale.
You’re never responsible for mortgage debt beyond the value of the property itself. If you don’t want the house, you can simply decline the inheritance and let the lender foreclose β it won’t affect your credit.
π₯ Medical Bills
Medical debt is one of the trickiest categories, because state laws vary significantly. In most states, a deceased person’s medical bills are paid from the estate like any other debt. If the estate can’t cover them, they’re written off.
However, there are exceptions:
π Student Loans
Federal student loans are discharged (forgiven) upon the borrower’s death. If your parent had federal student loans, contact the loan servicer with a copy of the death certificate. The balance goes to zero.
Parent PLUS loans are also discharged when the parent borrower dies β or when the student on whose behalf the loan was taken out dies.
Private student loans are less predictable. Many major private lenders now offer death discharge, but it’s not required by law. Check the promissory note. If your parent co-signed your private student loans, or you co-signed theirs, the surviving co-signer may be responsible for the remaining balance.
π Car Loans
Like mortgages, car loans are secured debt β tied to the vehicle. If you inherit the car, you can continue making payments, pay it off, or sell the vehicle. If you don’t want the car, you can let the lender repossess it. The estate may owe the difference between the car’s value and the loan balance, but you personally don’t.
β οΈ When You ARE Personally Responsible
While the general rule protects you, there are specific situations where a parent’s debt can become your problem:
π How to Deal with Debt Collectors
Collectors may call you within days of your parent’s death. Some are following proper legal procedures. Others are counting on your grief and confusion to get you to agree to something you shouldn’t. Here’s how to handle it:
A debt collector calling you does not mean you owe the debt. It means they’re trying to collect from anyone they can reach. Know the difference β it could save you thousands.
π‘οΈ How to Protect Yourself (and Your Family)
The best time to understand estate debt is before a crisis hits. If your parents are still alive, here’s what to do now:
π Know Where the Debt Is Before It Becomes an Emergency
Here’s the real problem families face: it’s not just about whether you owe the debt. It’s about knowing the debt exists at all. When a parent dies and nobody knows which accounts are open, which loans are outstanding, or which bills are on autopay, the executor is flying blind β and creditors have the advantage.
The families who navigate this best are the ones who have everything documented and accessible before the crisis hits. Every account. Every loan. Every creditor. Organized, stored securely, and shared with the people who need it.
Get Your Family’s Financial Picture in One Secure Place
ποΈ Try CareTabs FreeStore account details, loan documents, insurance policies, and financial records in one encrypted vault β and share access with the people who’ll need it most. Your first vault is free.