A title problem is a paperwork problem, and paperwork can be fixed
A title problem can stall a sale right at the closing table, but it's almost never the end of the road. Most of these issues, a lien you forgot about, a name still on the deed, a gap in who legally inherited the house, are paperwork problems. Texas has a well-worn process for sorting them out, and a good title company in Houston deals with this kind of thing every single week.
The frustrating part is that title issues often surface at the worst moment: you've got a buyer, you're ready to close, and the title commitment comes back with exceptions nobody saw coming. This page explains what those problems usually are and how they get resolved. It's educational, not legal advice. The two people you want in your corner here are a Texas title company and, for the trickier items, a real estate attorney.
What "title problems" usually means
When you sell, the buyer's side orders a title commitment, basically a report on who legally owns the property and what's attached to it. Problems show up as exceptions on that report. The common ones in Houston:
- Liens. A debt secured against the property. Could be a tax lien, a contractor's mechanic's lien from work that was never paid for, a judgment lien, or an HOA lien. A lien is a cloud on title until it's released. The good news: most liens get paid off straight out of the sale proceeds at closing, so they don't have to come out of your pocket up front. We cover this more on our selling with liens page.
- Heirship gaps. Common with inherited homes. The owner passed away and the estate was never properly settled, so on paper the title doesn't clearly belong to the person trying to sell. Texas usually fixes this with an affidavit of heirship, a probate proceeding, or in some cases a court action, depending on the situation.
- Clouds and errors. An old, unreleased mortgage that was actually paid off, a misspelled name on a past deed, a missing signature, a boundary or survey discrepancy. Small on their face, but they have to be cleared before clean title can pass.
- Ownership disputes. More than one person claims an interest, an ex-spouse still on the deed, a sibling who inherited a share. These sometimes need a quiet-title suit, which is squarely attorney territory.
How Texas actually clears these
Texas is a title-insurance state, which works in your favor. The title company researches the chain of ownership, identifies the exceptions, and runs the curative work to clear them, getting lien releases recorded, handling an affidavit of heirship, fixing a clerical error in the records. Liens that can't simply be released get paid from your proceeds at closing. For the heavier items, a clouded chain, a dispute, an heirship that needs probate, a real estate attorney steps in alongside the title company. The point is that there's a defined road for almost all of it. What there isn't is a shortcut you should try on your own.
You can often sell without untangling it all first
Here's what many sellers don't realize: you don't always have to resolve every title issue before you put the house on the market. Plenty of cash buyers and investors are comfortable buying through known title problems and working with the title company to clear them as part of the deal. Because they're not getting a mortgage, there's no lender refusing to fund over an exception, which is often what blows up a financed sale. You sell as-is, the curative work happens in parallel, and the liens get settled at closing.
Your options
- Sell as-is to a cash buyer. Good when you want out fast and would rather not front the cost or time of clearing everything yourself. See what a cash offer looks like.
- Let buyers compete. A title-challenged property can still draw multiple offers. Have a few vetted buyers bid against each other instead of taking the first number.
- Clear title with a title company, then list. If the issue is straightforward and your timeline allows, resolving it first and listing clean on the MLS can net the most.
- Settling an estate? Heirship gaps come straight out of inherited property. See selling a house in probate for how that piece fits.
Where SFHS fits
We're a local, family-owned Houston company. We'll lay the selling paths side by side, including a top-dollar MLS listing with our licensed REALTOR, Maxwell Buffamante, when that nets you more, and let you choose with no pressure. We can be the buyer or your listing agent. The title work itself, the curative steps, an affidavit of heirship, a quiet-title suit, belongs with a Texas title company and a real estate attorney. We'll point you to the right one and work alongside them. Tell us about the property when you want a straight read on your options.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I sell my Houston house if it has a lien on it?
Usually yes. Most liens, tax, mechanic's, judgment, or HOA, are paid off directly from the sale proceeds at closing, so they don't have to come out of your pocket first. The title company handles getting the releases recorded as part of the deal.
What if the title is in a deceased relative's name?
That's an heirship gap, common with inherited homes. Texas typically resolves it with an affidavit of heirship, a probate proceeding, or a court action, depending on the circumstances. A title company and a real estate attorney will tell you which applies to your situation.
Do I have to fix every title problem before I can sell?
Not always. Many cash buyers and investors purchase through known title issues and work with the title company to clear them as part of the closing. Because there's no mortgage lender involved, an exception that would sink a financed sale often doesn't stop a cash deal.
What is a clouded title?
A clouded title is one with an unresolved claim or defect, an old unreleased mortgage, a missing signature, a name error, or a competing ownership claim, that has to be cleared before clean title can pass to a buyer. A title company researches and resolves most clouds through curative work.
Who actually clears the title problems?
The title company does the research and most of the curative work. For heavier issues like a quiet-title suit or a contested estate, a Texas real estate attorney steps in. SFHS isn't your attorney or title company; we work alongside them and can point you to a reputable one.