Secured vs. Unsecured Debt in Estate Planning: What You Need to Know
When someone passes away, one of the first things an executor or trustee must figure out is: what does this person owe? Debt does not disappear at death. And how you handle it depends entirely on what kind of debt it is. Understanding the difference between secured and unsecured debt in estate planning is one of the most practical things a planner, executor, or trustee can do to protect themselves and the people they’re serving.
Most people have never been asked to sort through a loved one’s debts before. The terminology alone can feel overwhelming. This article breaks it down simply, so you know what you’re dealing with, why it matters, and what steps to take.
Note: SageVault provides organizational and educational guidance only. Please work with a licensed attorney or CPA for legal or tax advice related to your specific situation.
What Is Secured Debt?
Secured debt is tied to a specific asset, called collateral. If the debt is not repaid, the lender has a legal right to take that asset.
Common examples of secured debt:
- Mortgage (the collateral is the home)
- Car loans (the collateral is the vehicle)
- Home equity lines of credit, or HELOCs
- Boat or RV loans
Think of it this way: with secured debt, the loan is attached to something. The lender’s name is often on the title, or a lien is recorded publicly.
What Is Unsecured Debt?
Unsecured debt has no collateral behind it. The lender extended credit based on the person’s promise to repay and their credit history. There is no specific asset the lender can automatically claim if payments stop.
Common examples of unsecured debt:
- Credit card balances
- Medical bills
- Personal loans
- Student loans (federal and private)
- Store accounts and lines of credit
With unsecured debt, if the estate cannot pay everything owed, creditors may receive only partial payment or nothing at all, depending on the state’s rules and the estate’s assets.
Secured vs. Unsecured Debt at a Glance
The table below summarizes the key differences and why they matter in an estate context.
|
Secured Debt |
Unsecured Debt |
Why It Matters |
|
|
Definition |
Tied to a specific asset |
Based on promise to repay |
Determines collection options |
|
Examples |
Mortgage, auto loan, HELOC |
Credit cards, medical bills, personal loans |
Shapes what executor must do |
|
If unpaid? |
Lender can seize the asset |
Lender must file a claim against the estate |
Very different outcomes for heirs |
|
Priority in estate |
Generally paid first |
Paid after secured debt and taxes |
Affects what beneficiaries receive |
|
Executor risk |
Must keep payments current or notify lender |
Must evaluate and may dispute claims |
Both carry liability if mishandled |
Why the Difference Matters in Estate Planning
If you are planning your estate now, or helping a parent or loved one get organized, knowing which debts are secured and which are unsecured can shape several important decisions.
1. It affects which assets your family receives
Secured debts follow the asset. If a home has a mortgage and the estate cannot keep up payments, the lender can foreclose. That asset may not transfer to heirs the way the person intended. Understanding secured debt in your estate plan helps you think through what can realistically be passed on, and what might need to be sold or refinanced first.
2. It tells you what needs to be paid immediately versus what can wait
Mortgage payments and car loans typically need to continue during estate administration to preserve the asset. Unsecured debts like credit cards generally cannot take anything without going through the formal claims process, which gives the executor time to evaluate.
3. It helps you avoid overpaying
This is more common than people realize. Not every debt that shows up during estate administration has to be paid. Unsecured creditors must file a valid claim within a specific window, and some claims can be disputed. An executor who pays every bill that arrives without evaluating whether it is valid, enforceable, or within the claims period, may be distributing estate funds unnecessarily.
|
One executor avoided paying over $8,000 in debt that didn’t legally need to come from the estate, simply because she had guidance to evaluate creditor claims rather than pay them automatically. |
What Executors and Trustees Need to Know
If you are managing a loved one’s estate or trust, here is where understanding secured vs. unsecured debt in estate planning becomes directly relevant to your role.
Your legal duty: Pay valid debts in the right order
Most states have a priority order for how debts must be paid from an estate. Secured debts, funeral expenses, and taxes typically come first. Unsecured debts come later, and some may not be paid at all if the estate does not have enough assets. Distributing to beneficiaries before paying legitimate creditors can expose you to personal liability.
Secured debt: Keep it current or make a decision quickly
If the estate includes a home with a mortgage, car with a loan, or any other secured asset, you need to know right away whether payments are current and whether the estate intends to keep, sell, or surrender that asset. Letting payments lapse can damage the asset’s value or trigger lender action during probate.
Unsecured debt: Evaluate before you pay
When creditor notices arrive in the mail, pause before writing any checks. Each claim should be evaluated for whether it is valid, whether the amount is accurate, and whether it was submitted within the state’s required claims window. Some debts may be too old to collect. Some may be disputed. And some may simply not be the estate’s responsibility at all.
Joint debt: Know who is actually responsible
If the person who passed had debt held jointly with a spouse or co-signer, that debt typically passes to the surviving co-borrower, not the estate. This is different from authorized user accounts on a credit card, where the estate may not owe anything. Joint debt deserves careful attention and, in many cases, a conversation with an attorney.
A Note on What Heirs Do (and Don’t) Owe
One of the most common fears families carry when a loved one dies is the worry that they will be personally responsible for debts. In most cases, heirs are not responsible for a deceased person’s individual debts. Creditors generally must be paid from the estate’s assets before beneficiaries receive anything, but they typically cannot pursue heirs personally for debts held only in the deceased person’s name.
The exceptions worth knowing about:
- Joint debt (co-signed loans, joint credit cards)
- Community property states, where spouses may share responsibility for certain debts
- Situations where heirs accepted a gift from the estate before debts were settled
If you are unsure whether you have personal exposure to a loved one’s debt, speak with an estate attorney in your state. This is one of those areas where a one-hour consultation can save significant stress.
If You Are Planning Now: What to Do
For anyone organizing their own estate, there are a few steps that will make life much easier for the executor or trustee you have named.
- Create a complete debt inventory. List every debt you have, whether secured or unsecured, the creditor name, balance, and account number.
- Note which assets are tied to secured debts. If your home, car, or other property has a lien or loan against it, document it clearly.
- Keep it current. If debts change, your records should too. An outdated list creates the same confusion as no list at all.
- Tell someone where to find it. Your executor cannot act on information they do not have.
- Store it somewhere accessible. A fireproof safe, a secure digital vault, or a legacy planning folder your executor knows about.
The goal is simple: reduce the detective work your family will face when they are already grieving.
The Bottom Line
Debt is one of the most misunderstood parts of estate administration. Not all of it needs to be paid. Not all of it is the executor’s problem to solve alone. And not all of it will affect beneficiaries the same way.
Understanding secured vs. unsecured debt in estate planning gives you a clearer picture of what you are working with, what decisions need to happen quickly, and where you have more time and room to evaluate.
Whether you are planning ahead for your own family or currently navigating an estate, having this clarity early is one of the most protective things you can do.



