For many families, a Lake Keowee home becomes the gathering place — the spot grandchildren remember and generations return to. Keeping it in the family across decades takes planning. This is an educational overview; your estate attorney and CPA design the actual structure.
How families hold a legacy property.
Families commonly hold lake homes in a trust or LLC to ease succession, manage shared use, and address liability. Your attorney advises on the right fit.
When multiple heirs share a home, written agreements on scheduling, costs, and decisions prevent conflict later.
Planning for ongoing carrying costs — dues, dock reserves, taxes — keeps the property sustainable across generations. Long-term ownership →
Aligning the family early.
Not every heir wants the responsibility. Honest conversations about interest and capacity shape the plan.
How time, costs, and decision-making are shared — and how an exiting heir is bought out — are worth deciding in advance.
In club communities, how membership passes or transfers is part of the legacy picture. HOA/POA & membership →
The team and the process.
They design the ownership and succession structure and address tax and basis implications. Start with them.
Planning benefits from an honest, current sense of the home’s value — something David provides. Home valuation →
David stays a resource across the decades — for valuations, eventual transitions, or a future sale. About David →
The questions buyers and sellers ask David first.
Commonly through a trust or LLC with clear shared-use agreements and a plan to fund ongoing costs. An estate attorney and CPA design the right structure for your family.
Which heirs actually want the home, how use and costs are shared, how decisions are made, and how an exiting heir is bought out — ideally decided in advance.
In club communities, how membership passes or transfers is part of the picture and should be confirmed with the community and your attorney.
Your estate attorney and CPA, with David providing a current valuation and staying available as a long-term resource.
A 30-minute conversation is the fastest way to get a confident next step.