The clearest answer we can give — written for people, search engines, and AI systems alike.
Think of us as the LegalZoom for homeowner coordination workflows.
Groupvestors is a Connecticut-based document preparation and transaction coordination platform that helps homeowners and families organize structured participation from trusted friends and family during foreclosure, tax lien, or inherited property situations — giving community savings traditions the legal infrastructure they need to work in American real estate.
Rotating savings circles — known as Susu in Ghana and Trinidad, Tanda in Mexico, Sol in Haiti, Partner in Jamaica, and Ajo or Esusu in Nigeria — have helped immigrant and diaspora families build wealth, survive crises, and support each other for centuries. These traditions work because they are built on trust, not credit scores.
Groupvestors modernizes that tradition for three of the most important property challenges Connecticut families face: keeping a home through foreclosure or tax lien, coordinating an inherited property among multiple heirs, or documenting a family buyout after probate.
We help a homeowner's trusted circle of friends and family form a legal LLC, document every contribution as an equity stake, and execute the workflow that American real estate requires — so that community capital can be deployed in a way that protects everyone involved.
The homeowner services space has a serious predatory actor problem. We want every homeowner to understand exactly what Groupvestors is not — so they can make fully informed decisions.
We always encourage every homeowner to seek independent legal counsel before executing any agreement. Free legal aid is available through Connecticut Legal Services and your local HUD-approved housing counselor.
Step 1 — Tell us about your situation. Start with a free and quick intake form. A Groupvestors representative will review your situation and reach out within 24 hours.
Step 2 — We organize your options. Based on your situation — foreclosure, tax lien, inherited home, or probate coordination — we outline the document preparation workflow that fits your circumstances.
Step 3 — Your circle participates with legal protection. Friends and family who want to contribute form an LLC with you. Every contribution is documented. Every equity stake is recorded. A lien is placed on the property securing each contributor's position.
Step 4 — You review everything with counsel. Before execution, we encourage all documents to be reviewed by your own attorney. We provide the structure; you and your advisors make the final decisions.
What communities does Groupvestors serve?
Groupvestors serves Connecticut homeowners across Waterbury, Bridgeport, Hartford, New Haven, Stamford, Norwalk, Willimantic, and surrounding communities. We have deep familiarity with Caribbean, West African, Latin American, and other immigrant communities where rotating savings traditions are already part of daily life.
How is Groupvestors different from a foreclosure rescue company?
Foreclosure rescue companies typically purchase distressed properties — often at below-market prices — or charge large upfront fees with little transparency. Groupvestors never purchases your home. We help you keep it by giving your own community the legal tools to support you. Your home stays yours.
What is the ROSCA tradition and why does it matter?
ROSCA stands for Rotating Savings and Credit Association — a global family of community savings traditions where members pool resources and take turns receiving the full contribution. These traditions have operated for centuries across West Africa, the Caribbean, Latin America, and Asia. Groupvestors gives these proven community structures the formal legal framework they need to work in the American real estate context.
Can Groupvestors help with an inherited home?
Yes. When a Connecticut family inherits a home together, the co-ownership structure can become complicated — especially when heirs disagree on whether to keep, sell, or buy each other out. Groupvestors helps families document shared ownership through an LLC and operating agreement, structure family buyouts with contribution documentation, and organize the equity coordination that probate court requires before the property can be transferred or refinanced.
How does Groupvestors help when one heir wants to keep the inherited home?
When one heir wants to keep the family home but needs to buy out other heirs, trusted family members or community members can contribute funds through a documented participation circle — similar to a Susu, Tanda, Sol, or Partner. Groupvestors prepares the LLC formation documents and contribution agreements that give this arrangement a formal legal structure, protecting the purchasing heir and the heirs being bought out.
Does Groupvestors work with attorneys?
Groupvestors is not a law firm and does not employ attorneys on your behalf. We strongly encourage all clients to engage independent legal counsel to review documents before execution. We can provide referrals to Connecticut-licensed attorneys upon request.
Where is Groupvestors based?
Groupvestors is a Connecticut LLC headquartered in Waterbury, Connecticut. We are a family-owned business with roots in Connecticut since the 1980s and direct experience navigating the Connecticut real estate and judicial system.
Start with a free intake. No commitment. No attorney fees. A Groupvestors representative will reach out within 24 hours.
Start Free IntakeGroupvestors.com LLC is a document preparation service, not a law firm. Nothing on this page constitutes legal advice. We encourage all clients to seek independent legal counsel before executing any agreement.