Quitclaim Deed Medicaid 5-Year Lookback Explained
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Quitclaim Deed vs Ladybird Deed: Dodging the Medicaid 5-Year Lookback and Gift Tax Traps

Deepak
Jun 8, 2026
20 min read

Quitclaim Deed vs Warranty Deed: What You're Actually Transferring

A quitclaim deed is the legal equivalent of saying "whatever interest I have in this property, I give to you, no promises." It transfers ownership without any guarantee that the title is clear, that no liens exist, or even that you actually own the property at all. That is why it is the most misunderstood document in American real estate law.

By contrast, a warranty deed (general or special) comes with legal covenants: the grantor warrants they own the property, that it is free of undisclosed encumbrances, and that they will defend the title against future claims. If a problem surfaces after closing, the grantee can sue the grantor on those covenants. With a quitclaim, that recourse simply does not exist.

Quitclaim vs warranty deed legal protections comparison

Despite offering zero title protection, quitclaim deeds remain wildly popular for one reason: they are fast, cheap, and require no title search. That makes them ideal for situations where the parties already trust each other and title risk is low or already understood:

  • Parent-to-child transfers — Mom adds her adult daughter to the deed, or transfers the family home outright as part of estate planning.
  • Divorce property settlements — One spouse quitclaims their interest in the marital home to the other as part of the divorce decree.
  • Removing a co-owner — A former partner, ex-fiance, or sibling who inherited a fractional interest is paid out and quitclaims their share.
  • Adding a spouse — A homeowner who married after purchase wants their new spouse on title.
  • Trust funding — Transferring property from an individual into a revocable living trust they themselves control.
  • Clearing clouds on title — A long-lost heir signs a quitclaim to formally relinquish any claim.

Here is what the document does not do, and where most family disputes start:

  1. It does not extinguish the mortgage. If you quitclaim your interest to your son, you remain personally liable on the loan until it is refinanced or paid off.
  2. It does not transfer the homeowners insurance policy, which is tied to the named insured.
  3. It does not change the property tax assessment automatically — and in some states (notably California with Proposition 19) the transfer can trigger reassessment.
  4. It does not protect against unknown liens, easements, or boundary disputes that may exist.

Legal & Tax Disclaimer: This article is educational only and does not constitute legal, tax, or financial advice. Deed law, gift tax thresholds, and Medicaid eligibility rules vary by state and change frequently. Consult a licensed real estate attorney, CPA, and elder law attorney before executing any deed.

The Hidden Gift Tax Bomb: Form 709, the Annual Exclusion, and the Lifetime Cliff

Here is the conversation no one has at the kitchen table: the moment you quitclaim a $400,000 house to your son for $1 of "love and affection," the IRS considers it a $399,999 gift. That triggers federal gift tax reporting rules whether or not any tax is actually owed.

For 2026, the annual gift tax exclusion is $19,000 per recipient (up from $18,000 in 2024). That means you can give any one person up to $19,000 in cash or property value per year without filing anything. A married couple electing gift-splitting can give $38,000 per recipient per year. Anything above that threshold is a reportable gift.

2026 gift tax annual exclusion and lifetime exemption thresholds

Reportable does not mean taxable. The federal lifetime gift and estate tax exemption for 2026 is $13.99 million per individual ($27.98M per couple). Reportable gifts simply count against that lifetime number. The mechanism is IRS Form 709, the United States Gift Tax Return, due by April 15 of the year following the gift.

ScenarioProperty ValueAnnual ExclusionReportable AmountForm 709?
Parent quitclaims home to child$400,000$19,000$381,000Yes
Couple quitclaims to married child (gift-split)$400,000$76,000$324,000Yes (both spouses)
Adding spouse to deed$400,000 (50%)Unlimited$0No (marital deduction)
Quitclaim to revocable trust you control$400,000N/A$0No (not a completed gift)
Quitclaim of 1% interest annually$4,000$19,000$0No

Here is what people get wrong and why it matters in 2026:

  • The 2025 sunset has been extended. The Tax Cuts and Jobs Act doubling of the exemption was originally set to revert in 2026, but the 2025 reconciliation legislation made the elevated $13.99M figure permanent and indexed it for inflation. Many older articles incorrectly warn of a 2026 cliff back to roughly $7M.
  • Failure to file Form 709 starts no statute of limitations. The IRS can audit unreported gifts forever. A quitclaim recorded at the county is a public record the IRS can and does cross-reference.
  • Penalties for non-filing are 5% per month of the tax due (max 25%), but if no tax is owed because the lifetime exemption covers it, the practical penalty is the audit risk and basis-tracking nightmare.
  • State gift taxes are mostly gone, but Connecticut still imposes one (with its own exemption tracking).

The bottom line: if you transfer property worth more than $19,000 of equity, you almost certainly need to file Form 709. The good news is you probably will not owe a dime in 2026 — you will just use up some of your lifetime exemption.

The Carryover Basis Disaster: Why a Quitclaim Can Cost Your Kid $80,000 in Taxes

This is the single most expensive mistake families make with quitclaim deeds, and it shows up only when the child later sells the home. The villain is a concept called carryover basis, and it is the reason elder law attorneys cringe when they hear "Mom is just going to deed the house to me now."

When you give property as a gift during your lifetime, the recipient inherits your original cost basis — what you paid for the property plus the cost of capital improvements. When you transfer property at death (through a will, trust, or beneficiary deed), the recipient gets a stepped-up basis equal to the fair market value on the date of death.

Carryover basis vs step-up in basis tax impact on family home

Let us walk through a real-world example that plays out thousands of times a year:

The Setup: Mom bought her home in 1985 for $90,000. She added a $20,000 kitchen renovation in 2002. Her adjusted basis is $110,000. The home is worth $700,000 today. Her son Mark will inherit it eventually.

ScenarioMark's BasisSale PriceTaxable GainFederal Cap Gains Tax (15%)Net Cost
Mom quitclaims now (carryover)$110,000$700,000$590,000$88,500Plus state, plus NIIT 3.8%
Mark inherits at death (step-up)$700,000$700,000$0$0$0
Mom puts in revocable trust, Mark inherits$700,000$700,000$0$0$0
Ladybird deed (enhanced life estate)$700,000$700,000$0$0$0 (in eligible states)

The lifetime quitclaim costs Mark roughly $88,500 in federal capital gains tax alone, plus state income tax (potentially another $25,000-$50,000), plus the 3.8% Net Investment Income Tax if his income is high enough. Total damage: easily $120,000+. Inheriting the same house through any of the other methods costs zero.

There are nuances families miss:

  • The Section 121 exclusion does not transfer. Mom could have excluded $250,000 of gain as her primary residence ($500,000 if married). Mark gets none of that unless he lives in the home as his primary residence for 2 of the 5 years before selling.
  • Improvements you cannot document are lost. If Mom never kept receipts for the kitchen, the IRS can disallow that $20,000 add-back. Carryover basis is only as good as the records.
  • Partial gifts get partial step-up. If Mom quitclaims 50% now and dies owning 50%, only the 50% she still owned at death gets a step-up. The other half keeps the carryover basis.
  • Joint tenancy is even worse in non-community-property states — only the deceased's half gets a step-up.

The takeaway: for a highly appreciated primary residence, gifting during life via quitclaim is almost always a tax disaster. The exceptions are properties with little appreciation, properties that will not be sold (kept for rental), or properties where Medicaid planning urgency overrides tax optimization.

Medicaid 5-Year Lookback: When Your Quitclaim Disqualifies Mom or Dad

Here is the scenario that breaks more families than any other: Mom quitclaims her home to her daughter to "protect it from the nursing home." Three years later, Mom needs long-term care. The family applies for Medicaid. The state denies coverage and slaps Mom with a penalty period of disqualification. The family has to pay $9,000-$15,000 per month out of pocket for nursing care during the penalty. The daughter often has to sell the house anyway — or worse, refuses, and Mom has nowhere to go.

This is the Medicaid 5-year lookback, and it is the single most consequential rule in elder law.

How it works: When someone applies for long-term care Medicaid (the program that pays for nursing homes), the state reviews every asset transfer made in the 60 months preceding the application. Any transfer for less than fair market value — including a quitclaim deed for $1 — is presumed to be an attempt to qualify for Medicaid and triggers a penalty period.

Medicaid 5-year lookback penalty period calculation by state

Calculating the penalty: The state takes the value of the transferred asset and divides by the state's monthly penalty divisor — roughly the average private-pay nursing home cost in that state. The result is the number of months the applicant is disqualified, starting on the date they would otherwise have qualified for Medicaid.

State (2026 est.)Monthly Divisor$400K Quitclaim PenaltyPenalty Months
California (skilled nursing)$13,500$400,000 / $13,50029.6 months
New York (Upstate)$13,800$400,000 / $13,80028.9 months
Florida$10,809$400,000 / $10,80937.0 months
Texas$262.59/day$400,000 / $7,97850.1 months
Ohio$8,256$400,000 / $8,25648.4 months

Exempt transfers that do NOT trigger penalties:

  • Transfer to a spouse (unlimited).
  • Transfer to a child who is blind or permanently disabled.
  • Transfer to a child under 21.
  • Transfer to a caretaker child who lived in the home for at least 2 years and provided care that delayed institutionalization.
  • Transfer to a sibling who has an equity interest and lived in the home for at least 1 year.
  • Transfer into certain disability trusts or pooled trusts for the applicant's benefit.

The half-loaf strategy: Sophisticated elder law attorneys sometimes use a technique where the applicant gifts half the assets and uses the other half (often via a Medicaid-compliant annuity) to private-pay through the penalty period. This is complex, state-specific, and never something to attempt without an elder law specialist.

The bottom line: If there is any possibility a parent will need Medicaid-funded long-term care within 5 years, do not execute a quitclaim deed without first consulting a certified elder law attorney. The penalty is calculated from the date of Medicaid application, not the date of the deed, so timing matters enormously.

Step-by-Step: How to Properly Execute a Quitclaim Deed

The good news is that executing a valid quitclaim deed is mechanically straightforward. The bad news is that small errors — a missing middle initial, an incorrect parcel number, an unwitnessed signature — can invalidate the transfer or cloud the title for decades. Here is the complete checklist.

Quitclaim deed execution step by step process flowchart

Step 1: Obtain the correct state-specific form. Quitclaim deed requirements are governed by state law. Generic internet forms often miss state-specific language. Use either your county recorder's form, a state bar association form, or a verified template from your state's recorder of deeds website.

Step 2: Pull the current vesting deed. Look up the existing deed at the county recorder. The grantor on your new quitclaim must exactly match the grantee on the most recent deed — including any "as joint tenants," "as trustees," or "a married person as sole and separate property" language.

Step 3: Copy the legal description verbatim. The street address is not enough. The legal description (lot, block, subdivision, or metes and bounds) must be copied character-for-character from the existing deed or a current title report. Even a missing comma can render the deed void for vagueness.

Step 4: State the consideration. Most states require some recital of consideration, even if nominal. Common formulations: "the sum of Ten Dollars ($10.00) and other good and valuable consideration" for an arm's-length transfer, or "love and affection and the sum of One Dollar ($1.00)" for a family gift.

Step 5: Include grantor and grantee details. Full legal names (no nicknames), current mailing addresses, and marital status. For grantees, specify how title will be held: "as joint tenants with right of survivorship," "as tenants in common," "as community property," or "as sole and separate property."

Step 6: Sign before a notary. Every state requires notarization of the grantor's signature. Some states (including Florida, Georgia, Louisiana, South Carolina, and Vermont) also require two witnesses. The grantee does not sign.

Step 7: Spousal consent. In community property states (AZ, CA, ID, LA, NV, NM, TX, WA, WI) and many homestead-protection states (including FL), a non-titled spouse may need to sign even if not on the original deed.

Step 8: Prepare the Preliminary Change of Ownership Report (PCOR) or equivalent. California requires a PCOR. Other states have similar forms — Florida's DR-219, New York's RP-5217, Texas's HCAD form. These determine whether the transfer is reassessed for property tax.

Step 9: Calculate transfer taxes. Most states impose a real estate transfer tax or documentary stamp tax. Many states exempt intra-family transfers, but you must claim the exemption on the recording form. Common exemptions: parent-to-child, spouse-to-spouse, into a revocable trust, divorce decree.

Step 10: Record at the county recorder. An unrecorded deed is valid between the parties but vulnerable to subsequent creditors and bona fide purchasers. Bring the original signed deed, the PCOR/transfer form, the recording fee (typically $15-$150), and any transfer tax payment. The recorder time-stamps it and returns the original.

Step 11: Notify the mortgage holder and insurance carrier. Most mortgages contain a due-on-sale clause that technically allows the lender to accelerate the loan upon transfer. The federal Garn-St. Germain Act exempts most family transfers (spouse, child, joint tenant) but not all. Insurance must be updated to add or substitute the new owner.

Step 12: Update the property tax records. The recorder usually notifies the assessor, but follow up. The new owner needs to file for any applicable homestead exemption in their own name.

State-by-State Recording Requirements: Fees, Transfer Taxes, and Forms

Recording a quitclaim deed is a state and county matter, and the costs and required forms vary wildly. A transfer that costs $25 to record in Ohio can trigger $4,000 in mansion tax in New York. Here is what you need to know in the six most populous states for 2026.

State by state quitclaim deed recording fees and transfer tax comparison
StateRecording Fee (first page)Transfer Tax RateFamily Exemption?Required Form
California$15-$25 + $75 SB2 fee$0.55 per $500 (county) + cityYes — parent/child, spousePCOR (BOE-502-A)
New York$45 + $5/page$2 per $500 state + NYC 1-2.625%Limited — TP-584 declarationRP-5217, TP-584
Texas$26-$30None (no state transfer tax)N/ATexas Property Code form
Florida$10 first page, $8.50 each add'l$0.70 per $100 doc stamp ($0.60 Miami-Dade)No — but minimum tax on quitclaim is $0.70DR-219 (if applicable)
Ohio$34 first page, $8 each add'l$1-$4 per $1,000 (county option)Yes — DTE 100EX exemptionDTE 100 or DTE 100EX
Pennsylvania$30-$80 county varies1% state + 1% local (2% total typical)Yes — REV-183 family exemptionREV-183, REV-1728

California Proposition 19 trap: Since February 2021, parent-to-child transfers of California real estate only retain the parent's property tax basis if the child uses the property as their primary residence and files for the homeowners exemption within one year. The old "$1 million bonus" parent-child exclusion is gone. Quitclaiming a rental property or a vacation home to your kids in California now triggers a full reassessment to current market value — often doubling or tripling the property tax bill.

New York mansion tax: Transfers of residential property valued at $1 million or more trigger an additional 1% buyer-side mansion tax. The NYC mansion tax steps up further for properties above $2M, with a top rate of 3.9% at $25M+. "Quitclaim for love and affection" does not avoid it — NYC assesses based on fair market value.

Florida documentary stamp minimum: Florida is unique in that even a "$1 love and affection" quitclaim to a child triggers a minimum $0.70 documentary stamp tax. If there is a mortgage on the property and the grantee is assuming it, the documentary stamp is calculated on the mortgage balance — which can be thousands of dollars.

Texas advantage: Texas has no state transfer tax, no documentary stamp, and a flat recording fee. It is one of the cheapest states in which to execute a family quitclaim. However, Texas does have unique homestead and community property rules that require spousal joinder.

Pennsylvania quirk: The PA 2% transfer tax applies even to family transfers unless you specifically file the REV-183 claiming the family exemption (parent-child, grandparent-grandchild, spouse, siblings of the same parents). Forget the form and you pay 2% of the assessed value.

Always verify with your specific county recorder before recording — county-level surcharges, e-recording fees, and indexing fees can add another $50-$200 to the cost.

Reverse Quitclaim: When You Need to Undo a Deed Transfer

The phone call usually starts with panic: "My mom quitclaimed her house to me three years ago, but now she needs Medicaid and we are way inside the lookback. Can we just undo it?" Or: "My ex quitclaimed his half to me in the divorce, but the title company is saying the deed is defective. Can he sign a new one?" The answer to both is "maybe, but it is complicated."

A reverse quitclaim — sometimes called a "deed-back" or "corrective deed" — is the process of transferring the property back to the original grantor. The mechanism is exactly the same as the original quitclaim: a new deed naming the current owner as grantor and the original owner as grantee, signed, notarized, and recorded.

When a reverse quitclaim works smoothly:

  • Mutual agreement. Both parties cooperate and sign. The deed-back is recorded, and ownership reverts. This is the most common scenario in family contexts.
  • Within the same tax year. If the original quitclaim was within the same calendar year and Form 709 has not yet been filed, the IRS may treat the round-trip as if no completed gift occurred — but only if the intent was clearly to undo a mistake, not to manipulate exemptions.
  • Scrivener's error. If the original deed had a typographical or clerical error (wrong legal description, misspelled name, missing notary seal), a corrective deed can be recorded that explicitly references and replaces the prior recorded document. Most states allow this without re-triggering transfer tax.

When it gets messy:

  1. Tax consequences run both directions. A deed-back is itself a gift from the current owner back to the original. If the daughter deeds Mom's house back to Mom, the daughter has potentially used another chunk of her lifetime gift exemption. The IRS does not automatically "undo" the prior gift.
  2. Medicaid will not be fooled. Federal regulations require Medicaid agencies to look at the substance of transfers, not just current titling. A deed-back made specifically to defeat the lookback can still result in a penalty period — and in some states, lying on a Medicaid application is a criminal offense.
  3. Disputed cases require litigation. If the grantee refuses to sign the deed-back, the original grantor must sue in state court to set aside the deed. Grounds include undue influence, lack of capacity, fraud, or failure of consideration. These are tough cases, often requiring medical records and witness testimony, and can take 12-24 months to resolve.
  4. Third-party liens. If the grantee has taken out a mortgage, HELOC, or had a judgment lien recorded against the property, that lien survives the deed-back. The original grantor receives the property subject to whatever the grantee did during their ownership.
  5. Reassessment risk. A deed-back in California, for example, can be a second reassessment event for property tax purposes if the original transfer broke the parent-child exclusion chain.

The practical takeaway: A deed-back is far more expensive and risky than getting the original deed right. Before executing any family quitclaim, run the "what if we need to undo this?" scenario with an attorney. And if you are already in the position of needing to reverse one, get specialist counsel immediately — there are sometimes time-sensitive elections (such as filing an amended Form 709) that can salvage the situation.

Quitclaim vs Living Trust vs Ladybird Deed: The Smart Alternatives

For most parent-to-child transfer goals — avoiding probate, easing administration, keeping the home in the family — a quitclaim deed is the worst tool in the toolbox. The good news: there are at least three alternatives that achieve the same goals without the tax bomb or Medicaid penalty.

Quitclaim vs living trust vs ladybird deed comparison chart
MechanismAvoids Probate?Step-up in Basis?Medicaid Safe?Parent Retains Control?Cost
Lifetime QuitclaimYesNo — carryoverNo — triggers 5-yr lookbackNo$50-$300
Revocable Living TrustYesYes — full step-upNo — counts as parent's assetYes$1,500-$3,500
Transfer-on-Death (Beneficiary) DeedYesYes — full step-upYes — no transfer until deathYes$50-$200
Ladybird (Enhanced Life Estate) DeedYesYes — full step-upYes — no completed giftYes — can sell/mortgage$300-$800
Irrevocable Medicaid TrustYesYes (if grantor retains POA)Yes — after 5 yearsLimited$3,500-$8,000

The Ladybird Deed (Enhanced Life Estate Deed): This is the elegant solution most families have never heard of. The parent records a deed that conveys the property to the child at the parent's death, while explicitly retaining the right to live in, sell, mortgage, or revoke the transfer during life. Because the parent retains full control, it is not a completed gift for federal tax purposes and not a transfer for Medicaid purposes. At death, the property transfers automatically (no probate) and the child gets a full step-up in basis.

Ladybird deeds are recognized in Florida, Michigan, Texas, Vermont, and West Virginia. In other states, a similar result is achieved with a Transfer-on-Death Deed (TODD) or Beneficiary Deed, now recognized in roughly 30 states under the Uniform Real Property Transfer on Death Act.

The Revocable Living Trust: The parent transfers the property to themselves as trustee of a trust they control. They can revoke, amend, or sell at any time. The trust names the child as a successor beneficiary. At death, the trustee distributes the property without probate, and the child receives a stepped-up basis. The downside: it does not protect the home from Medicaid (the trust is treated as the parent's asset because they can revoke it).

The Irrevocable Medicaid Asset Protection Trust: For families with a long time horizon (more than 5 years), this is the gold standard. The parent transfers the home into an irrevocable trust, naming the children as remainder beneficiaries. After the 5-year lookback period passes, the home is no longer counted as the parent's asset for Medicaid purposes. With careful drafting (retaining a limited power of appointment), the parent can still preserve the step-up in basis at death. The cost is loss of control during the trust term.

Decision framework:

  • Parent is healthy, no Medicaid concerns: Revocable living trust or TOD deed.
  • Parent in FL/MI/TX/VT/WV, wants Medicaid protection and step-up: Ladybird deed.
  • Parent is healthy, 5+ year horizon, wants Medicaid protection: Irrevocable Medicaid Asset Protection Trust.
  • Parent is already in nursing home or expected within months: Talk to elder law specialist immediately — crisis planning has its own playbook.
  • Property has minimal appreciation: Lifetime quitclaim is actually fine.

Common Quitclaim Mistakes That Cause Title Problems for Decades

Title examiners have a graveyard of horror stories about quitclaim deeds drafted at the kitchen table, signed without proper notarization, or recorded with errors that took thirty years to surface — usually when someone tries to sell or refinance the property and the title company refuses to issue insurance.

Common quitclaim deed mistakes and remediation cost

Mistake #1: Missing or defective legal description. The street address is not a legal description. "123 Main Street, Springfield" is meaningless in the chain of title. Every deed needs the lot/block reference, subdivision name, plat book reference, or metes-and-bounds description. A deed with a defective legal description is sometimes void on its face and almost always requires a quiet title action (cost: $3,000-$10,000) to fix.

Mistake #2: No statement of consideration. Most states require some recital of consideration, even nominal. Deeds that say "in consideration of love and affection only" are valid in some states but rejected by recorders in others. Use the universal formulation: "the sum of Ten Dollars ($10.00) and other good and valuable consideration."

Mistake #3: Mismatched grantor names. The grantor on the new quitclaim must match the grantee on the most recent deed exactly. If Mom is on title as "Margaret A. Smith" but signs the quitclaim as "Maggie Smith," you have created a defect that may require an affidavit of identity, or in the worst case, a probate proceeding to resolve.

Mistake #4: Missing spousal signature. In community property states and homestead states, a non-titled spouse often must consent to a transfer of marital property. A Florida homestead conveyed by one spouse without the other's signature is void as to the homestead. The fix requires either the spouse's belated signature or, if the spouse has died, an estate proceeding.

Mistake #5: Untranscribed liens and mortgages. A quitclaim does not extinguish liens. If Mom owes $200,000 on her mortgage and quitclaims to her son, the son takes the property subject to the mortgage. The mortgage is still a lien even if the lender does not invoke the due-on-sale clause. Worse: tax liens, mechanic's liens, and judgment liens survive too. Always pull a current title report before transferring.

Mistake #6: Defective notarization. A notary who fails to verify the signer's identity, misdates the acknowledgment, or omits the seal can render the deed unrecordable. Some states (Florida, Georgia, South Carolina) also require two witnesses in addition to the notary. The deed itself may still be valid between the parties, but it cannot be recorded — and an unrecorded deed is vulnerable to subsequent creditors and bona fide purchasers.

Mistake #7: Wrong vesting language. "To John Smith and Mary Smith" without further qualifier creates a tenancy in common in most states (50/50, no right of survivorship). To create joint tenancy with right of survivorship, you must explicitly say so. To create tenancy by the entirety (available only to married couples in about half of states), specific language is required. The wrong vesting can mean the property goes through probate when one owner dies.

Mistake #8: Failure to record. An unrecorded deed is valid between grantor and grantee but invisible to the world. If the grantor later sells the same property to a bona fide purchaser who records first, the BFP wins in most states. Always record promptly — within days, not months.

Mistake #9: Recording in the wrong county. Deeds must be recorded in the county where the property is located, not where the parties live. This sounds obvious until you handle a property that straddles a county line or has been re-parceled.

Mistake #10: Ignoring transfer tax exemption forms. Even where family transfers are exempt from transfer tax, the exemption is only claimed by filing the proper form at recording. Miss the form, pay the tax. Some states allow refund applications within a year; others do not.

The repair cost for these mistakes ranges from a few hundred dollars (re-signing and re-recording) to tens of thousands (quiet title litigation) to a property no one can sell or insure. The lesson: pay $300-$800 for a real estate attorney to draft and record the deed correctly the first time.

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Frequently Asked Questions

No — and this is one of the most dangerous misconceptions in family real estate. A quitclaim deed transfers ownership but does not transfer the underlying mortgage debt. If you quitclaim your home to your son, you remain personally liable on the loan, your credit is still on the hook for missed payments, and the lender can still pursue you for any deficiency. The mortgage stays attached to the property as a lien, so your son takes ownership subject to the mortgage. Most mortgages also contain a due-on-sale clause that technically allows the lender to call the entire loan due upon transfer. The federal Garn-St. Germain Act exempts most family transfers (to a spouse, child, joint tenant, or into a revocable trust where you are a beneficiary), but you must notify the servicer and document the exemption. To truly remove yourself from the debt, the grantee must refinance the loan in their own name.
Almost never successfully, and trying to do so can land you in serious legal trouble. Transferring property to avoid existing or anticipated creditors is called a fraudulent transfer (now usually called a voidable transaction under the Uniform Voidable Transactions Act adopted by most states). Creditors can sue to set aside the transfer for up to four years (longer in some states), and the property gets dragged back into the original owner's estate or bankruptcy. The court does not care that the deed has been recorded or that title has technically moved. Worse, in bankruptcy, transferring property within one year of filing is presumptively fraudulent and can result in denial of discharge. Legitimate asset protection requires advance planning with proper vehicles like irrevocable trusts, LLCs, or homestead exemptions, set up before any creditor problem arises — typically with a 4-6 year safety margin. Once you have a known creditor problem, a quitclaim deed makes things dramatically worse, not better.
Strongly recommended, especially if the property has any history of multiple transfers, liens, or unknown heirs. The whole point of a quitclaim deed is that the grantor makes no warranties about title — so any undiscovered easements, missing-heir claims, old mortgages, mechanic's liens, or boundary disputes become the grantee's problem with no recourse. An owner's title insurance policy issued at the time of transfer protects the new owner against title defects that existed before the policy date. Cost is typically a one-time premium of 0.3% to 0.7% of property value, paid at closing. If the property already has owner's title insurance from a prior purchase, that policy generally does not transfer to the new owner — it expires when ownership changes. For intra-family transfers where the property has been owned by the family for decades and recently insured, the practical risk may be low. For any property with a complex history, multiple prior owners, or where the new owner intends to mortgage or sell within a few years, new title insurance is well worth the cost.
It depends entirely on your state and the type of transfer. In most states, parent-to-child transfers do not trigger reassessment because the property is reassessed only at sale or at certain death events. California is the famous exception: under Proposition 19 (effective February 2021), parent-to-child transfers only retain the parent's property tax basis if the child uses the home as their primary residence and files a homeowners exemption within one year. Rental properties, vacation homes, and second homes get fully reassessed to current market value, often doubling or tripling the tax bill. Florida's Save Our Homes cap is lost on any transfer except spouse-to-spouse. New York City reassesses at the next assessment cycle but does not reset Class 1 assessment caps. Texas has no transfer-triggered reassessment but homestead exemptions must be re-filed by the new owner. Always check your state and county rules before transferring — the property tax delta can dwarf any other cost of the transfer.
Yes — you can quitclaim a specific fractional interest (such as 50% or one-third) to another person, creating co-ownership. Common examples include adding an adult child as a 50% co-owner, transferring a 1% interest annually to stay within the gift tax annual exclusion, or quitclaiming an undivided one-third interest to each of three children. The new co-ownership is by default a tenancy in common unless you explicitly create joint tenancy with right of survivorship or tenancy by the entirety (the latter is only for spouses in eligible states). Be aware that fractional transfers have downsides: they expose your equity to the co-owner's creditors, divorces, and bankruptcies; they require all co-owners to consent to any future sale or refinance; and they can complicate Medicaid analysis because the gift portion still counts as a transfer. For most parent-to-child estate planning purposes, a Transfer-on-Death deed or Ladybird deed achieves the same probate-avoidance goal without creating present co-ownership.
The deed is legally effective between the grantor and grantee upon proper signing, notarization, and delivery — which is usually immediate. However, it is not effective against third parties (creditors, future buyers, lien claimants) until it is recorded at the county recorder of deeds. Practical timeline: the grantor signs and the deed is notarized (same day, 15 minutes at a UPS Store or bank notary); the deed is delivered to the grantee (legally significant — physical handover or constructive delivery suffices); the deed is taken to the county recorder along with required transfer-tax forms; the recorder time-stamps and indexes it (often same day in person, 1-3 weeks if mailed in, longer for e-recording delays). After recording, it takes another 2-8 weeks for the property tax assessor to update its records and another 4-12 weeks for the change to appear in commercial title databases. Always record promptly — every day of delay is a day someone else could record a competing claim against the grantor.
A quitclaim deed transfers ownership immediately upon recording — the grantee owns the property now. A Transfer-on-Death (TOD) deed, also called a beneficiary deed in some states, transfers ownership automatically at the grantor's death without going through probate, but the grantor retains 100% ownership and control during life. This distinction has massive tax and Medicaid consequences. With a quitclaim during life, the grantee inherits the grantor's carryover basis (huge potential capital gains tax) and the transfer triggers the Medicaid 5-year lookback. With a TOD deed, the grantee receives a full step-up in basis at death (often eliminating capital gains tax entirely) and there is no completed transfer for Medicaid purposes during life — the home remains the grantor's countable asset, but the TOD designation can be changed or revoked anytime. TOD deeds are now recognized in roughly 30 states under the Uniform Real Property Transfer on Death Act. For most parent-to-child probate-avoidance situations, a TOD deed is dramatically better than a lifetime quitclaim.
Mechanically you can record one yourself — county recorders accept walk-in submissions from anyone, and the recording clerk does not verify the legal sufficiency of the document. Whether you should is a different question. For straightforward transfers between family members where the property is unencumbered, the legal description is clear, and there are no Medicaid, gift tax, or property tax reassessment issues, a self-prepared deed using a state-approved template can work. The risks of going alone scale rapidly with complexity: any mortgage on the property, any community property or homestead state, any complex vesting situation, any divorce decree obligation, any trust, any anticipated Medicaid need within 5 years, or any property worth more than the annual gift tax exclusion all push you firmly into 'get an attorney' territory. A real estate attorney charges $300-$800 for a properly drafted and recorded quitclaim — vastly less than the $3,000-$10,000 of a quiet-title action to fix a defective one. Copilotly's Legal Copilot can prepare and review documents that you then take to an attorney for a 30-minute review, often cutting attorney fees by half.
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