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IRS gift taxes may apply When you add someone to your deed, the IRS sees it as a gift. That person becomes subject to IRS regulations concerning gifts. As of 2018, the IRS allowable gift limit is $15,000 annually, per person. Gifts that exceed this amount are subject to the gift tax.
Quitclaim deeds are not taxable when they transfer ownership to a spouse or a qualifying charity. Other transactions may be liable to property and gift taxes. The quitclaim process is an easy way to transfer an interest in property where no money changes hands.
The original owner conveys a first trust deed to the buyer, while the party with an unregistered interest conveys a quitclaim deed to the new owner. In this circumstance, the quitclaim deed has no effect on property taxes, which are now the responsibility of the new owner.
A quitclaim deed removes the name of one owner from the deed, while a gift deed is used to transfer a property from one owner to another.
Quitclaim deeds are most often used to transfer property between family members. Examples include when an owner gets married and wants to add a spouse's name to the title or deed, or when the owners divorce and one spouse's name is removed from the title or deed.
Adding Name to House Deed Without Consent. If a person decides to give a gift of real estate to someone, they can purchase that property and deed it to someone else. But that alone will not be sufficient to transfer title to the property to the recipient.
Oddly enough, the person receiving the interest does not sign the deed. In most states you can file a disclaimer or deed of disclaimer that says specifically you were placed in title without your knowledge or consent and disclaim the deed.
Adding someone to your house deed requires the filing of a legal form known as a quitclaim deed. When executed and notarized, the quitclaim deed legally overrides the current deed to your home. By filing the quitclaim deed, you can add someone to the title of your home, in effect transferring a share of ownership.
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