Where I live you can do it yourself and file it with the county, if you know how. County is very picky about how deeds are done and they must conform to certain criteria.
I would recommend having an attorney do it. Around here it costs about $75-$100 plus the filing fees.


Several financial reasons why it should not be signed over to an adult child.
1. It will trigger a Federal Gift Tax Return.
2. The basis of the house for the child is the same as your basis. If it is transferred as a result of dedath of the prior owner, the new owner get the basis as the Fair Market Value at date of death.
For example, if the property cost you $100,00 and you transfer it when the FMV is $500,000 the child's basis is still $100,000. Let us say the value at time of death is $1,000,000. And the child sells it for $1,100,000. If you had given it as a gift the taxable amount for the child is $1,000,000 but if the transfer was on death then the child is only liable for taxes on $100,000 of the saled.

Maybe this makes the tax basis a little easier to understand.
You bought the property for $50,000 in 1980. If your child inherits the property from you the govt will consider the house to be worth $50.000.
If you deed the property to her or add her to the deed before your death then when you die the govt will considered the house to be worth fair market value. Which could easilty be $200,000.
The tax values change dramatically.
I can't answer to the gift tax but I know Dave Ramsey says NEVER put an adult child on a deed for the tax reasons alone.
Okay.. A little update here.. I talked to a friend up here who recently did something that I'm considering doing now (through a lawyer) and it seems that might be the best way to go.. His fee actually wasn't that much for the changes to the deed (well - in her case 2 deeds to 2 different properties) - the filing fee with the county was actually higher..
Her DH passed away last year - and they only had one child.. So what she did was to sign over her house and her seasonal place to her son - with a "lifetime tenancy" clause on both for herself...
I would like to do the same with my place here at the lake (the only real estate property that I own now) and while I'm at the lawyers office anyhow, get a POA in place in case it's needed in the future.. (Like I'm critically ill and someone has to be able to sign checks and have access to my bank accounts to pay my bills and such..)
I won't do anything - without consulting a lawyer.. After thinking on it overnight, I decided I'm a little too skiddish (and a little too "OCD-ish") to take that chance..
Does this sound more reasonable than just "adding" names to the deed?
Thanks for the responses..![]()
I'm sorry, but you totally lost me on that one.. LOL.. Obviously this would be something to discuss with the attorney, but had this been the case (and no way around it), it would have been impossible (for financial reasons) for my neighbor and her son to have done this.. I believe my neighbor across the street did this 6 months ago as well, but I can't talk to him right now becuase he's in Ireland with his 2 granddaughters.. He's been a realtor for 40 years and would not have done this with his son if it were to trigger that kind of liability..
Either way, I will be sure to talk it over with the attorney and ask about any responses that I have received here - such as yours.. Thanks for bringing that up..
Believe me, I'm far too skiddish to jump into something of this magnitude without making sure that all of the bases have been covered..