Q: How can I add my wife's name to the property's title for full ownership?
I have paid off my mortgage, and my wife's name is not currently on the title of our property. I am considering adding her name now, as I want her to have full ownership of the property if I pass away. What steps do I need to take to ensure her name is added and she has full ownership?
A:
If you add your wife (which you can do via a Gift Deed, or Warranty Deed), she will be the full owner at that point in time. If she dies before you, you will have to go through probate and hope the law in your jurisdiction will give it back to you.
Other options: Transfer on Death (most jurisdictions have it), Make a Last Will and Testament, Create a Revocable Living Trust.
A: Some more facts are necessary to fully answer. Since Texas is a community property state, if the home was purchased during marriage, she already owns her community property portion. From an estate planning perspective, a Transfer on Death Deed would work such that at death, she would own the home without the need for any probate steps. You can also name others (your children, friends, etc) as alternate beneficiaries in the event your wife predeceases you.
A:
The deed to any piece of real property shows who owns that real property. In a community property state like Texas, property purchased before your marriage is separate property. It remains separate property after the date of marriage unless legal action is taken to change its character.
If you were to leave the deed the way it is today, your spouse has two legal rights related to the home. First, if the mortgage is being paid from community property (like earnings) your spouse has a legal right to be reimbursed for her half interest in those payments if you were to get divorced. Since you want to expand your spouse’s ownership rights, you must feel that your marriage is stable without much risk of divorce. Hence, the second already existing legal right has more impact: your spouse has the right to occupy the home for life even if she not listed on the deed as an owner.
However, that legal occupancy right is often loaded with family conflict. Do you have children from a prior marriage? The law makes your children owners of the house in the absence of your binding estate plan. They have financial obligations toward maintenance, payments, and insurance on the property as owners, even though they have no benefit from the property until your spouse dies or voluntarily abandons the homestead. Don’t do that to your children or to your spouse.
You should also want to avoid problems for your spouse if you die. This will require legal action on your part with a qualified attorney.
Adding her to the Deed
The first action you propose is adding her name to the deed. Doing so would only be the first step and must be done correctly. If you just add your spouse’s name to the deed, your spouse is receiving a half interest by gift. All gifts, by law in Texas, are separate property. Thus, you would each own a half interest in the house as separate property.
To get the most benefit, you want the house to be community property. Thus, the new deed must include provisions from the Texas Family Code which convert the ownership interest from separate property into community property. Doing so has potential tax benefits and opens the door for attaching a right of survivorship to the property.
Avoiding Probate
You also want to avoid probate. A traditional Will solves a lot of inheritance issues, but typically must go to probate court when you die. Methods for avoiding probate include a Community Property Survivorship Agreement (a legal contract written by your lawyer which is signed by you both, notarized, and filed in the deed records) or a Living Trust (a legal agreement written by your lawyer to split ownership between a trustee and beneficiaries). When done correctly, both of those methods pass title to the surviving spouse when either spouse dies, without probate. Both methods should still be backed-up with a traditional Will as a safety net.
Avoiding Taxes
You also want to avoid inheritance taxes. Fortunately, Texas is one of the states that has no inheritance tax. The federal government still imposes an estate tax, but the law grants an exemption currently (2025) at $13.99 million per person. Most of us have estates below that exemption amount and consequently pay zero federal estate tax on death.
Capital gain taxes should also be considered. If you allow the house to remain your sole property and your wife dies, you do not get an increase in your tax basis because she did not own any part of the house. If you gift her 1/2 the house as her separate property and one of you dies, the basis increase is only on 1/2 the property value. If you convert the house to community property and one of you dies, the survivor gets an increase in the taxable basis on 100% of the home's value.
Justia Ask A Lawyer is a forum for consumers to get free answers to basic legal questions. Any information sent through Justia Ask A Lawyer is not secure and is done so on a non-confidential basis only.
The use of this website to ask questions or receive answers does not create an attorney–client relationship between Justia and you, or between any attorney who receives your information or responds to your questions and you, nor is it intended to create such a relationship. Additionally, no responses on this forum constitute legal advice, which must be tailored to the specific circumstances of each case. You should not act upon information provided in Justia Ask A Lawyer without seeking professional counsel from an attorney admitted or authorized to practice in your jurisdiction. Justia assumes no responsibility to any person who relies on information contained on or received through this site and disclaims all liability in respect to such information.
Justia cannot guarantee that the information on this website (including any legal information provided by an attorney through this service) is accurate, complete, or up-to-date. While we intend to make every attempt to keep the information on this site current, the owners of and contributors to this site make no claims, promises, or guarantees about the accuracy, completeness or adequacy of the information contained in or linked to from this site.