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Deed Transfers in Texas: What They Are and When You Need One

Your home is likely the most valuable thing you own. And yet, most people have only a vague idea of how property ownership actually transfers — in life or at death. A deed is the legal document that moves real property from one person to another. Getting it right protects your family. Getting it wrong creates expensive, sometimes years-long problems that a properly drafted document would have prevented entirely.

Here's what you need to know about deed transfers in Texas, including the types that matter most in estate planning.

What a deed actually does

A deed is a written instrument that transfers ownership of real property. In Texas, to be valid, a deed must identify the grantor (the person transferring) and grantee (the person receiving), describe the property with sufficient specificity, include words of conveyance, be signed by the grantor, and be notarized. It must then be recorded with the county clerk in the county where the property is located to provide public notice of the transfer.

Recording is not technically required for the transfer to be valid between the parties — but it is absolutely essential to protect the new owner against third-party claims. If you've received property by deed and haven't recorded it, do that today.

The main types of deeds in Texas

General Warranty Deed

This is the gold standard for real estate purchases. When you sell or buy a home through a traditional transaction, this is almost always what's used. A general warranty deed means the grantor is guaranteeing the title against any defects — not just ones that arose during their ownership, but any claim going back through the entire chain of title. It's the most protective deed for a buyer.

Special Warranty Deed

Similar to a general warranty deed, but the warranty only covers defects that arose during the grantor's period of ownership. Common in commercial transactions and in estate sales where the executor isn't in a position to warrant the full history of title. Lenders sometimes accept these; sometimes they don't.

Quitclaim Deed

A quitclaim deed transfers whatever interest the grantor has — no more, no less, with no warranty at all. If the grantor has a perfect title, the grantee gets a perfect title. If the grantor has nothing, the grantee gets nothing. These are commonly used to clear up title issues (for example, to formally remove an ex-spouse from a title after divorce) or to transfer property between family members where the parties understand what's being transferred. They are almost never appropriate for arm's-length sales.

Common mistake: People use quitclaim deeds to "add someone to the title" of their home, thinking it's a simple fix. It can create unintended tax consequences, affect eligibility for Medicaid or other benefits, expose the property to the new co-owner's creditors, and — if done without proper planning — defeat the estate-planning purpose entirely. Talk to an attorney before using a quitclaim deed for anything other than a straightforward title correction.

Lady Bird Deed (Enhanced Life Estate Deed)

This is one of the most powerful and underused tools in Texas estate planning. A Lady Bird deed — formally called an Enhanced Life Estate Deed — allows you to transfer your property to a beneficiary at your death while retaining full control of it during your lifetime. You can sell it, mortgage it, or change the beneficiary without the new owner's consent. When you die, the property passes to the named beneficiary automatically, without going through probate.

The advantages are significant:

Lady Bird deeds are not right for every situation. If your estate is complicated, if you have multiple potential beneficiaries with competing interests, or if Medicaid planning is a significant concern, a revocable living trust may be a better vehicle. An attorney can help you decide.

Deed to Trust

If you've set up a revocable living trust, property doesn't automatically become part of it. You have to transfer it using a deed — specifically, a deed from you as an individual to yourself as trustee of your trust (for example, "Dylan James, Trustee of the Dylan James Revocable Living Trust dated January 1, 2026"). This is called "funding" the trust. A trust that isn't properly funded is one of the most common estate planning mistakes I see — the family goes through the whole process of creating a trust and then the home still has to go through probate because the deed was never updated.

Quick reference: which deed for which situation

SituationTypical deed type
Buying or selling a home on the open marketGeneral Warranty Deed
Selling estate property or a foreclosureSpecial Warranty Deed
Removing an ex-spouse from title after divorceQuitclaim Deed
Passing your home to a child without probateLady Bird Deed
Transferring your home into your living trustDeed to Trust (Warranty)
Gifting property to a family memberGeneral Warranty or Lady Bird (depends on goals)

What can go wrong

I'll be direct: deed drafting is not a DIY project. Texas has specific legal requirements for property descriptions, and an error in the description — even a minor one — can cloud the title and require a court action to fix. Online deed generators often produce documents that fail to account for Texas-specific rules, community property considerations, or the client's actual estate planning goals.

The cost to draft a deed correctly is modest. The cost to fix a defective deed — or to put an estate through probate that a Lady Bird deed would have avoided — is not.

Related reading: Trusts and estate planning: what most people get wrong · What is General Counsel and do I need one?

Need a deed drafted or reviewed in Dallas?

I handle deed transfers, Lady Bird deeds, and trust funding for clients across North Texas. Call today for a free consultation.

Call 979-657-LoDJ