Property Title
A piece of Real Estate is always owned by someone, an organization, a business or an agency. The legal owner of the Real Estate has the legal right to the property and the property title is in his/her name. When buying Real Estate, the legal property title matters a great deal because even if you pay money for a property, if the property title is not in your name, then you don’t own the property.
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When investing in Real Estate, investors will have to deal with checking out the property title to make sure that when he/she invests he/she will have a clean title of the property. Finding out later that someone else has the legal title to the property is a nightmare. |
Property title is how Real Estate investors want to hold the Real Estate title. Holding property title is different from using a business structure to hold Real Estate. If a Real Estate investor uses a structure, the issue of holding property title has changed, as it becomes a case of how the investor wants to hold ownership in the Real Estate property. Below are common property titles. Before buying any Real Estate, the buyer or invest should get a title insurance. There is a need for title insurance in case the property title is ever disputer after purchase.
| Joint Tenancy | Property title is held as one. |
| Joint Tenancy with rights of survivorship (JWROS) | When one tenant dies, the property title automatically passes to the other tenant. |
| Tenants in Common | Property title is held separately. |
| Community Property | Property title for married couples. |
| Land Trust | Property title held in the name of a trust. |
See also, the Benefits of Torrens System.

