04/27/2026
💰 Adding a child to your deed transfers ownership during your lifetime. The child receives your original cost basis on the transferred portion, not the stepped-up basis they would get if they inherited at death.
The tax math depends on how the transfer is structured. If you deed the entire home to your child (as shown in the image), they inherit 100% of your original basis. On a home bought for $80,000 and worth $350,000 at death, that is a $270,000 taxable gain and up to $40,500 in federal capital gains tax at the 15% rate.
The more common move is adding a child as a joint tenant, which typically transfers 50% ownership. In that case, only the child's half carries the original basis. The parent's half still receives a stepped-up basis at death, reducing the taxable gain to roughly $135,000 and the tax to roughly $20,250.
Adding a child to the deed also exposes the home to the child's creditors, divorce proceedings, and lawsuits. The transfer may trigger Medicaid's lookback period depending on state law.
One exception worth knowing: if the child lived in the home as a primary residence for at least 2 of the last 5 years before selling, the Section 121 exclusion can shelter up to $250,000 of gain ($500,000 if married filing jointly).
A TOD deed avoids the basis problem entirely. No ownership transfers during your lifetime. The beneficiary gets a full stepped-up basis at death. TOD deeds for real estate depend on state law, and not every state allows them.