A quitclaim deed is the most bare-bones way to transfer California real estate. The grantor "quitclaims" — gives up — whatever interest they hold to the grantee, with zero warranties. If the grantor owns the property outright, the grantee gets it outright. If the grantor's interest is partial or defective, that's exactly what the grantee receives. The deed makes no representation that the grantor owns anything at all.
When a quitclaim deed makes sense
Because it's simple and quick, the quitclaim is common in transfers built on trust rather than arm's-length protection:
- Divorce — one spouse quitclaims their interest to the other (an interspousal transfer deed is often used here too)
- Family transfers and gifts — between parents and children or other relatives
- Clearing a cloud on title — removing a possible claim or fixing a name
- Adding or removing a co-owner — see adding or removing a name
A quitclaim hands over whatever you have — which could be everything, or nothing at all.
The catch most people miss
Because a quitclaim carries no warranties, title insurers are often reluctant to rely on one. A new owner who took title by quitclaim may have trouble getting a clean title policy or selling later without extra steps. For a real purchase between strangers, a grant deed — backed by title insurance — is usually the safer instrument. Quitclaims shine where the parties already know and trust each other.
Requirements and taxes
A California quitclaim deed needs the grantor and grantee names, the legal description, vesting, the parcel number, and a notarized signature, recorded with a PCOR and transfer-tax declaration. Many quitclaim transfers — gifts, transfers to your own trust, transfers between spouses — are exempt from documentary transfer tax, with the exemption stated on the deed. Whether the transfer affects property taxes is a separate change-in-ownership question; check with your county assessor. This is general information, not legal or tax advice.
How SimpleDeeds prepares your quitclaim deed
Send us the name and the property address. We research the legal description and vesting, prepare the quitclaim deed and county forms, and record it after notarization — flat $295. We prepare the deed at your direction and don't give legal advice.