This is a very good question. You would want to know if the state you move to is a community property state or a separate property state and the various tenancies that are available for property owned by multiple owners, married couples or non-married partners. If necessary, you would need to know the laws regarding same sex marriage and civil unions in order to protect your partner if you died unexpectedly. You would need to know the laws of intestacy regarding real property. You would also want to know if homestead exemptions are automatic or if a homestead must be separately declared and recorded in the land records. You may even want to update your will.
i would like too know the answer to this question too except im in California do the laws change
The title to the property is what defines ownership. The person cosigning a loan has no rights to the property unless their name is also on the General Warranty Deed/title.
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That depends entirely on state and local laws. There is no answer good throughout the country.
It is called "inertia", but we still don't really know what it is.
Not in any U.S. state that I know of.
I do not know the laws the govern in your country. However, since you have no brother, if your parents were partners in the ownership of property then you may have inherited that ownership. That means you may have inherited some responsibility regarding that property. You should consult with a legal advisor who is familiar with your laws.
One queries the local hall of land-use records with an address to ascertain the real estate ownership type for that address.
I don't know if you are talking about income tax or property taxes. The answer is the same for both. In renting the house out you will pay income taxes on your gain from rental income and you will pay property taxes for the ownership of the property.
physical property
Yes. If the bank has a mortgage on the property there is a due on tranfer clause in the mortgage that the property owner signed That means the bank must be notified of any transfer of ownership and it can demand payment in full of the mortgage if any transfer is made. A quitclaim deed would be a transfer of ownership.