Severing a Joint Tenancy
When looking to make or update your Will. It is also very important to carry out effective Estate Planning to ensure you are protecting your estate from potential care home fees and inheritance tax liabilities and also to protect your future bloodline.
Often a key part of estate planning is making sure that joint owners are changed to tenants in common, ensuring that each have a distinct share of the property that can be left to trust in your Will.
If after checking your current tenancy status you find that it is on a joint tenants basis and need it to be tenants in common, you will need to carry out a ‘severance of tenancy’. This is often referred to as a deed of severance.
By severing a tenancy you are not changing who owns the property, you are only changing the manner in which you own the property. In order to carry out a severance you need to complete and sign a Deed of Severance that confirms that you intend to own the property not as joint tenants but as Tenants In Common.
If your property is registered with the land registry then the Deed of Severance is sent to them and they will enter the appropriate restriction on the title to indicate a tenancy in common.
If however your property is not registered the Deed of Severance does not go to the Land Registry as they will have no record of the Title as it isn't’ registered. In this case the deed of severance needs to be placed with the Title Deeds of the property, this ensures that whoever looks at the Deeds can see that the property is owned on a tenants in common basis.