Baltimore City Transfer-on-Death Deed (Individual) Form

Last validated July 15, 2026 by our Forms Development Team

Baltimore City Transfer-on-Death Deed (Individual) Form

Baltimore City Transfer-on-Death Deed (Individual) Form

Fill in the blank Transfer-on-Death Deed (Individual) form formatted to comply with all Maryland recording and content requirements.

Document Last Validated 7/15/2026
Baltimore City Transfer-on-Death Deed (Individual) Guide

Baltimore City Transfer-on-Death Deed (Individual) Guide

Line by line guide explaining every blank on the Transfer-on-Death Deed (Individual) form.

Document Last Validated 7/15/2026
Baltimore City Completed Example of the Transfer-on-Death Deed (Individual) Document

Baltimore City Completed Example of the Transfer-on-Death Deed (Individual) Document

Example of a properly completed Maryland Transfer-on-Death Deed (Individual) document for reference.

Document Last Validated 7/15/2026

All 3 documents above included • One-time purchase • No recurring fees

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Important: Your property must be located in Baltimore City to use these forms. Documents should be recorded at the office below.

Where to Record Your Documents

City of Baltimore Land Records

Address:
Courthouse - 110 North Calvert St, Rm 610
Baltimore, Maryland 21202

Hours: 8:30 to 4:30 Monday through Friday

Phone: 410-333-3760

Recording Tips for Baltimore City:
  • Check that your notary's commission hasn't expired
  • Verify all names are spelled correctly before recording
  • Check margin requirements - usually 1-2 inches at top
  • Recorded documents become public record - avoid including SSNs
  • Request a receipt showing your recording numbers

Cities and Jurisdictions in Baltimore City

Properties in any of these areas use Baltimore City forms:

  • Baltimore
  • Brooklyn

View Complete Recorder Office Guide

Hours, fees, requirements, and more for Baltimore City

How do I get my forms?

Forms are available for immediate download after payment. The Baltimore City forms will be in your account ready to download to your computer. An account is created for you during checkout if you don't have one. Forms are NOT emailed.

Are these forms guaranteed to be recordable in Baltimore City?

Yes. Our form blanks are guaranteed to meet or exceed the applicable formatting requirements used for recording in Baltimore City, including margin requirements, font requirements, and other layout standards. This guarantee applies to formatting, not to the legal sufficiency of information entered by the user or the suitability of a form for a particular transaction.

Can I reuse these forms?

Yes. You can reuse the forms for your personal use. For example, if you have multiple properties in Baltimore City you only need to order once.

What do I need to use these forms?

The forms are PDFs that you fill out on your computer. You'll need Adobe Reader (free software that most computers already have). You do NOT enter your property information online - you download the blank forms and complete them privately on your own computer.

Are there any recurring fees?

No. This is a one-time purchase. Nothing to cancel, no memberships, no recurring fees.

How much does it cost to record in Baltimore City?

Recording fees in Baltimore City vary. Contact the recorder's office at 410-333-3760 for current fees.

Questions answered? Let's get started!

Maryland did not allow transfer-on-death deeds for real property until the 2026 General Assembly passed the Maryland Transfer-on-Death Deed Act. Codified at Real Property Article, Title 14, Subtitle 10, the Act lets a single owner name who receives their real estate at death, outside probate, while keeping full control during life. The Act takes effect October 1, 2026, and a deed recorded before that date is not yet effective under it.

How a Maryland Transfer-on-Death Deed Works

The deed is nontestamentary. It transfers no interest while the owner is alive, so the property can still be sold, mortgaged, or leased, and the deed stays revocable even if it says otherwise. At the owner's death, the designated beneficiary receives whatever interest the owner then holds, subject to any mortgage, lien, or other interest affecting title at that moment, and without covenant or warranty of title. The capacity needed to make the deed is the capacity to make a will, and only an individual may be the transferor. A recorded deed is later taken out of effect by a revocation instrument acknowledged and recorded before the owner's death, by a later inconsistent transfer-on-death deed, or by a lifetime transfer of the property; a revocation is a separate instrument, prepared and recorded on its own and not included in this package.

Why Recording Before Death Matters

Under Real Property Section 14-1006, the deed has no effect unless it is acknowledged and recorded, before the owner's death, in the land records of every county where the property sits. A deed that is signed, witnessed, and notarized but never recorded transfers nothing, and a deed recorded in only one of several counties reaches only the property in that county. This recording-before-death rule is the detail that most often defeats a homemade beneficiary deed.

Witnessed and Notarized, With a Disqualification Rule

The statutory form is both witnessed by two witnesses and acknowledged before a notary public, and it complies with the ordinary Maryland deed formalities of Real Property Section 4-101. The Act adds a guardrail that catches many do-it-yourself deeds: the two witnesses and the notary may not be a party to the deed, a designated beneficiary, or a relative of a party or beneficiary, and a disqualified witness or notary makes the deed ineffective.

Who This Form Describes

This form recites a single individual transferor, the only kind the Act allows: one owner, married or unmarried, signing alone. Maryland is not a community property state and recognizes no inchoate dower or curtesy, so a spouse who is not a record owner is not a transferor and has no signature line; a surviving spouse's protection runs through the statutory elective share at death. The form provides for primary beneficiaries, optional alternates, and the form of ownership among multiple beneficiaries; where that line is left blank, multiple beneficiaries take as joint tenants with right of survivorship under Real Property Section 14-1003.

The package includes the blank deed as a fillable PDF, a plain language guide that walks through every numbered section and where each entry comes from, and a completed example filled in for a realistic Maryland fact pattern.

The package is formatted for Maryland recording: letter size pages within the Real Property Section 3-104 limits, the codified three inch reserved area at the top of the first page, the certificate of preparation a clerk requires before recording any deed, and space for the tax account identification number that ties the deed to the assessment records. The guide covers the land instrument intake sheet, the recordation and transfer tax exemption the Act provides for a primary or secondary residence, and step by step completion. The materials are informational and are not legal advice.

Important: Your property must be located in Baltimore City to use these forms. Documents should be recorded at the office below.

This Transfer-on-Death Deed (Individual) meets all recording requirements specific to Baltimore City.

Our Promise

The documents you receive here are guaranteed to meet or exceed the applicable Baltimore City recording format requirements. If there is a rejection caused by our formatting, we will correct the issue or refund your payment. This guarantee applies to document formatting only and does not extend to information entered by the user, the selection of the form, or the legal effect of the completed document.

Save Time and Money

Get your Baltimore City Transfer-on-Death Deed (Individual) form done right the first time with Deeds.com Uniform Conveyancing Blanks. At Deeds.com, we understand that your time and money are valuable resources, and we don't want you to face a penalty fee or rejection imposed by a county recorder for submitting nonstandard documents. We constantly review and update our forms to meet rapidly changing state and county recording requirements for roughly 3,500 counties and local jurisdictions.

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Dorothea B.

October 2nd, 2019

The Affidavit- Death of Joint Tenant form you provided is not the same form as showed on the Los Angeles County property tax website. It appears that the LA county form requires entering additional info that is not included in your form.

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