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by Practical Law Real Estate. A deed transferring title and legal interest in real property from the grantor to the grantee with full covenants and warranties.
All deeds filed in Alabama must be met with the Grantor(s) signing in front of a notary public or two (2) witnesses along with the Real Estate Sales Validation (Form RT-1) to be completed when filing with the Probate County Judges Office.
A general warranty deed is the most common type of warranty deed in the United States. It offers the highest level of protection to the buyer because it guarantees that there are absolutely no problems with the home even dating back to prior property owners.
The only problem is Alabama does not have a TODD statute, so any such deed would have no validity. As of January 14, 2022, twenty-nine states, along with the District of Columbia and the U.S. Virgin Islands, have some form of TODD. Alabama is not one of them, and neither is Georgia or Florida.
As of September 2019, the District of Columbia and the following states allow some form of TOD deed: Alaska, Arizona, Arkansas, California, Colorado, Hawaii, Illinois, Indiana, Kansas, Maine, Minnesota, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, Nevada, New Mexico, North Dakota, Oklahoma, Oregon, South Dakota, Texas, Utah, Virginia,
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A Warranty Deed is the best of the best. It protects you from all future and past issues with property title and any outstanding debts or liens.
The deed must be recorded in the Office of the Judge of Probate in the county where the property is located (Alabama Code 35-4-50 and Alabama Code 35-4-62). Unless an exception applies, a deed transfer tax must be paid when the deed is recorded (Alabama Code 40-22-1).
Deeds are usually recorded by the property owner, real estate agent, or closing attorney in the Mobile County Probate Court records department. If your deed was recorded, you may purchase a copy. For more information you can call the records department of the Mobile County Probate Court at 251-574-6000.
The surviving owner shall present an application for certificate of title within 30 days of obtaining ownership. To transfer ownership from the deceased owner, the surviving owner must bring in the original title and original death certificate of deceased owner for transfer of title.
The process for transferring Alabama real estate by deed involves several steps: Find the most recent deed to the property. Create the new deed. Sign and docHub the deed. Record the signed, docHubd original deed with the Office of the Judge of Probate.

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