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A clear guide explaining Joint Tenancy, its features, and its role in property and estate planning.
Joint Tenancy is a form of property ownership in which two or more parties hold equal ownership rights with a right of survivorship.
Definition
Joint Tenancy is a legal arrangement where co-owners hold property simultaneously and equally, and upon the death of one owner, their share automatically passes to the surviving owner(s).
Joint Tenancy requires four unities to exist at the same time: unity of time, title, interest, and possession. This means all owners acquire the property at the same time, through the same title, with equal interests, and with equal rights to possess the property.
The defining feature of Joint Tenancy is the right of survivorship. This ensures that ownership transfers automatically to surviving owners without passing through probate.
Because of this automatic transfer, Joint Tenancy is often used by spouses or close family members but may limit estate planning flexibility.
There is no formula, but ownership is typically:
Two business partners purchase an office building as Joint Tenants. When one partner passes away, the surviving partner automatically becomes the sole owner of the property.
Joint Tenancy is important because it:
However, it may expose owners to risks if one tenant incurs debts or legal claims.
Yes. It can be severed, converting it into tenancy in common.
Yes. All joint tenants hold equal shares.
It depends on estate planning and risk considerations.