It's usually not a good idea. Don't think of this as "adding someone to my deed." What you are doing is giving someone part ownership of your home. That person then has all the rights of an owner you cannot change this later without that person's agreement. You have to consider gift taxes (at least filing a return). If you make gifts, and you later need benefits for long term care, the gifts may disqualify you. If the part owner has tax problems, credit problems, then you end up with liens on your home or it gets foreclosed. BTW, if you have a mortgage on the home, mortgages always have a "due on sale" clause. You cannot give away part of the home, or sell it, without paying off the mortgage. Bottom line, though, is, "why?" There is no sensible reason to do this. If you want the person to have the home when you pass away, make a will. If you are concerned about incapacity, give someone power of attorney (be VERY careful who). Maybe one in 100 times do I see a situation where giving someone a part interest in the home is the sensible course of action. Most times, it turns into an expensive mess.
Answered on Sep 12th, 2013 at 5:07 PM