Quitclaim Deed
A deed that transfers whatever interest the grantor holds, if any, with no warranties of title.
A quitclaim deed transfers only the interest the grantor actually holds, and it makes no warranties. If the grantor holds no interest, the grantee receives nothing. Because it carries no title covenants, it offers the grantee the least protection.
Quitclaim deeds are commonly used to clear a cloud on title, transfer property between family members, or correct a defect in a prior deed.
On the exam
Exam trap
Tested in
Titles and Deeds (7% of the exam)
From definition to recall
See this term inside a real exam question.
Pass Florida gives you Florida-specific practice, diagnostics across the 19 exam areas, Trap Library, Math Coach, offline access, and one $39.99 purchase. No subscription. No copied exam questions.
Try 5 free questionsRelated terms
This definition is Florida real estate exam-prep education, not legal, tax, or professional advice. Verify current rules against the official source before relying on them for a real transaction. Back to the full glossary.