Conveyancing

Transfer of Equity Solicitors in Cardiff.

Adding a partner to your Cardiff home, or removing an ex after a separation? A transfer of equity changes who legally owns a property without a full sale. We handle it properly, including your lender and any tax.

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Transfer of Equity
About this service

Transfer of equity from our Cardiff office

If you need a transfer of equity in Cardiff, adding or removing someone from the ownership of a property without a full sale, our conveyancing solicitors handle it for people across the city and the Vale. What a transfer of equity involves, and when your lender’s consent is needed, is set out in full on our transfer of equity page. Here we focus on the local picture.

Buying out an ex after a separation?

One of the most common reasons for a transfer of equity in Cardiff is a separation, where one person buys the other out of the family home. This is usually part of a wider financial settlement and should be backed by a consent order approved by the court. We deal with the transfer itself, removing the outgoing person from the title and the mortgage, and work alongside your family solicitor; see our financial settlements in Cardiff page.

Does Welsh property tax apply?

It can. In Wales a transfer of equity can attract Land Transaction Tax rather than Stamp Duty Land Tax, but only where there is chargeable consideration, most commonly where the person joining the title takes on a share of the mortgage debt. A genuine gift of a share, with no money changing hands and no mortgage, is usually tax-free. We work out exactly what, if anything, is due as part of the transaction.

How our Cardiff team helps

We handle transfers of equity for people across Cardiff and the Vale, new relationships and marriages, separations, and family estate planning. We deal with the lender, the transfer deed, the registration and the tax, and explain anything you are unsure about. Because a transfer of equity is a regulated service, we set out our fees in full on our conveyancing pricing page, with a written estimate at the outset.

Changing who's on the deeds sounds simple, but the lender and the tax need handling carefully, that's where we come in.

Our approach
How we work

Clear advice. Practical next steps.

Every transfer of equity matter is different. We start by understanding your situation before we recommend an approach.

We won't push you toward a process that doesn't fit. We won't drag things out. And we'll always tell you what something will cost before we start it.

  • A dedicated specialist for your matter, backed by the wider Robertsons conveyancing team
  • Transparent pricing — clear written costs before any work begins
  • Plain-English advice — no jargon, no surprises
  • Offices across South Wales and the South West
What transfer of equity clients say

Real stories from real clients

★★★★★
“Natalie was such a massive help with my transfer of equity. Very fast and efficient service.”
Becky Smith Barry · Transfer of equity
★★★★★
“I felt fully supported throughout my transfer of equity - Kimberley went above and beyond to make sure everything went smoothly. I was kept up to date with clear communication throughout the whole process.”
Abbie P Cardiff · Transfer of equity
★★★★★
“Natalie has been amazing from the start right up until the end. Any queries asked were answered straight away and any problems we had were sorted asap. We can't thank you enough for assisting with completing on our first home.”
Lucy Dimond Barry · Buying a property
Your specialists

Who would be looking after you?

Some of your transfer of equity team at Robertsons.

Common questions

Questions clients ask us about transfer of equity

Yes — and the process is simpler where there is no mortgage, as there is no lender whose consent needs to be obtained. The solicitor prepares a transfer deed, both parties sign it, and the new ownership is registered at HM Land Registry. Stamp duty land tax or land transaction tax may still apply if any consideration changes hands, though a genuine gift of equity with no consideration and no mortgage is typically tax-free. Even without a mortgage, taking legal advice before transferring equity is important — particularly where the transfer is to an unmarried partner, a family member for estate planning purposes, or as part of a separation agreement.

A transfer of equity to a family member is a disposal for IHT purposes and may be treated as a potentially exempt transfer — meaning it falls outside your estate if you survive seven years after making it. However, if you transfer equity but continue to live in or benefit from the property, the gift with reservation of benefit rules apply: HMRC treats the property as still forming part of your estate regardless of the transfer. A transfer made with the primary purpose of avoiding care fees may also be treated as deliberate deprivation of assets by a local authority. Equity transfers used as IHT planning tools require careful structuring and specialist advice — they are not as straightforward as they might appear.

The incoming party — the person being added to the title — does not legally have to instruct their own solicitor, but doing so is strongly advisable where their interests may differ from those of the existing owner. For example, in a separation where one party is buying the other out, each party should have independent legal advice to ensure the terms are fair and properly understood. Where the transfer is between parties whose interests are clearly aligned — such as spouses simply adding each other to a jointly owned home — a single solicitor acting for both may be appropriate, provided there is no conflict of interest. Your solicitor will advise at the outset whether separate representation is needed.

Transfers of equity arising from a divorce or separation are commonly used to implement a financial settlement — most often where one spouse buys the other out of the family home. The transfer is usually dealt with as part of the broader financial settlement and should be accompanied by a consent order approved by the court, which makes the financial arrangements legally binding. The solicitor handling the transfer will need to see the consent order, obtain the lender's consent where a mortgage is involved, and arrange for the outgoing party to be removed from both the title and the mortgage. Timing matters — the transfer should complete promptly once the consent order is in place to avoid complications if circumstances change.

A straightforward transfer of equity typically takes four to eight weeks, provided the lender consents promptly and there are no title complications. Where a mortgage is involved, the lender must assess the proposed new ownership structure and confirm that the remaining or incoming owner meets their affordability criteria — this is often the main cause of delay. Transfers involving no mortgage are generally faster. Leasehold properties may require the freeholder's notice and consent, adding further time. Complex situations — such as those arising from contested separations or those involving multiple charges — can take considerably longer.

Transfer of equity is an SRA-regulated service and we publish detailed pricing on our conveyancing pricing page. Costs vary depending on the value of the property, whether a mortgage is involved, and whether the transaction is straightforward or complex. Disbursements include Land Registry registration fees and, where applicable, stamp duty land tax or land transaction tax. Where both parties instruct separate solicitors — which is advisable where interests may diverge — each party's legal costs are separate. We provide a full itemised estimate before you commit.

It depends on whether chargeable consideration changes hands. In England, stamp duty land tax (SDLT) applies where the person joining the title takes on a share of an outstanding mortgage — the amount of mortgage debt they assume is treated as chargeable consideration. In Wales, land transaction tax (LTT) applies on the same basis. A transfer for nil consideration with no mortgage — for example, adding a spouse to an unencumbered property as a gift — will generally not attract any tax. Where consideration is involved, the rates and thresholds that apply depend on the value of the consideration, whether the property is residential, and whether the transferee already owns other property. Your solicitor will calculate any tax due as part of the transaction.

Transferring equity to an unmarried partner gives them a legal share in your property — but without a cohabitation agreement or declaration of trust setting out each party's respective share and what happens if the relationship ends, disputes can be difficult and expensive to resolve. If you transfer equity and the relationship later breaks down, your former partner may be entitled to a share that does not reflect what you intended or what you each contributed. Unlike married couples, unmarried partners cannot rely on the family court's broad financial powers to achieve a fair outcome — they are limited to property law remedies, which are more rigid. Taking legal advice and putting a declaration of trust in place at the same time as the transfer protects both parties.

A transfer of equity is the legal process of adding or removing a person from the ownership of a property — changing who is on the title deeds — without a full sale taking place. Common reasons include adding a partner or spouse to the title after marriage or a new relationship, removing an ex-partner following a separation or divorce, transferring a share to a family member for estate planning purposes, or restructuring ownership between co-owners. A transfer of equity is a distinct legal transaction requiring a solicitor — it is not simply an administrative change. Where a mortgage exists, the lender's consent is also required before any change in ownership can take place.

A deed of gift is simply a transfer of equity where no money changes hands — the property or share in it is given rather than sold. Both involve the same legal process: a transfer of the legal title at HM Land Registry. The distinction matters for tax purposes — a deed of gift may still attract stamp duty or land transaction tax if a mortgage is being assumed, and it is still a potentially exempt transfer for IHT purposes subject to the seven-year rule. A deed of gift does not avoid the legal formalities of a transfer of equity; it simply describes the nature of the consideration (or lack of it). Both require a solicitor and, where a mortgage exists, lender consent.

Have a question that isn't covered here? Speak to one of our transfer of equity specialists directly.

Get started with our transfer of equity team

Confidential, no pressure, and we'll explain what's involved before you commit to anything.