Property

Joint Tenants vs Tenants in Common — What's the Difference?

Should you own property as joint tenants or tenants in common? How they differ, what happens when one owner dies, and which is right for your situation.

When two or more people buy a property together in England and Wales, they must choose one of two legal ownership structures: joint tenants or tenants in common. This decision affects what happens to the property if someone dies, separates, or wants to sell their share. Getting it wrong can have costly consequences.

The Two Types of Property Ownership

Quick Comparison

Feature Joint Tenants Tenants in Common
Ownership shares Equal (always 50/50 with two owners) Can be any split (e.g. 60/40, 70/30)
Right of survivorship Yes — property passes to survivor automatically No — share goes according to will or intestacy
Can leave share in a will No — survivorship overrides will Yes — each owner can leave their share to anyone
Can sell individual share Not directly Yes (though mortgage lender consent needed)
Inheritance tax Survivor inherits but may face IHT on the full value later Each share assessed separately for IHT
Best for Married couples, civil partners Unmarried couples, friends, unequal contributions, tax planning

Joint Tenancy Explained

Under a joint tenancy, both owners are treated as owning the whole property together rather than distinct shares. Neither person owns a specific percentage.

How It Works

Aspect Details
Ownership Both own the whole — no individual shares
On death Property passes to survivor automatically (right of survivorship)
Probate Not needed for the property — survivor updates the title
Will Cannot override survivorship — property is not part of the estate
Selling Both owners must agree to sell
Mortgage Both are jointly liable for the full amount

Advantages

Advantage Explanation
Simplicity Clean transfer on death with no legal complications
No probate needed Survivor becomes sole owner by updating the Land Registry
Protection for partners Surviving spouse or partner inherits automatically
Cost No need for a separate declaration of trust

Disadvantages

Disadvantage Explanation
No flexibility on shares Always equal ownership, even if contributions differ
Cannot leave share to others Children, family members, or charities cannot inherit your share
IHT exposure Full property value may count for inheritance tax on second death
Cannot protect share No way to ring-fence your half for specific beneficiaries

Tenants in Common Explained

Under tenants in common, each owner holds a specific share of the property. These shares can be equal or unequal.

How It Works

Aspect Details
Ownership Each person owns a defined share (e.g. 50/50, 60/40, 75/25)
On death Share passes according to the will or rules of intestacy
Probate Needed for the deceased’s share (it is part of their estate)
Will Essential — without one, intestacy rules apply
Selling Both owners must agree to sell the whole property, but a share can be sold independently (in theory)
Mortgage Both are usually jointly liable regardless of shares

Advantages

Advantage Explanation
Flexible shares Reflect unequal financial contributions accurately
Estate planning Leave your share to children, family, or others
IHT planning Use trusts and wills to manage inheritance tax more effectively
Asset protection Can protect your share in a trust (e.g. for care home fee planning)

Disadvantages

Disadvantage Explanation
Less straightforward on death Requires probate for the deceased’s share
Needs a will Without a will, intestacy rules may not match your wishes
Declaration of trust recommended Additional legal cost (£200–£500)
More complex More administration and planning required

Which Should You Choose?

Married Couples or Civil Partners

Usually: Joint Tenants

Most married couples choose joint tenancy because:

  • The property automatically passes to the surviving spouse
  • It is simple and does not require a will to deal with the property
  • There is no inheritance tax between spouses regardless of ownership type

Consider tenants in common if:

  • One partner contributed significantly more to the deposit
  • Either partner has children from a previous relationship
  • You want to use a trust for inheritance tax planning (e.g. a life interest trust)
  • You want to protect your share against future care home fee assessments

Unmarried Couples

Usually: Tenants in Common

Unmarried couples (whether cohabiting or not) do not have automatic inheritance rights, so tenants in common is usually the better choice because:

  • You can reflect unequal financial contributions
  • Each person can leave their share to whoever they wish in their will
  • If the relationship breaks down, ownership shares are clearly defined
  • Cohabiting partners do not inherit under intestacy rules without a will

Friends Buying Together

Always: Tenants in Common

Friends buying a property together should always use tenants in common with a detailed declaration of trust covering:

  • Ownership shares
  • How mortgage payments are split
  • What happens if one person wants to sell
  • How running costs are divided
  • What happens if one person cannot pay their share

Investment Properties or Business Partners

Usually: Tenants in Common

Tenants in common is typically better for investment partners because:

  • Shares can reflect different financial contributions
  • Each partner can plan their tax and inheritance separately
  • Partners can sell their share independently (subject to any agreement)

Severing a Joint Tenancy

If you are currently joint tenants and want to change to tenants in common, this is called severing the tenancy. Either owner can do this without the other’s consent.

How to Sever

Step Action
1 Complete a Form SEV (available from the Land Registry)
2 Serve written notice on the other joint tenant(s)
3 Send Form SEV and a copy of the notice to the Land Registry
4 Land Registry updates the title — a restriction is added

Key Points

Point Details
Cost Free at the Land Registry
Consent needed No — either owner can sever unilaterally
Notice Must be served in writing on the other owner
Effect Creates equal shares (50/50 with two owners) unless agreed otherwise
Reversible No — you cannot revert to joint tenancy without both owners agreeing
When it takes effect From the date notice is served

People commonly sever joint tenancies when:

  • Separating or divorcing
  • Planning for care home fees (to protect half the property)
  • Setting up a trust for inheritance tax planning
  • One owner becomes seriously ill

Declaration of Trust

If you are tenants in common, a declaration of trust (also called a deed of trust) is a legal document that records:

What it covers Example
Ownership shares A owns 60%, B owns 40%
Deposit contributions A paid £30,000, B paid £20,000
Mortgage responsibility Split equally or in proportion to shares
Running costs How bills and maintenance are divided
If one person wants to sell Process, timelines, and right of first refusal
Improvements How renovations and their costs affect shares

A solicitor can draw up a declaration of trust for £200–£500. This is strongly recommended for any tenants in common arrangement, especially when contributions are unequal.

Inheritance Tax Implications

Scenario Joint Tenants Tenants in Common
Spouse dies No IHT (spouse exemption) No IHT (spouse exemption)
Unmarried partner dies IHT potentially due on deceased’s share IHT potentially due on deceased’s share
Second spouse dies Full property value in estate for IHT Only the deceased’s share counted
With a trust Cannot use trust (survivorship applies) Share can be placed in trust to reduce IHT

The IHT nil-rate band is £325,000 and the residence nil-rate band adds up to £175,000 for properties passed to direct descendants. For estates above these thresholds, tenants in common with a trust can be more tax-efficient.

Related: Inheritance Tax Guide

Scotland and Northern Ireland

This guide covers England and Wales. Scotland has a different system:

Jurisdiction Ownership types
England & Wales Joint tenants or tenants in common
Scotland Common ownership (no survivorship by default) — similar to tenants in common. Survivorship clauses can be added.
Northern Ireland Joint tenants or tenants in common (similar to England & Wales)

Summary

Situation Recommended ownership
Married, no complications Joint tenants
Married, IHT planning Tenants in common with trust
Married, second marriage with children Tenants in common
Unmarried couple Tenants in common
Friends buying together Tenants in common with declaration of trust
Unequal deposit contributions Tenants in common
Investment partners Tenants in common

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