Pennsylvania Quitclaim Deed: Step-by-Step Guide (with Free Form Generator)

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A Pennsylvania quitclaim deed transfers whatever interest the grantor has in real property to another party without warranting the quality of that interest. It's the right tool for transfers between family members, into or out of a trust or LLC, after a divorce, or to clear minor title defects. This guide walks through Pennsylvania's state-specific requirements - witnesses, transfer tax, recording office, and the practical gotchas - and gives you a free interactive form builder at the bottom.

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The biggest Pennsylvania-specific thing to know

Pennsylvania's Realty Transfer Tax is 1% state plus 1% local in most municipalities, but Philadelphia (3.278% city + 1% state = 4.278% total) and Pittsburgh (4% combined) are dramatic outliers. Family transfers (spouse, parent-child, grandparent-grandchild, sibling) are exempt from the state portion AND local portion, but the exemption must be claimed via the REV-183 Statement of Value filed with every deed.

Pennsylvania requirements at a glance

Subscribing witnessesNone required
NotarizationRequired (notary acknowledgment block on the deed)
Transfer / documentary taxState: 1% Realty Transfer Tax; many localities add 1%-3% additional
Recording officeCounty Recorder of Deeds in the county where the property is located
Recording fee$73 (varies by county)
Top margin (page 1)3 inches
Required formsRealty Transfer Tax Statement of Value (REV-183) required.
Notarization methodRemote Online Notarization (RON) available, or in-person

Witnesses + notarization

Pennsylvania permits Remote Online Notarization (RON), so the entire signing + notarization can happen via video from anywhere - no need to leave your home.

Transfer / documentary tax

The Statement of Value (PA Dept. of Revenue Form REV-183) is required for all PA deeds (except certain exempt deeds with specific recital language). Skipping it or miscomputing the tax owed is the most common PA deed defect.

Recording

Once the deed is signed and notarized, you take it (along with any required forms and the recording fee) to the County Recorder of Deeds in the county where the property is located. The clerk stamps it with a recording number and date and adds it to the public record. From that moment, the world is on notice that title has transferred. Expect to pay roughly $73 (varies by county).

Common mistakes

When NOT to use a Pennsylvania quitclaim

Two ways to do this

Have us handle the whole thing

$199 flat. We draft the Pennsylvania-compliant deed, arrange a video notary or in-person mobile notary, file with your county recorder, and email you the recorded copy. Typically 24-72 hours end-to-end.

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Or use the free generator below

Fill in the fields and download a Pennsylvania-compliant quitclaim deed PDF. You handle the notary and county recording yourself. Free, no email required.

Use the free generator ↓

Pennsylvania does not have a Transfer on Death Deed statute. Common alternatives: living trust, joint tenancy with right of survivorship.

Free Pennsylvania Quitclaim Deed generator

Fill in the fields below and we'll generate a Pennsylvania-compliant quitclaim deed PDF you can print, sign in front of a notary, and take to the County Recorder of Deeds for recording. Free, no email required.

Grantor (current owner)
Grantee (new owner)
Property in Pennsylvania
Consideration

This guide and the generated form are general information about Pennsylvania deed law, not legal advice. ClosingDesk is a workflow automation service, not a law firm. Pennsylvania-specific issues can have material legal and tax consequences if mishandled. If your situation has any complexity (existing mortgage, contested ownership, divorce in progress, tax planning concerns, parent-child transfers in states with reassessment rules), consult a licensed Pennsylvania real estate attorney before transferring title.