Want to keep your business assets safe when property ownership changes hands?
Real estate ownership changes are one of the most neglected business risks. One small error in a transfer can cost you thousands — or even subject you to lawsuits, lost equity and tax problems.
Here’s the thing…
Buyers get caught up in the deal, they neglect the closing documents that will truly protect them. Deed recording fees, transfer tax, title insurance – yawn… yawn. But, it’s these precise ingredients that will prevent your assets from falling into a legal black hole.
In this guide we will show you precisely how to safeguard your business when changing real estate ownership.
Let’s jump in!
Here’s what’s coming up:
- Why Ownership Changes Put Business Assets At Risk
- Understanding Deed Recording Fees
- 5 Ways To Protect Your Business During A Transfer
- Common Mistakes Business Owners Make
Why Ownership Changes Put Business Assets At Risk
Every time real estate ownership changes, there is a window of risk.
During this period, your business assets can be vulnerable to creditors, tax liens, fraud and even title disputes. And the numbers don’t lie. 176,445 properties sold during full-year 2025 with a total transaction volume of $560.2 billion — that’s a tremendous amount of transactions with potential for something to go awry.
So why does ownership change create risk?
It comes down to one simple thing — paperwork.
If the deed is not recorded correctly, you don’t have a clear chain of title. And if you don’t have a clear chain of title, you can’t prove the property is your business’. That opens the door to:
- Title fraud
- Hidden liens
- Tax complications
- Disputed ownership claims
Say you’re working through the process of changing ownership of property in PA, you’ll need to manage the deed recording fees, realty transfer tax and appropriate title work to ensure that the property is legally protected. Bypass these processes and your business could be left paying the consequences.
Understanding Deed Recording Fees
Deed recording fees are the fees you pay to your county to record the deed transfer.
Sounds simple, right? But these fees do something massive…
They record the change in ownership. If you do not record, the world doesn’t know your business owns the property. And that is a huge problem.
Why deed recording fees matter for businesses:
- They create a public chain of title
- They protect you against future ownership claims
- They are required before lenders will finalize financing
- They prevent fraud and double-conveyance scams
How much are they? The amount differs by state and county. The national average is $125 for recording fees, based on a survey by the Home Buying Institute, but they range from zero in Alaska to a percentage of the home price which can drive costs into the thousands.
For commercial property, these fees can be even higher because of multi-page deeds, mortgages and supporting documents.
Here’s the kicker…
Recording must be done or incorrect payment won’t be accepted by the county. If the deed isn’t accepted then for all intents and purposes, the transfer didn’t occur.
Note: Several states have increased these fees recently. In Washington the fee skyrocketed to over $300 per document. Always check the current rate for your state before closing.
5 Ways To Protect Your Business During A Transfer
OK, now the good stuff. These are the 5 approaches advisors recommend to clients to protect business assets during a change of property ownership.
Get Title Insurance
Title insurance is non-negotiable for business owners.
Why? Because it defends against unknown title defects which existed at the time you purchased the property. Undiscovered liens, forged deeds, unknown heirs — all of these can haunt you years later.
A title insurance policy pays the legal fees and any loss when a claim arises.
It’s a one-time expense that can prevent catastrophic financial loss in the future. Don’t skip it.
Use A Business Entity (Not Personal Name)
Holding commercial property in your personal name is a recipe for disaster.
If something goes wrong — a tenant lawsuit, an environmental claim, a tax issue — your personal assets are exposed. Holding the property in an LLC or corporation creates a legal wall between your business and your personal life.
Benefits include:
- Limited liability protection
- Easier to transfer ownership later
- Tax flexibility
- Cleaner accounting
It only has to be done in the exact legal name of the entity. Misspellings, however slight, can create a nightmare.
Conduct A Full Title Search
Before closing, conduct a full title search of the property.
This step reveals any liens, easements, or claims against the property — so you don’t take ownership of them along with the house. A title search is one of the least expensive types of insurance you can purchase.
The most common (and most expensive) mistake business buyers make is to skip this step.
Pay All Transfer Taxes And Fees Upfront
Transfer taxes and recording fees should be paid in full at closing.
If fees aren’t paid, the deed doesn’t record. If the deed doesn’t record, you risk losing your ownership. And the more transaction volume there is, the more important this is. Transaction volume hit $108.5 billion in Q4 2024, a 33.6% increase from the previous quarter — and every one of those deals needed fees paid to protect the parties involved.
Always budget for:
- Deed recording fees
- Transfer tax
- Notary fees
- Title insurance premium
Work With A Real Estate Attorney
Don’t try to DIY a commercial property transfer.
A real estate attorney ensures that all paperwork is in order, all fees are paid, and the deed is recorded properly. They also guide you through state-specific regulations that can trip up business owners.
The cost of a lawyer is negligible compared to the cost of a bad transfer.
Common Mistakes Business Owners Make
Here are the biggest errors business owners make with ownership transitions.
Mistake #1: Failing to record the deed in a timely manner. Every day you wait is a day that someone else can record a competing claim to the property. Record the deed the day of closing, if possible.
Mistake #2: Not updating your insurance. Your policies are in your name because you own them. When you sell the ownership must be removed from your name. Have the new owner added to every policy.
Mistake #3: Commingling business and personal accounts. Always pay the transfer fee from the business account. Commingling of funds is one of the most common ways to pierce the corporate veil and risk your personal assets.
Mistake #4: Not doing a title search. This is the worst one. The title search only costs a few hundred bucks, but can save you from inheriting tens of thousands of dollars in liens.
Mistake #5: Failing to keep copies of recorded documents. Make sure to obtain a stamped copy of the recorded deed and store it in a safe place.
Avoid these mistakes and your business assets will be much safer.
Final Thoughts
Real estate ownership changes are fraught with peril — but they don’t have to be.
Get Savvy on Deed Recording Fees, Use the Correct Business Structure and Follow the Process:
- Record the deed
- Pay the fees
- Get title insurance
- Use an entity
- Hire a pro
Do these things and you’ll emerge from any ownership change with your business assets and your peace of mind intact?
