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Illinois Compiled Statutes
Information maintained by the Legislative Reference Bureau Updating the database of the Illinois Compiled Statutes (ILCS) is an ongoing process. Recent laws may not yet be included in the ILCS database, but they are found on this site as Public Acts soon after they become law. For information concerning the relationship between statutes and Public Acts, refer to the Guide. Because the statute database is maintained primarily for legislative drafting purposes, statutory changes are sometimes included in the statute database before they take effect. If the source note at the end of a Section of the statutes includes a Public Act that has not yet taken effect, the version of the law that is currently in effect may have already been removed from the database and you should refer to that Public Act to see the changes made to the current law.
ESTATES (755 ILCS 27/) Real Property Transfer on Death Instrument Act. 755 ILCS 27/1 (755 ILCS 27/1) Sec. 1. Short title. This Act may be cited as the Real Property Transfer on Death Instrument Act.
(Source: P.A. 102-68, eff. 1-1-22 .) |
755 ILCS 27/5 (755 ILCS 27/5) Sec. 5. Definitions. In this Act: "Beneficiary" means a person that receives real property under a transfer on death instrument. "Designated beneficiary" means a person designated to receive real property under a transfer on death instrument. "Joint owner" means an individual who owns real property concurrently with one or more other individuals with a right of survivorship. The term includes a joint tenant or a tenant by the entirety. The term does not include a tenant in common. "Owner" means an individual who owns an interest in real property. "Owner" does not include a trustee or an individual acting in a fiduciary, representative, or agency capacity who holds an interest in real property. "Person" means: an individual; a corporation; a business trust; a trustee of a land trust, a revocable or irrevocable trust, a trust created under a will or under a transfer on death instrument; a partnership; a limited liability company; an association; a joint venture; a public corporation; a government or governmental subdivision; an agency; an instrumentality; a guardian; a custodian designated or to be designated under any state's uniform transfers to minors act; or any other legal entity. "Real property" means an interest in realty located in this State capable of being transferred on the death of the owner. "Residential real estate" means real property improved with not less than one nor more than 4 residential dwelling units; a residential condominium unit, including but not limited to the common elements allocated to the exclusive use thereof that form an integral part of the condominium unit and any parking unit or units specified by the declaration to be allocated to a specific residential condominium unit; or a single tract of agriculture real estate consisting of 40 acres or less which is improved with a single family residence. If a declaration of condominium ownership provides for individually owned and transferable parking units, "residential real estate" does not include the parking unit of a specific residential condominium unit unless the parking unit is included in the legal description of the property being transferred by a transfer on death instrument. "Transfer on death instrument" means an instrument authorized under this Act.
(Source: P.A. 102-68, eff. 1-1-22; 102-558, eff. 8-20-21; 102-813, eff. 5-13-22.) |
755 ILCS 27/10 (755 ILCS 27/10) Sec. 10. Applicability. This Act applies only to the following: (1) A transfer of residential real estate by means of | | a transfer on death instrument made before, on, or after January 1, 2012, by an owner dying on or after January 1, 2012.
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(2) A transfer of real property by means of a
| | transfer on death instrument made before, on, or after the effective date of this amendatory Act of the 102nd General Assembly by an owner dying on or after the effective date of this amendatory Act of the 102nd General Assembly.
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| (Source: P.A. 102-68, eff. 1-1-22 .)
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755 ILCS 27/15 (755 ILCS 27/15) Sec. 15. Non-exclusivity. This Act does not affect any method of transferring real property otherwise permitted under the law of this State.
(Source: P.A. 102-68, eff. 1-1-22 .) |
755 ILCS 27/20 (755 ILCS 27/20) Sec. 20. Transfer on death instrument authorized. An owner may transfer real property by a transfer on death instrument to one or more beneficiaries in any form of ownership valid under State law, concurrent or successive, absolute or conditional, contingent or vested, effective at the owner's death.
(Source: P.A. 102-68, eff. 1-1-22 .) |
755 ILCS 27/21 (755 ILCS 27/21) Sec. 21. Trust as beneficiary. A transfer of real property by a transfer on death instrument to a trustee of a trust that is in existence when the owner executes a transfer on death instrument and that is identified in the transfer on death instrument, to a trustee of a trust created under the owner's will, to a trustee of a trust created under the transfer on death instrument, or to a trustee of a trust under the will of another individual if that individual has predeceased the owner, is permitted even if the trust is subject to amendment, modification, revocation, or termination. Unless the transfer on death instrument provides otherwise, the real property transferred shall be governed by the terms and provisions of the instrument creating the trust, including any amendments or modifications in writing made at any time before or after the execution of the owner's transfer on death instrument and after the death of the owner. The existence or lack thereof of a trust corpus is immaterial to the validity of the transfer by the transfer on death instrument. Unless the transfer on death instrument provides otherwise, a revocation or termination of the trust before the owner's death causes the transfer to the trust to pass to the owner's estate.
(Source: P.A. 102-68, eff. 1-1-22 .) |
755 ILCS 27/25 (755 ILCS 27/25)
Sec. 25. Transfer on death instrument revocable. A transfer on death instrument is revocable even if the instrument or another instrument contains a contrary provision.
(Source: P.A. 97-555, eff. 1-1-12.) |
755 ILCS 27/30 (755 ILCS 27/30) Sec. 30. Transfer on death instrument nontestamentary. A transfer on death instrument is a nontestamentary instrument and is subject to all other laws governing or affecting transfers by nontestamentary instruments. A transfer on death instrument may not be admitted to probate as the will of the owner or as a codicil thereto.
(Source: P.A. 102-68, eff. 1-1-22 .) |
755 ILCS 27/35 (755 ILCS 27/35) Sec. 35. Capacity of owner and agent's authority. The capacity required to make or revoke a transfer on death instrument is the same as the capacity required to make a will. An agent under a durable power of attorney or other instrument creating an agency, even if authorized, does not have the authority to create or revoke a transfer on death instrument on behalf of the owner. This Section shall not be construed to prohibit the agent from selling, transferring, or encumbering the real property under the terms of the agency.
(Source: P.A. 102-68, eff. 1-1-22 .) |
755 ILCS 27/40 (755 ILCS 27/40) Sec. 40. Requirements. (a) A transfer on death instrument: (1) must: (i) contain the essential elements and | | formalities of a properly recordable inter vivos deed, but does not need to state consideration or the addresses of the beneficiaries; and (ii) must be executed, witnessed, and acknowledged in substantial compliance with Section 45;
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| (2) must state that the transfer to the designated
| | beneficiary is to occur at the owner's death; and
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| (3) must be recorded before the owner's death in the
| | public records in the office of the recorder of the county or counties in which any part of the real property is located.
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| (b) The failure to comply with any of the requirements of subsection (a) will render the transfer on death instrument void and ineffective to transfer title to the real property at the owner's death.
(Source: P.A. 102-68, eff. 1-1-22 .)
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755 ILCS 27/45 (755 ILCS 27/45) Sec. 45. Signing, attestation, and acknowledgment. (a) Every transfer on death instrument shall be signed by the owner or by some person in his or her presence and by his or her direction, and shall be attested in writing by 2 or more credible witnesses, and the signatures of the witnesses along with the owner's signature shall be acknowledged in front of a notary public. The witnesses shall attest in writing substantially as follows: (i) that on the date thereof the owner executed the transfer on death instrument in the presence of the witnesses; (ii) that the owner's execution was his or her own free and voluntary act; and (iii) that at the time of the execution, the witnesses believed the owner to be of sound mind and memory.
(b) Except as provided in subsection (c), if the transfer on death instrument is not witnessed by at least 2 credible witnesses, it is not executed in substantial compliance with subsection (a) and is void. (c) If a beneficiary, or his or her spouse, attests to the execution of the transfer on death instrument, the interest transferred to that beneficiary and all persons claiming under him or her is void as to that beneficiary unless the transfer on death instrument is otherwise duly attested by a sufficient number of witnesses as under subsection (a) exclusive of that person and the notary, and he or she may be compelled to testify as if the interest had not been given, but the beneficiary is entitled to receive so much of the interest or share given to him or her by the transfer on death instrument not to exceed the value or share that he or she would have received had no transfer on death instrument been established. (Source: P.A. 102-68, eff. 1-1-22 .) |
755 ILCS 27/50 (755 ILCS 27/50) Sec. 50. Notice, delivery, acceptance, or consideration not required. A transfer on death instrument is effective without: (1) notice or delivery to or acceptance by the | | designated beneficiary during the owner's life; or
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| (2) consideration.
(Source: P.A. 97-555, eff. 1-1-12; 98-821, eff. 1-1-15 .)
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755 ILCS 27/55 (755 ILCS 27/55)
Sec. 55. Revocation by recorded instrument authorized; revocation by act or unrecorded instrument, not authorized.
(a) An instrument is effective to revoke a recorded transfer on death instrument, or any part of it, only if: (1) it is: (A) another transfer on death instrument that | | revokes the instrument or part of the instrument expressly or by inconsistency; or
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| (B) an instrument of revocation that expressly
| | revokes the instrument or part of the instrument; and
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| (2) it is:
(A) executed, witnessed, and acknowledged in the
| | same manner as is required by Section 45 on a date that is after the date of the acknowledgment of the instrument being revoked; and
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| (B) recorded before the owner's death in the
| | public records in the office of the recorder of the county or counties where the prior transfer on death instrument is recorded.
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| (b) A transfer on death instrument executed and recorded in accordance with this Act may not be revoked by a revocatory act on the instrument, by an unrecorded instrument, or by a provision in a will.
(Source: P.A. 97-555, eff. 1-1-12; 97-813, eff. 7-13-12.)
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755 ILCS 27/60 (755 ILCS 27/60) Sec. 60. Effect of transfer on death instrument during owner's life.
(a) During an owner's life, a transfer on death instrument does not: (1) affect the right or interest of the owner, | | any other owner, or an agent for the owner to sell, transfer, or encumber the real property;
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| (2) affect an interest or right of a transferee,
| | lienholder, mortgagee, or option holder even if the transferee, lienholder, mortgagee, or option holder has actual or constructive notice of the instrument;
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| (3) affect an interest or right of a secured or
| | unsecured creditor or future creditor of the owner, even if the creditor has actual or constructive notice of the instrument;
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| (4) affect the owner's or designated
| | beneficiary's eligibility for any form of public assistance;
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| (5) create a legal or equitable interest in favor
| | of the designated beneficiary; or
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| (6) subject the real property to claims or
| | process of a creditor of the designated beneficiary.
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(b) If after recording a transfer on death instrument, the owner makes a contract for the sale or transfer of the real property or some part thereof that is the subject of the transfer on death instrument and the whole or any part of the contract remains executory at the owner's death, the disposition of the real property by the contract does not revoke the transfer on death instrument but the real property passes to the designated beneficiary or beneficiary subject to the contract.
(Source: P.A. 102-68, eff. 1-1-22 .)
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755 ILCS 27/65 (755 ILCS 27/65) Sec. 65. Effect of transfer on death instrument at owner's death.
(a) Except as otherwise provided in the transfer on death instrument, in this Act, in the Probate Act of 1975, or in any other Act applicable to nontestamentary instruments, on the death of the owner, the following rules apply to the real property that is the subject of a transfer on death instrument and owned by the owner at death: (1) Subject to the beneficiary's right to disclaim | | the transfer, the interest in the real property is transferred to the beneficiary in accordance with the instrument.
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| (2) If the owner has identified 2 or more designated
| | beneficiaries to receive concurrent interests in the real property, the interests are taken in equal and undivided shares with no right of survivorship.
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| (3) Except as provided in paragraph (5), if the owner
| | has identified a single designated beneficiary and the designated beneficiary fails to survive the owner or is not in existence on the date of the owner's death, then the real property shall pass to the owner's estate.
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| (4) Except as provided in paragraph (5), if the owner
| | has identified 2 or more designated beneficiaries to receive concurrent interests, and one or more, but less than all, designated beneficiaries predecease the owner, then the interests of those that lapse or fail for any reason are transferred to the other remaining designated beneficiary or beneficiaries in proportion to the interest of each in the remaining part of the real property held concurrently.
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| (5) If the designated beneficiary who dies before the
| | owner is a descendant of the owner, the descendants of the deceased designated beneficiary living at the time of the owner's death shall take the deceased designated beneficiary's share of the real property per stirpes.
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| (b) Subject to the Probate Act of 1975 and the Conveyances Act, a beneficiary takes the real property subject to all conveyances, encumbrances, assignments, contracts, options, mortgages, liens, and other interests to which the real property is subject at the owner's death.
(c) A transfer on death instrument transfers real property without covenant or warranty of title even if the instrument contains a contrary provision.
(d) If there is no sufficient evidence of the order of the owner and designated beneficiary's deaths, otherwise than simultaneously, and there is no other provision in the transfer on death instrument, for purposes of this Section, the designated beneficiary shall be deemed to have predeceased the owner.
(Source: P.A. 102-68, eff. 1-1-22 .)
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755 ILCS 27/66 (755 ILCS 27/66) Sec. 66. Renunciation by spouse. (a) Unless the right to renounce is waived by the owner's surviving spouse, a transfer on death instrument may be renounced by the owner's surviving spouse. If renounced, the surviving spouse is entitled to a one-third interest in the real property transferred by the transfer on death instrument if the owner leaves a descendant or a one-half interest in the real property if the owner leaves no descendant. The surviving spouse may waive his or her right to renounce by executing a waiver as part of the transfer on death instrument. Notwithstanding the foregoing, a surviving spouse does not have the right to renounce a transfer on death instrument that transfers the owner's interest in real property to a trustee of a trust created under the owner's will or otherwise that is for the sole benefit of the surviving spouse during his or her lifetime. (b) In order to renounce the transfer on death instrument, the owner's surviving spouse must file, in the recorder of deeds office where the transfer on death instrument is recorded, a written instrument signed by the surviving spouse setting forth a description of the real property and declaring the renunciation. The instrument shall be filed within 7 months after the date of the owner's death, or within such additional time as a court having jurisdiction of the real property may grant pursuant to Section 2-8 of the Probate Act of 1975. The filing of the instrument renouncing the transfer on death instrument is a complete bar to any claim of the surviving spouse under the transfer on death instrument. (c) If a transfer on death instrument is renounced under this Section, any future interest that is to take effect in possession or enjoyment at or after the termination of an estate or other interest given by the transfer on death instrument to the surviving spouse takes effect as though the surviving spouse had predeceased the owner, unless the transfer on death instrument expressly provides that in the case of renunciation the future interest shall not be accelerated. (d) If the surviving spouse of the owner renounces the transfer on death instrument and the interests transferred to other persons are thereby diminished or increased, upon petition by a beneficiary, the court shall abate from or add to any interest transferred in such a manner as to apportion the loss or advantage among the beneficiaries in proportion to their respective interests.
(Source: P.A. 102-68, eff. 1-1-22 .) |
755 ILCS 27/70 (755 ILCS 27/70)
Sec. 70. Joint owners. (a) One or more joint owners may execute a transfer on death instrument. (b) If all of the joint owners execute a transfer on death instrument, then an instrument of joint owners is revoked only if it is revoked by all of the then living joint owners. A transfer on death instrument is revocable by the last surviving joint owner notwithstanding any contract or agreement between the joint owners to the contrary. (c) If less than all of the joint owners execute a transfer on death instrument, the transfer on death instrument will be governed by the designation of the joint owner who is the last to die of all the joint owners. If the last to die joint owner did not execute a transfer on death instrument, the designation of any prior deceased joint owner is ineffective. (d) A transfer on death instrument shall not sever a joint tenancy or tenancy by the entirety.
(Source: P.A. 97-555, eff. 1-1-12.) |
755 ILCS 27/75 (755 ILCS 27/75) Sec. 75. Notice of death affidavit. Any beneficiary who takes under a transfer on death instrument may file in the office of the recorder in the county or counties where the real property is located a notice of death affidavit to confirm title following the death of the owner. The notice of death affidavit shall contain the name and address, if known, of each beneficiary taking under the transfer on death instrument, the legal description of the property, the street address and parcel identification number of the real property, if known, the date of the transfer on death instrument and its recording document number, the name of the deceased owner, the date and place of death, and the name and address to which all future tax bills should be mailed. The affidavit shall be acknowledged under penalty of perjury before a notary public or person authorized to administer oaths. The filing of the notice of death affidavit is not a condition to the transfer of title.
(Source: P.A. 102-68, eff. 1-1-22 .) |
755 ILCS 27/80 (755 ILCS 27/80)
Sec. 80. Disclaimer. A beneficiary may disclaim all or part of the beneficiary's interest as provided by the Disclaimer Under Nontestamentary Instrument Act.
(Source: P.A. 97-555, eff. 1-1-12.) |
755 ILCS 27/85 (755 ILCS 27/85) Sec. 85. Rights of claimants. A beneficiary of a transfer on death instrument is subject to creditor, administrative, funeral and burial, and statutory claims to the same extent and in the same manner as a beneficiary of a trust that was revocable at the time of the settlor's death as provided in Section 505 of the Illinois Trust Code, except that if more than one real property is transferred by a transfer on death instrument, the liability will be apportioned among the real properties in proportion to the net values of the real properties at the time of the owner's death.
(Source: P.A. 102-68, eff. 1-1-22 .) |
755 ILCS 27/90 (755 ILCS 27/90) Sec. 90. Limitations and bona fide transfers. (a) An action to set aside or contest the validity of a transfer on death instrument shall be commenced within the earlier of 2 years after the date of the owner's death or 6 months from the date letters of office are issued pursuant to the Probate Act of 1975. (b) A bona fide purchaser or mortgagee for value shall take the real property free and clear of any action, claim, liability, or contest if the transfer to the bona fide purchaser or mortgagee for value occurs prior to the recording of a lis pendens under Section 2-1901 of the Code of Civil Procedure or prior to the filing of the a notice of renunciation pursuant to Section 66 of this Act.
(Source: P.A. 102-68, eff. 1-1-22 .) |
755 ILCS 27/95 (755 ILCS 27/95) Sec. 95. Preparation of a transfer on death instrument or its revocation. A transfer on death instrument or its revocation shall be prepared only by a licensed attorney. Nothing in this Section, however, shall prohibit an owner from preparing his or her own transfer on death instrument or revocation, or shall render the transfer on death instrument void for failing to be prepared by a licensed attorney.
(Source: P.A. 102-68, eff. 1-1-22 .) |
755 ILCS 27/100 (755 ILCS 27/100)
Sec. 100. (Repealed).
(Source: P.A. 97-555, eff. 1-1-12. Repealed by P.A. 98-821, eff. 1-1-15 .) |
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