An executor for her father’s estate in Queens recently called me. She had the will, the account numbers, and a lifetime of memories in the family home she was now responsible for selling. What she didn’t have was the deed. The original, thick paper document her parents received at their closing decades ago was gone. She worried this would halt the entire estate administration, trapping the home in legal limbo with the Surrogate’s Court.
This is a common fear. Families believe the original, physical deed is like a car title—without it, you cannot prove ownership. Fortunately, that is not how real property works. The physical document is symbolic. The official proof of ownership is not in a safe deposit box; it is in a public records office. Losing the original is an inconvenience, not a catastrophe for the estate.
Your Proof of Ownership Is a Public Record
When you buy property, the signed deed is “recorded” with a government office. This act creates a permanent, public notice of the ownership transfer. That recorded image becomes the official document, and a certified copy carries the same legal weight as the original. This system is the bedrock of property ownership in New York.
The process is built on a principle from New York Real Property Law § 291, which requires conveyances of real property to be recorded. This law protects owners and provides a clear, searchable chain of title for every property in the state. When a client cannot find an original deed, my first step is not to panic. It is to pull the official record.
For property in the five boroughs of New York City—Manhattan, Brooklyn, Queens, the Bronx, and Staten Island—the record is maintained by the Office of the City Register. The public portal for these records is the Automated City Register Information System—ACRIS. With an address or a block and lot number, we can locate and print an unofficial copy of any recorded deed in minutes. From there, we request a certified copy from the City Register for official use in court or for a sale.
For properties outside the city, in counties like Nassau, Suffolk, or Westchester, the process is similar. Each county’s Clerk is responsible for maintaining property records. While some offer online search tools, others may require a written request or an in-person visit to obtain a certified copy. The fee is nominal and the process is straightforward.
Why the Wording on the Deed Matters More Than Its Location
Securing a copy of the deed is a mechanical task. The more important question I ask clients is, “What does your deed actually do for your estate plan?” The way your property is titled has profound implications for what happens after your death. Here, we move from simple record-keeping to deliberate stewardship of your legacy.
A deed is more than a property description. It names the owner or owners and, crucially, defines the form of ownership. Here are a few common scenarios we see:
- Sole Ownership: If a deed names only one person, that property becomes part of their probate estate upon death. It must pass through the Surrogate’s Court process, subject to their will or New York’s intestacy laws.
- Joint Tenants with Rights of Survivorship (JTWROS): If a deed lists co-owners as “joint tenants with rights of survivorship,” the property automatically passes to the surviving owner upon the death of the other. It bypasses probate entirely. This is common for married couples but can have unintended tax consequences if used incorrectly with other family members.
- Tenants in Common: When co-owners are listed as “tenants in common,” each owns a distinct share. Upon death, their share does not automatically go to the other owners. Instead, it becomes part of their probate estate and is distributed according to their will. This can lead to a family member inheriting a fractional interest in a home alongside unrelated co-owners.
The distinction is enormous. For the executor I mentioned, finding the deed was only the first step. The next was understanding that because her parents owned the home as joint tenants, her mother automatically inherited it when her father passed. Now, as the executor of her mother’s estate, the house is a probate asset that she has the authority to sell.
The Deed to a Trust: A Better Approach
While locating a deed is simple, the issues it can raise—probate, co-ownership disputes, unintended heirs—are often difficult. This is why, for many of my clients, we do not leave the family home titled in their individual names. Instead, we use a trust.
By preparing a new deed that transfers the property from the individual to the trustee of their revocable living trust, we transform the asset. The client still has complete control during their lifetime, but the property is no longer part of their probate estate. When they pass away, the successor trustee they appointed can manage or sell the property according to the trust’s instructions, without any involvement from the Surrogate’s Court. The process is private, faster, and less stressful for the family.
The deed is a foundational document, but its true power lies in how it is integrated into a thoughtful estate plan. It is not just about proving you own your home. It is about being intentional in directing who will be its steward for the next generation.
If you are unsure how your property is titled, our process begins with a review of your current deed. We can analyze the document to determine how it aligns with your long-term goals for your family.



