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Title TransferNC Exam

Transfer of Title for North Carolina

Master transfer of title concepts for the NC real estate exam.120+ practice questions with detailed explanations and North Carolina-specific content.

120+Questions
8%of Exam
11Sub-topics
Transfer of Title — Study Card
Transfer of Title study card infographic showing key concepts, exam weight (8%), and memory aids for the North Carolina real estate exam
AI-generated study card for Transfer of Title. Covers 8% of the real estate exam.

What You'll Learn

Key transfer of title concepts for the North Carolina real estate exam

Types of deeds and their uses
North Carolina title insurance requirements
Escrow and closing procedures
Recording and chain of title
Exam Coverage
How Transfer of Title appears on the NC exam
Exam Weight8%

Deeds, title insurance, escrow, and closing procedures. This topic is essential for both the national and North Carolina-specific portions of the exam.

Study Tips
How to master Title Transfer efficiently
  • Deed hierarchy: General Warranty > Special Warranty > Bargain and Sale > Quitclaim
  • Quitclaim deed = NO warranties at all (used for clearing title clouds)
  • Recording is optional but protects priority against later claims
  • Owner's title insurance protects buyer; lender's policy protects the mortgage lender

Transfer of Title: In-Depth Guide for North Carolina

Transfer of Title covers the legal process of transferring property ownership from one party to another. This topic includes deeds, the recording system, title searches, title insurance, and the closing process — all essential knowledge for facilitating real estate transactions.

Understand the hierarchy of deeds based on the level of protection they provide: General Warranty Deed offers the most protection with five covenants (seisin, quiet enjoyment, against encumbrances, further assurance, warranty forever), Special Warranty Deed warrants only against defects during the grantor's period of ownership, Bargain and Sale Deed implies ownership but provides no warranties, and Quitclaim Deed transfers whatever interest the grantor has with no warranties at all.

For a deed to be valid, it must have a competent grantor, identifiable grantee, words of conveyance (granting clause), adequate legal description, and be signed by the grantor. Delivery and acceptance are required to complete the transfer. Recording is not required for validity between the parties but protects against subsequent claims. Title insurance protects against undiscovered defects — lender's policies protect the lender while owner's policies protect the buyer.

For North Carolina-specific regulations, consult the North Carolina exam prep guide and practice with our Transfer of Title practice questions.

How North Carolina Tests Title Transfer

The North Carolina real estate exam allocates approximately 8% of questions to Transfer of Title. That means roughly 12 out of 150 questions on the salesperson exam will cover this topic. The NCREC requires candidates to demonstrate competency in both national title transfer principles and NC-specific regulations.

North Carolina exam questions on transfer of title are typically scenario-based, requiring you to apply concepts to realistic situations rather than simply recall definitions. Focus your study on understanding how title transfer rules work in practice, not just what they are.

Recent North Carolina Regulatory Updates

  • Exam Administration ChangeNorth Carolina transitioned to a new exam provider with updated testing locations and scheduling options.
View all North Carolina law updates →

Frequently Asked Questions

Transfer of Title typically makes up 8-12% of the North Carolina real estate exam. You can expect approximately 10-18 questions on this topic, covering both national and North Carolina-specific concepts.

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