Quick Answer
A road widening reservation on an ACT property title means a strip of land may be compulsorily resumed for future road infrastructure. You still own and pay rates on that land, but you cannot build on it. Buyers must check the title, Crown lease, survey plan, and planning certificate before committing — and adjust their offer if the usable area is reduced.
What Is a Road Widening Reservation in the ACT?
In the Australian Capital Territory, all land is held under Crown lease, not freehold. A road widening reservation is a registered encumbrance or notation that earmarks part of a block for future road expansion. The territory can resume that strip without negotiating an easement. Compensation is set under ACT legislation, not by private agreement.
These reservations are common along arterial roads, major intersections, and planned transport corridors across Canberra suburbs. The reserved strip may be a narrow sliver along the front boundary — or a substantial portion of the block.
Where Road Widening Appears on ACT Property Records
Unlike some states that record road widening as a registered easement, ACT titles may reference it in several places:
- Current Title / State Lease: The reservation appears as an encumbrance, notation, or reference to an associated plan.
- Crown Lease document: The lease conditions may include a road widening clause or reference a diagram showing the affected area.
- Survey / Block plan: The physical extent is shown on the deposited plan with hatching or a written notation.
- Planning certificate: Confirms whether the reservation is currently in force under ACT planning legislation.
Buyer Checklist: Road Widening Checks for ACT Property
Work through this list for any ACT purchase near a main road or transport corridor:
- Order a Current Title / State Lease search ($74.50 AUD through TitleFinder). Check the encumbrances and notations for any road widening reference or associated plan number.
- Review the Crown Lease terms. Look for clauses about road widening, resumed land, or development restrictions near the road boundary.
- Obtain the survey or block plan. This shows the exact dimensions and position of the reserved strip. Compare it against existing fences, structures, and the buildable envelope.
- Order a planning certificate. This confirms whether the reservation is active under current ACT planning law and whether its status has changed since the lease was granted.
- Check for lease variations. A variation may have expanded, reduced, or removed the reservation. Compare the current lease against registered variations — do not rely on vendor disclosures alone.
- Inspect for restrictive covenants. Road widening areas often carry additional covenants limiting building height, setbacks, or construction type. These can restrict the remaining land beyond standard planning rules.
- Review unit plans if buying a townhouse or apartment. Check whether the reservation affects common property, driveway access, or individual unit boundaries. Body corporate records may reveal special levy risks.
What Each Document Reveals
| Document | What It Tells You | When to Order |
|---|---|---|
| Current Title / State Lease | Whether a road widening reservation is registered and the plan reference | Always — first document to order |
| Crown Lease (full document) | Lease conditions and any road widening clauses or diagrams | Always — with the title search |
| Survey / Block plan | Exact location and width of the reserved strip on the block | When a reservation is noted on the title |
| Planning certificate | Current planning status of the reservation under ACT law | When developing, renovating, or subdividing |
| Lease variation instrument | Changes to the original lease including boundary adjustments | When the title references a registered variation |
ACT-Specific Risks Buyers Often Miss
Crown Lease and Road Widening Interplay
Because ACT land is leasehold, a road widening reservation operates within the Crown lease framework. The territory can resume the reserved strip under its statutory powers without negotiating a separate easement. Compensation typically covers the value of the resumed portion at the time of resumption — not the impact on the value of the remaining land. Factor this into your offer.
Unit Plans and Common Property
For unit-titled properties, a reservation on common property can affect parking, driveways, and future body corporate costs. The owners corporation may face special levies if the land is resumed. Check the unit plan boundaries against the survey.
Restrictive Covenants Over the Reserved Strip
Even if the territory never acts on the reservation, restrictive covenants tied to it can prevent building within that area for decades. These covenants may also impose setback requirements that shrink the buildable envelope on the remaining land.
Lease Variations That Adjust the Reservation
Some ACT leases have been varied to remove road widening reservations as transport plans changed. Others have had reservations expanded. Always verify the current variation register entries rather than relying on older contract documents.
Planning Certificate Timing
A planning certificate reflects reservation status at its issue date. ACT planning authorities review road widening proposals periodically, and a reservation may have been added, removed, or altered between when the vendor bought and when you settle. Order a fresh certificate close to settlement.
When to Order Additional Documents
If the title search reveals a road widening notation, order the survey plan and planning certificate straight away. If the reservation covers a large portion of the block, request the lease variation history. For unit-titled properties, obtain the full unit plan and body corporate records. Confirm your position with a qualified conveyancer or solicitor before exchange.
Frequently Asked Questions
Does a road widening reservation reduce property value in the ACT?
Yes, it can. The reserved strip cannot be built on, which reduces the usable land area. Compensation on resumption is typically limited to the value of the resumed portion, not the broader impact on the remaining block. Adjust your offer to reflect the reduced usable area.
Can I remove a road widening reservation from my ACT title?
No. Only the territory planning authority can remove or vary a road widening reservation. An individual leaseholder cannot do this. If a transport plan no longer requires the widening, the authority may revoke the reservation through a formal lease variation, but this is uncommon.
How do I confirm whether a road widening reservation is still active?
The title notation itself does not expire. To check whether the reservation is still part of current planning, order a planning certificate and cross-reference it with the Crown lease and any registered lease variations on the title.
Order the right TitleFinder document
Use this guide as a reference, then order the actual record that answers your question:
- ACT Certificate of Title — $69.90
- ACT Deposited Plan — $85.90
- ACT Instrument — $91.80
If you are unsure, start with the current title search, then add the plan or instrument if the title points to one.
Need the title search? Use the TitleFinder product links above to order the current title, plan, instrument or state-specific property record you actually need.