ACT Subdivision Title Search: Documents, Timing and Checklist

Quick Answer

A title search subdivision ACT project requires checking the Crown lease, unit plans, and any lease variations before you commit funds. In the Australian Capital Territory, all land is held under Crown lease, making the lease terms a deciding factor in whether a subdivision is viable. Ordering a Current Title / State Lease search through TitleFinder for $74.50 AUD gives you the baseline ownership and lease details, but you must also order planning certificates and historical dealings to verify restrictive covenants and development conditions.

Why ACT Subdivision Due Diligence Differs

Unlike freehold states, the Australian Capital Territory operates under a leasehold system. Every block is a Crown lease. When you subdivide, you are not just splitting a title; you are varying an existing lease or creating new sub-leases. This means the original lease terms—such as minimum dwelling sizes, permitted uses, and development timelines—directly control your subdivision potential. If a unit plan or restrictive covenant blocks a multi-unit development, you must apply for a lease variation, which adds time and cost to the project.

Key Property Title Documents Australian Capital Territory

When running subdivision due diligence, you rely on specific official property records to answer specific questions. Here is what to order and what each document reveals:

Current Title / State Lease

The foundational document. It confirms the current leaseholder, the lease expiry date, and the base rent. Most importantly, it lists the purpose for which the land is leased (for example, "single residential dwelling"). If the purpose does not permit multiple dwellings, you cannot subdivide without a lease variation. Order this through TitleFinder for $74.50 AUD.

Unit Plans

If you are subdividing an existing multi-unit block or creating a community title scheme, the unit plan dictates boundaries, common property, and unit entitlements. You must check for any registered unit plans to understand existing shared areas, and you will need to lodge a new unit plan for the subdivision.

Lease Variations

Any change to the original Crown lease terms is recorded as a lease variation. Prior owners may have already varied the lease to allow for higher density. Search the historical dealings on the title to see if a lease variation for subdivision rights already exists. If not, you will need to initiate one.

Restrictive Covenants

These are negative encumbrances registered against the title. A restrictive covenant might limit building height, mandate specific building materials, or explicitly forbid subdividing the block. Removing a restrictive covenant in the ACT is a formal process and may require neighbour consent or tribunal orders.

Planning Certificates

A planning certificate confirms the zoning under the territory plan. It tells you the maximum plot ratio, building height, and setback requirements. Even if your Crown lease permits subdivision, the territory plan zoning must support the density you intend to build.

Timing Your Subdivision Due Diligence

Ordering documents at the wrong time wastes money and delays settlements. Use this timeline to sequence your title searches:

  • Pre-offer / Feasibility: Order the Current Title / State Lease first. At $74.50 AUD, this single document tells you if the base lease permits your intended use or if a costly lease variation is unavoidable.
  • Pre-contract / Due Diligence Period: Order planning certificates, unit plans, and copies of any restrictive covenants or easements. This confirms the physical and legal reality of the subdivision.
  • Pre-settlement: Order a final title search to ensure no new encumbrances, caveats, or further lease variations have been registered between the contract date and settlement.

ACT Subdivision Due Diligence Checklist

Work through this checklist before committing to a subdivision project in the ACT:

  1. Order Current Title / State Lease to verify ownership and base lease conditions.
  2. Check the remaining lease term—short remaining terms can block development financing.
  3. Confirm the permitted use on the Crown lease allows your intended subdivision yield.
  4. Search for existing unit plans if altering a current multi-unit property.
  5. Identify any restrictive covenants that limit dwelling numbers, height, or site coverage.
  6. Verify if prior lease variations have already granted development concessions.
  7. Obtain a planning certificate to confirm territory plan zoning supports the proposed density.
  8. Review easements affecting services, drainage, or vehicle access.
  9. Confirm whether Crown rent is payable and if it is up to date.

Document vs. Risk Comparison

Match the official property records to the specific development risks they address:

Document Risk Addressed
Current Title / State Lease Identifies base lease conditions, lease term, permitted use, and Crown rent
Unit Plan Shows existing unit boundaries, common property, and entitlements
Lease Variation Confirms if subdivision rights or use changes were previously granted
Restrictive Covenant Highlights building size, height, or subdivision limitations
Planning Certificate Validates zoning, plot ratio, and territory plan compliance

Frequently Asked Questions

Do I need a lease variation to subdivide in the ACT?

Usually, yes. Most standard residential Crown leases permit a single dwelling only. If your lease does not expressly permit multiple dwellings, you must vary the lease before the territory planning authority will approve a subdivision.

What happens if a restrictive covenant blocks my subdivision?

You have two options: abandon the subdivision or apply to have the covenant removed or varied. Removing a restrictive covenant requires an application to the relevant authority or a tribunal, and it is not guaranteed. Factor this risk into your feasibility study.

How long does an ACT subdivision title search take?

Through TitleFinder, electronic title searches are returned quickly. However, ordering historical dealings, copies of unit plans, or planning certificates can take longer depending on the complexity of the records. Order early in your due diligence period to avoid delays.

Always verify facts with a qualified conveyancer or legal professional before committing to a purchase or development application.

Order the right TitleFinder document

Use this guide as a reference, then order the actual record that answers your question:

If you are unsure, start with the current title search, then add the plan or instrument if the title points to one.


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Compare practical property title search guidance across Australia:


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.

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Current Title / State Lease

Verify up-to-the-minute ownership and registered interests for a Queensland property, state lease, or water allocation. Essential for conveyancing, refinancing, and due diligence.

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Track ownership changes and dealings on a Queensland title since 1994 (ATS). Ideal for investigations and long-form due diligence.

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Dealing Instrument

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