Quick Answer
A title search for a deceased estate in Victoria reveals the current registered proprietor, any encumbrances, and interests that could block or complicate a transfer. Order a Current Title search ($74.50 AUD), the plan of subdivision, and any registered dealings to verify the estate's property before committing to a purchase or transfer.
Why Deceased Estate Title Searches Need Extra Scrutiny
When a property owner dies, the title remains in their name until the executor or administrator transfers it. This gap creates specific risks. The will may direct the property to a beneficiary, but the registered title tells you whether the estate actually has clear ownership to transfer. Disputes between beneficiaries, unpaid debts, or caveats lodged by creditors can all cloud title. A thorough title search identifies these issues before you commit time and money.
In Victoria, the executor or administrator must obtain probate or letters of administration before dealing with the property. Confirming title details early lets you assess whether the transfer can proceed cleanly or whether additional steps are needed.
Key Documents to Order
Current Title Search
The starting point. A Current Title search confirms the registered proprietor, the land description, and lists every registered encumbrance — mortgages, caveats, covenants, easements, and owners corporation notices. Order this first. Current Title / State Lease searches through TitleFinder cost $74.50 AUD.
Plan of Subdivision
If the property is on a plan of subdivision, order the plan to verify lot boundaries, common property, and easement locations. This is essential when the property is part of a subdivision or strata development. Discrepancies between the plan and physical boundaries can delay settlement.
Registered Dealings and Instruments
Each encumbrance listed on the title has an instrument number. Order any that raise questions — a caveat, a restrictive covenant, or a section 173 agreement. These documents set out the exact terms and conditions. Do not assume the title notation tells the full story; the instrument itself may contain conditions that affect your use of the land.
Owners Corporation Certificate
For properties within an owners corporation, order the certificate to check fees, arrears, insurance, and any pending disputes. Unpaid owners corporation fees become a liability for the new owner.
Timing: When to Order
Order the Current Title search as soon as the property is on your shortlist. For deceased estates, this should happen before you agree to terms — not after. Early title verification lets you:
- Confirm the estate has clear title to transfer
- Identify caveats or disputes that may take months to resolve
- Check whether the representative has probate or letters of administration
- Assess whether covenants or restrictions affect your intended use
- Compare title details against the Section 32 statement
Order the plan of subdivision and specific dealings within the first week of due diligence. Allow time for review. Some encumbrances require negotiation or consent before they can be removed.
Victoria-Specific Risks in Deceased Estates
Caveats
Caveats are common in deceased estates. A beneficiary, creditor, or estranged family member may lodge a caveat to protect an interest in the property. Each caveat listed on the title needs to be examined. If a caveat is present, the property cannot be transferred without consent or a court order.
Covenants
Victorian titles frequently carry restrictive covenants that limit land use, building height, or subdivision. Check whether the covenant binds successors in title. In a deceased estate, the covenant passes to the beneficiary or purchaser unchanged.
Owners Corporations
Units and townhouses often sit within an owners corporation. Unresolved disputes, unpaid fees, or pending special levies can attach to the property. Verify the owners corporation details against the title and order a certificate for the full picture.
Subdivisions
If the deceased's property was recently subdivided, confirm the plan of subdivision is fully registered and all conditions have been satisfied. An incomplete subdivision can stall transfer.
Section 32 Due Diligence
The vendor's Section 32 statement should reflect the title details. Cross-reference every encumbrance, easement, and restriction listed in the Section 32 against the Current Title search. Discrepancies — a missing caveat, an unlisted covenant, or an outdated mortgage reference — are red flags that require investigation before signing.
Deceased Estate Title Search Checklist
- Order a Current Title search ($74.50 AUD)
- Verify the registered proprietor matches the deceased's name
- List every encumbrance on the title
- Order the plan of subdivision if the property is on one
- Order registered dealings for any caveats, covenants, or agreements
- For units and townhouses: order the owners corporation certificate
- Cross-reference title details against the Section 32 statement
- Confirm probate or letters of administration are granted
- Check for unpaid rates, water charges, or land tax
- Identify any subdivision conditions still to be satisfied
- Verify easement locations against the plan
- Assess whether caveats need removal before transfer
Key Documents and What They Reveal
| Document | Reveals | When to Order |
|---|---|---|
| Current Title Search | Proprietor, all encumbrances, easements, caveats, covenants | Immediately after shortlisting |
| Plan of Subdivision | Lot boundaries, common property, easement layout | First week of due diligence |
| Registered Dealing / Instrument | Full terms of a specific encumbrance | When a title encumbrance raises questions |
| Owners Corporation Certificate | Fees, arrears, insurance, disputes | Before making an offer on a unit or townhouse |
Frequently Asked Questions
Can a deceased estate property be transferred with a caveat on title?
No. A caveat prevents any dealing with the title until it is withdrawn by the caveator or removed by court order. In a deceased estate, this usually requires the executor to negotiate with the caveator or apply to have the caveat removed.
What if the Section 32 statement does not list a covenant shown on the title?
This is a material discrepancy. The title overrides the Section 32 statement. Investigate the covenant's terms by ordering the relevant dealing. A missing covenant in the Section 32 may give you grounds to renegotiate or withdraw, but the covenant still binds the land regardless.
How long does probate take in Victoria before a title transfer can proceed?
Probate typically takes 4 to 8 weeks from filing, assuming no disputes. Complex estates or contested wills can take much longer. Do not order title transfers until probate or letters of administration are granted — the representative has no authority to deal with the property before then.
This article provides general information only and does not constitute legal advice. For specific guidance on a deceased estate transfer, consult a qualified legal practitioner.
Order the right TitleFinder document
Use this guide as a reference, then order the actual record that answers your question:
- VIC Title Search — $69.90
- VIC Imaged Plan — $85.90
- VIC 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.