Quick Answer
A Victoria strata or unit title search shows the registered proprietor, lot and plan details, owners corporation obligations, and any encumbrances, caveats, covenants, or easements affecting the property. Reading it correctly means knowing which section answers which question, and when to order supporting plans or instruments for full due diligence.
What You Receive in a Victoria Title Search
When you order a current title search through TitleFinder ($74.50 AUD for a Current Title / State Lease search), you receive the official property records for the specific lot. For strata and unit titles, this includes the registered proprietor(s), the volume and folio reference, the lot number and plan of subdivision reference, any encumbrances, caveats, covenants, or easements listed, and owners corporation details where applicable.
The title alone does not include the full plan of subdivision or copies of encumbrance instruments. These are separate documents you may need to order depending on what the title reveals.
Strata vs Unit Title in Victoria
Victoria uses "plan of subdivision" rather than "strata plan" terminology, but the principle is the same. A lot created by subdivision that shares common property will have an owners corporation attached. When reading the title, look for:
- Lot number and plan of subdivision number — confirms the exact lot and the registered plan
- Owners corporation reference — appears when common property exists (driveways, stairwells, gardens, communal areas)
- Any notation about limited common property or exclusive use areas
This distinction matters because an owners corporation creates ongoing financial obligations, by-laws, and maintenance responsibilities that do not appear on a conventional freehold title.
Key Sections to Check When Reading a VIC Strata or Unit Title
Lot and Plan Details
The lot number and plan of subdivision reference sit near the top of the title. Use the plan number to order the full plan of subdivision, which shows lot boundaries, common property, and easement locations. Without the plan, you cannot see exactly what you are buying or where boundaries fall.
Owners Corporation Information
If the title shows an owners corporation, the lot is part of a multi-lot subdivision with shared areas. Key checks:
- How many owners corporations are listed — a large complex may have separate corporations for different building elements
- Whether the lot has specific obligations, such as exclusive use areas or special contributions
- That the owners corporation certificate in the Section 32 vendor statement discloses fees, arrears, insurance, and pending litigation — cross-reference this against the title
If owners corporation details appear on the title but no certificate is provided in the Section 32, that gap requires follow-up before you commit.
Title Encumbrances VIC: What to Look For
Encumbrances are registered interests that affect what you can do with the property. Common types on Victoria strata and unit titles include:
- Mortgages — the lender holds a registered interest until the loan is discharged
- Covenants — restrictions on use, building materials, or alterations, common in newer subdivisions
- Easements — rights for others to use part of the lot, such as drainage or right of way
- Caveats — a claim of interest by a third party, preventing dealings until resolved
Each encumbrance lists a reference number. Use this to order the full instrument or dealing, which sets out the exact terms. A one-line entry on the title is rarely enough to understand the full restriction.
Caveats
A caveat on a Victoria title means someone claims an unregistered interest in the property. This blocks further registration until the caveat is withdrawn, removed, or expires. Before settlement, confirm who lodged the caveat and why, whether it will be removed prior to or at settlement, and that your conveyancer is aware and addressing it. Caveats that remain at settlement can prevent the transfer from registering.
Covenants on Strata and Unit Titles
Covenants appear frequently on subdivided lots. They may restrict building height or materials, limit the lot to residential use only, or require approval for alterations. In a unit or strata context, covenants can exist alongside owners corporation by-laws. Both may apply, and the more restrictive rule generally prevails. Check whether the covenant is enforceable by the owners corporation or by individual lot owners.
Strata/Unit Title vs Conventional Title: Key Differences
| Feature | Strata/Unit Title | Conventional Title |
|---|---|---|
| Owners corporation | Listed on title | Not applicable |
| Common property | Shown on plan of subdivision | Not applicable |
| Ongoing fees | Owners corporation levies | None from title |
| By-laws and rules | Apply via owners corporation | Only if covenant on title |
| Building insurance | Usually corporate responsibility | Owner responsibility |
| Alteration restrictions | By-laws plus any covenants | Covenants only (if any) |
Practical Checklist: Reading Your VIC Strata or Unit Title
- Confirm the lot number and plan of subdivision match the contract of sale
- Check for owners corporation references and cross-reference with the Section 32 certificate
- List every encumbrance, mortgage, covenant, and easement on the title
- Order the full instrument for any encumbrance that may affect use or value
- Check for caveats and confirm removal plans before settlement
- Verify the plan of subdivision shows lot boundaries and common property clearly
- Compare covenant restrictions with owners corporation by-laws for overlap
- Ensure the registered proprietor matches the vendor
- Confirm all mortgages will be discharged at settlement
This is general information only, not legal advice. Consult your conveyancer or solicitor for specific guidance on how title matters affect your transaction.
When to Order Additional Documents
The title search is the starting point, not the full picture. Order supporting documents when:
- The title lists encumbrances — order the instrument or dealing to read the full terms
- The title references a plan of subdivision — order the plan to see lot boundaries and common property
- The Section 32 is incomplete or missing owners corporation certificates
- You are developing or subdividing — boundary and easement detail affects feasibility
Frequently Asked Questions
Can a unit title in Victoria have multiple owners corporations?
Yes. Large developments often create layered owners corporations — one for the whole site and others for specific buildings or elements. Each appears on the title and may have separate fees and rules. Check the owners corporation certificate in the Section 32 for details on each tier.
What is the difference between an encumbrance and a caveat on a VIC title?
An encumbrance is a registered interest such as a mortgage, covenant, or easement that affects the property permanently or until discharged. A caveat is a temporary claim that prevents registration of further dealings until resolved. Encumbrances stay until formally removed; caveats can lapse if not pursued by the claimant.
Do I need the plan of subdivision if the title shows no encumbrances?
Yes. The title lists what is registered, but the plan shows where lot boundaries fall, where common property starts, and whether easements physically affect your lot. A title with no encumbrances can still carry owners corporation obligations and common property boundaries that affect your use of the property.
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.