Buying an apartment or unit in Queensland is not the same as checking a freestanding house. The title search is still the starting point, but the buyer also needs to think about lot entitlement, plan references, common property, exclusive-use areas, body corporate context and any registered interests affecting the lot.
Quick answer
Order the current title for the unit first. Confirm the lot and plan identifiers, registered owner, community titles context and listed interests. If the question involves boundaries, car parks, storage, common property or exclusive use, order the survey/community plan or relevant instrument rather than relying on the sales brochure.
Order the right TitleFinder document
Use this guide as a reference, then order the actual record that answers your question:
- Current Title / State Lease — $74.50
- Image of Survey Plan (SP/RP) — $85.90
- Image of Dealing 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.
What to check first
- Lot and plan identifiers for the unit
- Registered proprietor and ownership structure
- Community titles or building format plan references
- Exclusive-use, car park, storage or common property clues
- Easements, covenants, mortgages, caveats or leases
- Plan or instrument references that explain what the title only lists
Which document answers which question?
| Record or clue | What it helps confirm | Buyer action |
|---|---|---|
| Current Title / State Lease | Confirms lot, owner and registered interests | Order first |
| Survey or community plan image | Shows lot boundaries, scheme context and plan references | Order for unit layout/common property questions |
| Dealing instrument | Explains listed interests or rights | Order when the title points to a dealing |
| Body corporate records | Operational and financial scheme context | Useful alongside title records, not a replacement |
How to use the title search during due diligence
Use the title search as the control record for the property file. Save the title reference, lot and plan details, registered proprietor details and every listed interest. Then compare those details with the contract, agent material, finance documents and any advice you receive. If something appears in the title but not in the contract pack, do not ignore it. Order the supporting plan or instrument and ask your conveyancer, solicitor or adviser to review the same document.
Timing matters. A title search is most useful before you are locked into a decision, not after settlement pressure has already started. Buyers often order it before signing, during cooling-off, before finance approval, or when a listed interest needs a fast explanation.
What the record can change
The record can change what you ask the seller, what your lender wants clarified, what your conveyancer reviews, and whether an extra plan or dealing is needed before settlement. It can also separate a real registered issue from a vague concern. That is the point of ordering records early: you are not trying to become a lawyer; you are trying to make sure the next professional conversation starts from the same evidence.
For investors and developers, the title search also helps triage whether the property deserves deeper review. A clean-looking listing can still point to easements, covenants, lease conditions, plan limitations or document references. A messy-looking title may simply need the right supporting instrument to make the risk understandable.
For owners and family members, the same discipline helps avoid stale-file mistakes. Older PDFs, screenshots and contract attachments can be useful background, but the current property record is the safer place to start when money, transfer timing or buyer confidence is involved.
Common trap to avoid
The classic unit-buyer mistake is assuming the apartment, balcony, car park and storage area are all obvious from the inspection. In a community titles setting, the registered title and plan context matter. If a space is important to the purchase, verify it in the records.
Practical checklist before ordering
- Confirm the property address, lot and plan details you intend to check.
- Order the current title or equivalent first so you are working from the registered record.
- List every plan, dealing, instrument, caveat, covenant, easement, lease, mortgage or notice referenced on the title.
- Order supporting plans or instruments where the title points to a document that affects boundaries, access, restrictions, ownership, tenure or settlement risk.
- Keep the downloaded records together with the contract file so every adviser is reviewing the same evidence.
FAQs
Is the title search enough by itself?
Sometimes. If your only question is current ownership and basic registered interests, the title may answer it. If the title points to a plan, dealing or instrument, order that supporting document before relying on a summary.
When should I order it?
Order early enough to affect the decision. For buyers, that usually means before signing, during cooling-off, before finance finalisation, or before settlement if a new issue appears.
Does TitleFinder give legal advice?
No. TitleFinder supplies property records. Use the records as evidence for your own due diligence, then ask a conveyancer, solicitor or qualified adviser where the document raises a legal, finance or settlement question.
Bottom line
Queensland property title search for apartments and units: buyer checklist is about reducing guesswork. Start with the registered record, follow the document references, and order the plan or instrument when the title shows that the detail lives somewhere else.
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.