South Australia rural and acreage title search: documents, encumbrances and checklist

Quick Answer

For any rural or acreage purchase in South Australia, start with a current title search ($74.50 AUD through TitleFinder) to confirm the registered owner and identify all encumbrances, easements, and restrictions. Then order the deposited plan to verify boundaries, and request individual dealings for any registered interests noted on the title. If the property is under community title or a state lease, order those documents as well.

Why rural title searches in SA need extra checks

Rural and acreage properties carry title risks that urban purchases rarely face. Access may depend on an easement, water rights may be severed from the land, and heritage agreements can restrict land use indefinitely. Under SA's Torrens title system, what is registered on the title binds you — but only if you read what is actually registered.

A current title search is your starting point, not your finish line. You need to know which additional documents to order, what each one reveals, and when a dealing or instrument requires its own request.

Key documents and what they tell you

Current Title Search

The current title search ($74.50 AUD through TitleFinder) shows the registered proprietor, the volume and folio reference, and every registered encumbrance, easement, restriction, and caveat. It also identifies whether the land is held under Torrens title, community title, or state lease.

If the title lists dealing numbers for encumbrances, easements, or caveats, note each one. You will need to order those individually to read the full terms.

Deposited Plan

The deposited plan confirms parcel boundaries, dimensions, and easements created by the plan itself. For rural properties this is essential: it verifies the land area, shows rights of way, and reveals plan-level restrictions. Order it when the title references a specific plan number.

Dealings and Instruments

Dealings are individual documents registered against the title — encumbrances, easements, caveats, and heritage agreements. Order a dealing when the current title lists a dealing number. For example, an easement notation may only say "Easement to drain water DP 12345". The full instrument gives you the location, width, and maintenance obligations.

Community Plan and Scheme Statements

Some rural subdivisions in SA operate under community title, with shared infrastructure managed by a corporation. The scheme statement sets out obligations and contributions. Order the community plan and scheme statements when the title is a community title.

State Lease

If the property is Crown lease land — common for pastoral leases — the state lease document sets out the term, rent, and permitted use. Order this alongside the title search (also $74.50 AUD through TitleFinder).

Document comparison

Document What It Shows When to Order
Current Title Search Owner, title type, registered interests Every purchase — first order
Deposited Plan Boundaries, dimensions, plan easements Always for rural/acreage
Dealing/Instrument Full terms of a specific encumbrance or easement When referenced on the title
Community Plan Shared infrastructure, corporation obligations If community title applies
State Lease Lease term, rent, permitted use If Crown lease land

SA rural title risks to check

Encumbrances

Encumbrances on rural SA titles often include:

  • Heritage agreements — restrict clearing, building, or altering the landscape and bind future owners.
  • Restrictive covenants — may limit subdivision, building materials, or dwelling numbers.
  • Profit à prendre — allow a third party to take resources such as gravel, timber, or water from the land.
  • Mining or exploration interests — may appear as caveats.

Always order the full dealing for any encumbrance. The notation on the title rarely gives enough detail to assess the real impact.

Easements: access, water, and utilities

For acreage, easements directly affect use:

  • Right of way — confirms legal access, especially for landlocked blocks or shared roads.
  • Water supply easements — may allow water authority infrastructure on your land.
  • Power line easements — restrict building near transmission lines.
  • Drainage easements — often run along natural watercourses.

Order the instrument for each easement to confirm location, width, and your maintenance obligations.

Heritage areas and listings

A state heritage listing or local heritage overlay can restrict exterior alterations, demolition, and even fencing. If the title notes a heritage agreement or restriction, order the full instrument. Check planning overlays separately — heritage restrictions do not always appear on title.

Community titles on rural subdivisions

Community titles in SA create a corporation with shared obligations. If buying into a rural community title, order the community plan and scheme statements. Check ongoing levies, special contributions, and by-laws for fencing, vehicle access, and building rules.

Timing: when to order

Order your title search early — before you sign, or during the cooling-off period.

  1. Order the current title search first ($74.50 AUD through TitleFinder).
  2. Review the title for dealings, plan references, and title type.
  3. Order the deposited plan and any relevant dealings within the same week.
  4. For community titles, order the community plan and scheme statements.
  5. For state leases, order the lease document.

Allow 1–3 business days for delivery of searches through TitleFinder. Dealings and plans may take additional time depending on the document.

Rural and acreage title search checklist: SA

  • Current title search — confirm owner, title type, all registered interests
  • Deposited plan — verify boundaries, dimensions, plan easements
  • Encumbrance dealings — order each one listed on the title
  • Easement instruments — check access, water, power, and drainage terms
  • Heritage agreements — order full instrument if referenced
  • Community plan and scheme statements — if community title
  • State lease document — if Crown lease land
  • Caveat checks — identify any third-party claims
  • Planning overlays — check heritage and environmental overlays through local council
  • Water allocations — verify separately; water rights may not appear on title

Frequently asked questions

Does a current title search show all easements?

A current title search lists all registered easements by dealing number, but the notation alone usually only identifies the type. To read the full terms — location, width, maintenance obligations — you need to order the individual instrument for each easement.

What is the difference between a Torrens title and a community title in SA?

A Torrens title (certificate of title) covers a single parcel with no shared infrastructure obligations. A community title includes shared land, infrastructure, or facilities managed by a community corporation, with scheme statements setting out rules and levies. For rural properties, community titles often apply to lifestyle subdivisions with shared roads or drainage.

Are water rights shown on the title search?

Not always. Water allocations in SA are generally managed separately from the land title. A title search may show a water supply easement or a profit à prendre related to water, but the actual water allocation or licence is held in a separate register. Always check water entitlements independently.

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.


Browse title search guides by state

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

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