Buying your first home is exciting — but also full of unfamiliar terms and processes. This guide explains everything first home buyers need to know about property titles in New Zealand.
Ready to order the official title?
A current Record of Title with diagram is the usual starting point for confirming ownership, legal description, registered interests and title diagram information.
What is a Certificate of Title?
When you buy property in New Zealand, you're not just buying a house — you're buying a legal interest in land. The certificate of title (also called "record of title") is the official document that proves ownership and records everything legally registered against that property.
Think of it as the property's legal DNA. It tells you:
- Who owns the property
- What type of ownership it is
- What restrictions or rights affect it
- The property's legal boundaries
Every property purchase should involve reviewing the title — it's one of the most important documents you'll see.
Why First Home Buyers Need to Understand Titles
As a first home buyer, you might be focused on:
- Whether you love the house
- If you can afford the price
- Getting your finance approved
But the title contains critical information that affects:
- What you can actually do with the property
- Whether there are hidden obligations
- Your ability to make changes in the future
- The property's long-term value
Understanding your title protects you from costly surprises.
Title Types Explained Simply
New Zealand has several types of property ownership. Here's what each means for you:
Freehold (Fee Simple)
What it means: You own the land and everything on it outright. Best for first home buyers: ✅ Most straightforward ownership type Things to watch: Still check for easements and covenants
Cross Lease
What it means: You own a share of the land jointly with neighbours, plus exclusive use of your dwelling. Caution: ✅ Common but more complicated Things to watch: Need neighbour consent for external changes; check flats plan is current
Unit Title
What it means: You own your apartment/unit plus a share of common areas. Common for: Apartments, townhouses, some retirement units Things to watch: Body corporate fees, rules, and building condition
Leasehold
What it means: You own the building but lease the land from someone else. Caution: ⚠️ Less common; lease terms crucial Things to watch: How long the lease runs, ground rent, renewal terms
What's on a Certificate of Title?
Understanding what you're looking at:
1. Legal Description
The property's official identification — not the street address, but references like lot numbers and deposited plans.
Why it matters: Make sure this matches the property you think you're buying.
2. Registered Owners
Who legally owns the property right now.
Why it matters: Verify the seller is actually the owner. If there are multiple owners, all need to agree to sell.
3. Interests and Encumbrances
This is where things get interesting. This section lists:
| Interest Type | What It Means |
|---|---|
| Easements | Others have rights to use part of the land (e.g., shared driveway) |
| Covenants | Rules about what you can/cannot do (e.g., building restrictions) |
| Mortgages | Loans secured against the property |
| Caveats | Someone claims an interest (warning sign) |
Why it matters: These affect how you can use the property and may come with obligations.
4. Area
The official land size in hectares or square metres.
Why it matters: Verify this matches what you're expecting and what's been advertised.
Red Flags First Home Buyers Should Watch For
🚩 Caveats
A caveat means someone is claiming an interest in the property. This needs to be resolved before you buy.
🚩 Multiple Mortgages
While the seller's mortgage will be discharged at sale, multiple mortgages might indicate financial stress.
🚩 Cross Lease with Alterations
If a cross lease property has been modified (new deck, extension) without updating the flats plan, you may be buying a "defective title."
🚩 Restrictive Covenants
Rules about what you can build, what colours you can paint, or how you can use the property. Make sure you can live with them.
🚩 Major Easements
Large rights of way or utility easements through the middle of the property can limit what you can do.
🚩 Leasehold with Short Lease
If it's leasehold, check how many years remain and what happens at renewal.
The Due Diligence Process
When you make an offer, you typically include a "due diligence" condition giving you time to investigate the property. Here's how to use it:
Week 1: Order Title Search
Get a current certificate of title immediately. Don't wait.
Week 1-2: Review with Your Lawyer
Your solicitor will review the title and explain any concerns. Ask questions about anything you don't understand.
Week 2: Follow Up on Issues
If there are easements or covenants, get the full documents. Understand exactly what they mean.
Before Deadline: Make Your Decision
Either confirm you're satisfied and proceed, or negotiate based on what you've found.
Questions to Ask About the Title
When reviewing the title with your lawyer, ask:
- What type of title is this? (Freehold, cross lease, unit title, leasehold)
- Are there any easements? What do they mean in practice?
- Are there any covenants? Will they restrict what I want to do?
- Is there anything unusual? Anything that concerns you?
- For cross lease: Is the flats plan current?
- For unit title: What are the body corporate levies and rules?
How Title Searches Fit with Other Checks
A title search is just one part of your due diligence:
| Check | What It Tells You |
|---|---|
| Title search | Legal ownership, restrictions, interests |
| LIM report | Council information, consents, compliance |
| Building inspection | Physical condition of the house |
| Valuation | Whether the price is fair |
| Finance approval | Confirmation you can afford it |
All of these work together to give you a complete picture.
First Home Buyer Government Support
If you're using government support programmes, be aware:
Kāinga Ora First Home Loan
Your lender will conduct their own title checks, but you should still do your own due diligence.
First Home Grant
Available for new builds and existing homes that meet certain criteria. Title type may affect eligibility.
KiwiSaver First Home Withdrawal
Property must be your primary residence. Title type doesn't usually affect eligibility.
Common First Home Buyer Mistakes
Mistake 1: Skipping the Title Search
"The agent said everything's fine" isn't good enough. Always check yourself.
Mistake 2: Not Reading Covenants
A covenant preventing sheds might not matter now, but could frustrate future plans.
Mistake 3: Ignoring Easement Implications
That shared driveway seemed fine at the viewing — but do you understand the maintenance obligations?
Mistake 4: Assuming Cross Lease Equals Freehold
Cross lease has important differences. Make sure you understand them.
Mistake 5: Rushing Due Diligence
Take the full time allowed. Getting good advice now prevents problems later.
Frequently Asked Questions
How much does a title search cost?
From around $40-$50 for a basic title to $100+ for comprehensive searches with supporting documents.
When should I order a title search?
As soon as you're seriously interested in a property — ideally before making an offer, or immediately after.
Can I do my own title search?
Yes, through services like Certificate of Title NZ or directly from the official registry. But have your lawyer review the results.
What if I find problems with the title?
You can negotiate with the seller, ask them to fix issues, adjust your offer, or walk away if needed.
How recent does the title need to be?
For legal purposes, get a current search. Titles can change, and your lawyer needs the latest information.
What's the difference between a title search and a LIM?
A title search shows legal ownership and registered interests. A LIM shows council information about the property. You need both.
Your First Home Buyer Checklist
Before going unconditional on your first home:
- ✅ Obtained current certificate of title
- ✅ Understood the title type (freehold/cross lease/unit title)
- ✅ Reviewed all easements and covenants
- ✅ Had lawyer explain any concerns
- ✅ For cross lease: verified flats plan is current
- ✅ For unit title: reviewed body corporate information
- ✅ Checked for any caveats or unusual interests
- ✅ Satisfied with the legal ownership situation
Get Started with Your Title Search
Don't leave your first home purchase to chance. A title search gives you the information you need to buy with confidence.
Certificate of Title NZ offers:
✅ Fast delivery — within 2 hours ✅ Easy to order — no accounts or subscriptions needed ✅ Expert service — we're here to help ✅ Plain English — we explain what you're getting
First time buying? Contact our friendly team if you have questions about title searches.