Property Titles for Estate Planning in New Zealand: A Complete Guide

Property Titles for Estate Planning in New Zealand: A Complete Guide

Planning your estate in New Zealand? Understand how property titles interact with wills, trusts, joint ownership, and succession — and why a title search is essential for estate planning.

Address, title number or boundaries — what should you order?

  • Record of Title Current with Diagram: confirms the official title reference and current legal record.
  • Cadastral Survey Plan: helps with plan layout, parcel shape and boundary-related checks.
  • Pre-Purchase Diligence Package: use this when you want multiple checks before making an offer or signing.

Order a Record of Title or order a cadastral survey plan.

Property is typically the most valuable asset in a New Zealand estate. How your property title is structured — whether it's held in joint tenancy, as tenants in common, or through a trust — has profound implications for what happens when you pass away. Understanding these structures is essential for effective estate planning.

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How Property Ownership Appears on NZ Titles

The Record of Title for any New Zealand property shows who owns the land and how they hold it. This information is critical for estate planning because different ownership structures have vastly different succession consequences.

Joint Tenancy

When two or more people own property as joint tenants, they each have an equal, undivided interest in the entire property. The critical feature of joint tenancy is the right of survivorship: when one joint tenant dies, their interest automatically passes to the surviving joint tenant(s), regardless of what their will says.

The title will show the owners' names followed by "as joint tenants."

💡 Estate planning implication:

Property held in joint tenancy does not form part of the deceased's estate and cannot be left to someone else in a will. This is a common trap for people who assume their will controls all their assets.

Tenants in Common

When property is held as tenants in common, each owner has a defined share (e.g., 50/50, 60/40, or any other proportion). Unlike joint tenancy, there is no right of survivorship. Each owner's share forms part of their estate and passes according to their will (or the rules of intestacy if there's no will).

The title will show the owners' names followed by their respective shares, e.g., "as tenants in common in equal shares."

💡 Estate planning implication:

Tenants in common ownership gives you control over who inherits your share. This is often preferred for blended families, business partners, or situations where each owner wants their share to go to different beneficiaries.

Legal professionals reviewing property and estate planning documents

The Role of Trusts in Property Ownership

Many New Zealand families hold property through a trust. When property is in a trust, the trustees (not the settlor or beneficiaries) are the legal owners shown on the title.

How Trust Ownership Appears on Titles

The Record of Title will show the trustees' names, typically followed by "as trustees of the [Name] Trust" or similar wording. The trust deed itself is not registered on the title.

Estate Planning Benefits of Trusts

Trusts have traditionally been used in New Zealand estate planning for several reasons:

  • Asset protection — Property in a trust is generally protected from personal creditors and relationship property claims (subject to conditions)
  • Succession planning — The trust deed controls how property is dealt with when a trustee or settlor dies, providing certainty and flexibility
  • Avoiding probate delays — Trust property doesn't form part of a deceased's personal estate, so it isn't subject to probate
  • Intergenerational transfer — Trusts can hold property across generations without triggering transfer costs
House keys and property documents representing ownership and estate planning

What Happens to Property When Someone Dies

The process depends entirely on how the property is held:

Joint Tenancy

The surviving joint tenant(s) applies to the official land registry to have the deceased's name removed from the title. This is a relatively straightforward process requiring a death certificate and a simple application. The property does not go through probate.

Tenants in Common

The deceased's share passes according to their will (or intestacy rules). The executor or administrator must:

  1. Obtain probate or letters of administration from the High Court
  2. Conduct a title search to confirm the property details
  3. Arrange for the transfer of the deceased's share to the beneficiary
  4. Register the transfer on the title

Trust Property

When a trustee dies, the remaining trustees (or successor trustees appointed under the trust deed) continue to manage the property. A new trustee may need to be appointed, and the title updated to reflect the change.

The Importance of Title Searches in Estate Planning

Title searches play a crucial role at several stages of estate planning:

📋 During Estate Planning

Verify current ownership, identify encumbrances, check trust arrangements, understand the property portfolio

⚖️ After a Death

Confirm property details for probate applications, identify all registered interests, verify ownership structure

🏗️ During Estate Administration

Transfer property to beneficiaries, update trustee details, discharge mortgages, verify transfers are completed

New Zealand family home representing property assets in estate planning

Common Estate Planning Mistakes Related to Titles

  • 🚩Assuming Your Will Controls Everything — If property is held in joint tenancy, it passes automatically to the survivor regardless of your will
  • 🚩Not Checking the Title Before Making a Will — Your lawyer needs accurate title information to draft an effective will
  • 🚩Outdated Trust Arrangements — If trustees have died or become incapacitated and the title hasn't been updated
  • 🚩Forgetting About Registered Interests — Easements, covenants, and encumbrances pass with the land

Order Your Title Search for Estate Planning

Accurate title information is the foundation of effective estate planning. Certificate of Title NZ provides fast, reliable title searches for all general land in New Zealand:

Service Price
Record of Title from $42.90
Guaranteed Search from $45.90
Historical Title from $42.90
Instruments and Documents from $39.90
Survey Plans from $49.90

All searches are sourced from New Zealand's official land information body, with delivery in as little as two hours.

🔍 Get Your Property Title Search

Official NZ land records delivered within 2 hours

Order Your Search →
⚡ 2hr delivery📋 Official records🏆 Trusted service

*Disclaimer: This article is for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal or financial advice. Estate planning involves complex legal considerations. Always consult a lawyer specialising in wills, trusts, and estate planning.*

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Record of Title with Diagram

⭐ BEST SELLER ⭐

Electronic property title record, showing current proprietor, legal description, registered rights and restrictions (mortgage, easement, covenant). Includes a plan or diagram of the land.

$42.90

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Guaranteed Search

Same as current title, plus shows any documents recently lodged but not yet formally registered (e.g., a newly created covenant). Generally requested by solicitors for property transactions.

$45.90

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Historical Title

Shows all interests registered when the title was created, and since. May include scan of original paper Certificate of Title.

$42.90

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Instruments

Official copies of documents registered against a title: consent notices, mortgages, easements, land covenants, and more.

$39.90

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