Buying property in NSW involves more than just finding the right home and agreeing on a price. Conveyancing searches NSW are your protection against hidden problems that could cost you thousands down the track.
At Jameson Law, we’ve seen buyers skip these searches and face serious regrets. This guide walks you through the essential checks that every NSW buyer should complete before signing on the dotted line.
What a Title Search Actually Reveals
The Foundation of Your Purchase
A title search is your first line of defence against ownership problems. It’s not optional-it’s the foundation of every property transaction in NSW. The NSW Land Registry Services maintains the official electronic record of who owns the land and what legal interests affect it. When you order a title search, you access the registered owner details, lot and plan information, and any easements, restrictions on use, covenants, mortgages, and caveats that could impact your purchase.
Order this search before your contract is prepared, not after. Most buyers wait too long and discover problems at exchange, when it’s far harder to renegotiate or walk away. A title search typically costs between $20 and $100 depending on the service provider-a small price compared to the cost of discovering encumbrances after settlement.
Easements and How They Affect Your Plans
Easements catch buyers off guard more often than any other title issue. An easement grants a third party (usually a utility company or neighbour) the right to access and use part of your land for drainage, access, or services. If an easement runs across your property, it can restrict your renovation plans, prevent you from building a fence in certain areas, or allow others to access parts of your land.
Restrictions on use work similarly; they’re legal conditions that limit how you can develop or use the property now and in the future. Some restrictions prevent you from running a business from home or subdividing the land. These limitations affect not just your immediate plans but also the property’s future resale value.
Mortgages, Covenants, and Caveats
Covenants are historical conditions that may require or prevent specific actions by owners. Mortgages listed on the title show the seller’s lender interest and must be discharged before settlement, which is standard. Caveats on property title are notices claiming an interest in the property and can delay your settlement significantly if not resolved.

The Australian Institute of Conveyancers emphasises that while these issues don’t necessarily block a sale, they require clear understanding and appropriate action. A conveyancer explains the practical impact of each finding and works with you to address them.
Why Professional Review Matters
Ordering a title search online is possible, but interpreting legal terms and notations without expertise often leads to missed red flags. A conveyancer reviews the entire title packet, identifies what affects your plans, and flags anything requiring negotiation or further investigation before you exchange contracts. This professional review protects you from costly surprises and ensures you understand exactly what you’re buying. Once you’ve confirmed the title is clear, your next step involves checking what the local council and environmental authorities have on record about the property.
Local Council and Environmental Searches Reveal Hidden Property Issues
What Council Certificates Tell You
Council searches in NSW uncover what local government knows about your property, and this information often surprises buyers who assumed their title search told them everything. A Section 10.7 Planning Certificate from your local council is now mandatory under the NSW Conveyancing (Sale of Land) Regulation 2022 and must be attached to every contract before exchange. This certificate reveals whether the property is affected by proposed road widening, heritage listings, flood zones, or development applications that could impact your plans or property value. The cost runs roughly $53 to $133 depending on your council, but skipping this step exposes you to rescission rights if the seller fails to attach it at signing.

Council rates certificates, formally called Section 603 certificates, show the current owner, property address, and any outstanding rates and charges for the year. These documents help you budget for ongoing holding costs and identify whether the seller owes money to the council that could delay settlement.
Environmental Hazards and Contamination Risks
Environmental searches identify contamination risks, asbestos in older buildings, and flood or bushfire hazard zones that affect insurance premiums and future resale appeal. Flood zone information in particular affects your insurance costs significantly; properties in flood-prone areas often face premium increases or outright refusal from some insurers. Environmental Protection Authority searches and Roads and Traffic Authority checks, costing roughly $20 to $25 each, flag contaminated land registers and road impact assessments that could affect your property’s future use or value.
Water and Drainage Systems
Sydney Water and Hunter Water provide sewerage diagrams showing where private sewer pipes run on your property and how it connects to the wastewater system. These diagrams cost $20 to $25 and reveal whether buildings sit over or adjacent to sewer lines, information critical before any renovation or extension work. A Statement of Available Pressure and Flow from Sydney Water shows current water pressure and flow at hydrants, which matters if you plan internal water service upgrades or have concerns about water supply reliability.
Drainage diagrams and stormwater information from your local council cost around $25 and reveal whether stormwater pipes cross neighbouring properties or whether your land contributes to neighbourhood flooding during heavy rain.
Timing and Professional Review
Request these searches at least three weeks before your expected exchange date, as councils can take weeks to respond and delays here commonly push settlement dates back. Many buyers order these searches but fail to review them carefully, missing red flags buried in technical language. If a Section 10.7 Certificate shows a proposed development application affecting the property, you need to contact the council directly to understand the timeline and impact before exchange.
Outstanding council rates, water charges, or special levies listed on these certificates become your responsibility after settlement if not settled by the vendor beforehand, so confirm with your conveyancer that the seller will clear these before completion. Review all council and environmental documents with your conveyancer before exchange, not after, because rescission rights expire five business days after you sign and missing a single mandatory attachment gives you grounds to withdraw and recover your deposit. Once you’ve confirmed these searches are clear, the final layer of protection involves checking water, drainage, and building compliance records that reveal the property’s physical condition and infrastructure standards.
Infrastructure and Building Compliance Before You Buy
Sewerage Diagrams and Building Restrictions
Sydney Water and Hunter Water sewerage diagrams form the backbone of your pre-purchase infrastructure checks, yet most buyers never examine them carefully until problems emerge after settlement. These diagrams cost $20 to $25 and show exactly where private sewer pipes run across your property, how your land connects to the public wastewater system, and critically, whether any buildings sit over or adjacent to sewer lines. Building over sewer (BOS) or building adjacent to sewer (BAS) creates major complications if you plan renovations, extensions, or any structural work. Sydney Water charges substantial fees for approvals on properties with BOS conditions, and some developments become impossible without expensive rerouting. Request these diagrams at least three weeks before exchange because water authorities can take weeks to respond, and a delayed diagram arriving after you’ve exchanged contracts gives you rescission rights under NSW law.
Stormwater and Water Pressure Systems
Stormwater drainage systems matter equally; council drainage diagrams reveal whether stormwater pipes cross neighbouring properties, whether your land contributes to neighbourhood flooding during heavy rainfall, or whether you’re responsible for maintaining shared drainage infrastructure. These diagrams cost around $25 and prevent you from discovering mid-renovation that your planned extension will block a neighbour’s stormwater line or that your property sits in a natural drainage path.

A Statement of Available Pressure and Flow from Sydney Water shows current water pressure and flow at hydrants on your property-information that matters if you plan internal water service upgrades, have concerns about water supply reliability, or want to verify the system can handle your intended use.
Building Inspections and Defect Detection
Building inspection reports and compliance records separate properties you can safely buy from those requiring expensive remedial work before occupation. While building and pest inspections are optional, roughly 26% of buyers discover problems after purchasing that they would have caught beforehand. A professional building inspection typically costs $400 to $800 and identifies structural defects, asbestos in older properties, roof condition, plumbing integrity, electrical safety issues, and pest infestations that could cost thousands to fix post-settlement. For properties built before 1990, asbestos in insulation, roofing, or pipe wrapping represents a genuine health hazard and remediation cost; identifying it before purchase lets you factor removal costs into your negotiation or walk away entirely.
Strata Reports and Financial Health
Strata properties require additional scrutiny; a strata report costs $300 to $600 and reveals the building’s physical condition, outstanding maintenance backlogs, special levies, litigation history, and insurance coverage. Properties with significant defects flagged in strata reports often face difficulty securing finance, meaning your bank may refuse to lend against a property with unresolved building issues. You must receive at least 30 days notice to pay for standard levies, as well as any special levies. Ask your conveyancer to coordinate these inspections before exchange, not after, so you can renegotiate the purchase price or request vendor contributions to repairs based on actual findings.
Development Applications and Neighbourhood Changes
Development Application reports from council show whether approved or proposed developments nearby will affect your property’s privacy, light access, or noise levels within the next five years, helping you understand whether the neighbourhood environment will change significantly after your purchase.
Final Thoughts
Conveyancing searches NSW protect your investment by uncovering problems before you commit to a purchase. Title searches reveal easements and restrictions that affect your plans, council certificates expose zoning changes and outstanding rates, and water diagrams show infrastructure limitations. Building inspections catch structural defects and asbestos, while strata reports flag special levies or defects that banks refuse to finance. Together, these searches form a complete picture of what you’re actually buying.
Common issues emerge repeatedly throughout NSW property transactions. Easements restrict renovations, outstanding council rates transfer to you after settlement, and sewerage diagrams reveal building-over-sewer conditions that cost thousands to remedy. Strata reports flag structural defects that lenders refuse to finance, while development applications show neighbourhood changes coming within five years. Missing a single mandatory document at exchange gives you rescission rights, but discovering problems after settlement leaves you with repair bills and no recourse.
A conveyancer coordinates all searches, reviews findings in plain English, flags anything requiring negotiation, and ensures every mandatory document attaches before you sign. Contact Jameson Law to discuss your conveyancing needs and protect your purchase from start to finish.