Our Expert in South Africa
No results available
Every buyer in South Africa faces the same threshold question before signing an offer to purchase: freehold vs sectional title. The choice determines not only what you own, but what you owe, in monthly levies, in maintenance liability, and in the degree of control you hold over the property after transfer. In 2026, with the price gap between the two tenure types narrowing in major metros and body corporate enforcement intensifying under the Sectional Titles Schemes Management Act 8 of 2011 (STSMA), the decision carries more financial weight than it did even two years ago.
This guide sets out a practitioner-level, dimension-by-dimension comparison of freehold vs sectional title in South Africa, gives you a concrete decision framework, and tells you exactly when to instruct a conveyancer before you commit.
South African property law offers several forms of tenure, but the vast majority of residential purchases fall into one of two categories: freehold (also called full title) and sectional title. Each carries distinct legal consequences that flow directly from the way ownership is registered at the Deeds Office and the statutes that govern each form.
Other tenure types, such as share-block schemes and leasehold, exist but are far less common in today’s residential market and are not covered in this comparison. If you encounter either during your property search, treat that as an immediate reason to consult a conveyancer before proceeding.
A freehold property gives the owner full title to the land and every structure on it, registered in the owner’s name at the Deeds Office under the Deeds Registries Act 47 of 1937. Ownership is in perpetuity, subject only to statutory limitations (such as municipal zoning), conditions of title recorded against the deed, and any registered servitudes or restrictive conditions. There is no body corporate, no shared common property, and no scheme management rules. The owner bears sole responsibility for maintaining the property and paying municipal rates levied under the Municipal Property Rates Act 6 of 2004.
A sectional title scheme is created and governed by the Sectional Titles Act 95 of 1986, which defines a “section” as a unit shown on a registered sectional plan and “common property” as everything in the scheme that does not form part of a section. Ownership of a section automatically includes an undivided share in the common property, proportionate to the unit’s participation quota. Scheme management, including levy setting, rule enforcement, and dispute resolution, is governed by the Sectional Titles Schemes Management Act 8 of 2011 (STSMA) and the prescribed management and conduct rules.
Conveyancing for sectional title purchases is more document-intensive than a freehold transfer. The conveyancer must obtain and review the body corporate’s financial statements, management and conduct rules, minutes of recent meetings, and a levy clearance certificate confirming that the seller has no outstanding levies. This body corporate record review is not optional, it is the single most important due-diligence step in a sectional title purchase and the point at which many buyers discover hidden risks such as special levies, pending litigation, or underfunded reserve funds.
The table below captures the core dimensions that separate sectional title vs freehold South Africa ownership. Use it as a quick reference before reading the detailed analysis that follows.
| Dimension | Freehold (Full Title) | Sectional Title |
|---|---|---|
| Ownership & title | Full title to land and structures; registered in owner’s name at Deeds Office | Title to a unit + undivided share in common property; governed by Sectional Titles Act 95 of 1986 |
| Who it suits | Buyers wanting control, privacy, and the ability to subdivide or extend | Buyers wanting lower entry cost, communal amenities, managed security, and reduced maintenance |
| Typical purchase price | Higher per m² in stand-alone suburbs; wider price variability | Lower entry price for comparable location; gap has narrowed in 2024–2025 |
| Ongoing costs | Municipal rates and taxes; full maintenance borne by owner | Monthly body corporate levies + apportioned municipal charges; levies are legally enforceable |
| Transfer duty / VAT | Transfer duty or VAT depending on seller status; standard bond and transfer fees | Same transfer duty / VAT rules; additional compliance certificate and body corporate document fees |
| Transaction timing | Standard Deeds Office transfer and bond registration timeline | Same Deeds Office timeline plus body corporate certificate processing, can add delays |
| Alterations & control | Owner free to alter subject to municipal planning and building regulations | Alterations require body corporate consent; conduct rules restrict use |
| Enforceability & disputes | Civil remedies for neighbour disputes; municipal enforcement for rates | Body corporate has statutory levy-recovery powers (STSMA); CSOS provides adjudication for scheme disputes |
| Conveyancing complexity | Standard title-deed checks, servitude review, rates clearance | All standard checks plus body corporate records review, levy clearance, management rule analysis, higher risk if skipped |
The comparison reveals a consistent pattern: freehold gives maximum control at the price of maximum responsibility, while sectional title shifts some responsibility, and some control, to the body corporate. The financial comparison depends less on purchase price alone and more on a total-cost-of-ownership calculation that includes levies, maintenance, insurance, and enforcement exposure.
The cost comparison between freehold and sectional title purchases involves both once-off transaction costs and ongoing running costs. The transfer duty and VAT rules are identical in structure for both tenure types, the key variable is the seller’s VAT registration status, not the form of tenure.
| Cost item | Freehold | Sectional Title |
|---|---|---|
| Transfer duty | Payable by the buyer on a sliding scale set by SARS where the seller is not VAT-registered; first R1 100 000 of value is exempt from transfer duty | Same sliding-scale rules apply; first R1 100 000 exempt |
| VAT (where applicable) | If the seller is a VAT-registered vendor (e.g., a developer), VAT at 15% applies instead of transfer duty; VAT is included in the purchase price | Common when buying a new-build unit from a developer, VAT at 15% applies, no separate transfer duty |
| Conveyancer transfer fees | Regulated by guideline tariff; varies by purchase price | Same tariff applies, plus additional fees for obtaining and processing body corporate documents |
| Bond registration costs | Bond attorney fees + Deeds Office registration fees | Same costs; bond endorsement against a sectional title unit follows the same registration process |
| Body corporate document fees | Not applicable | Levy clearance certificate, body corporate financial statements, and management rule copies, fees vary by scheme |
| Monthly running costs | Municipal rates and taxes (assessed on municipal valuation); all maintenance self-funded | Monthly body corporate levies (widely variable, dependent on scheme size, amenities, and reserve fund contributions) plus apportioned municipal charges |
Worked example, freehold purchase at R1 500 000: Transfer duty applies on the portion above R1 100 000 (i.e., on R400 000). The buyer pays transfer duty per the applicable SARS schedule, plus conveyancer transfer fees and bond registration costs. There are no body corporate fees and no monthly levies, only municipal rates.
Worked example, sectional title purchase at R1 500 000 from a developer: If the developer is VAT-registered, the R1 500 000 purchase price includes VAT at 15%, and no separate transfer duty is payable. The buyer pays conveyancer fees, bond registration costs, and body corporate document fees. After transfer, the buyer pays monthly levies to the body corporate in addition to apportioned municipal charges.
This dimension is the single biggest ongoing financial differentiator between the two tenure types. Freehold owners pay municipal rates and taxes directly to the municipality and fund all maintenance themselves. Sectional title owners pay monthly levies to the body corporate, which uses those funds to maintain common property, fund the reserve fund, and cover scheme insurance.
Can you refuse to pay levies on a sectional title? No. Levies are a statutory obligation under the STSMA. The body corporate has the legal power to recover unpaid levies through court action, and can obtain a judgment against a defaulting owner. Interest accrues on overdue levies. In severe cases, the body corporate can proceed to a sale in execution of the unit. The practical consequences of non-payment can extend to the defaulting owner being excluded from voting at general meetings.
Both freehold and sectional title transfers follow the same basic conveyancing sequence: signature of the deed of sale, fulfilment of suspensive conditions (typically bond approval), lodgement of transfer and bond documents at the Deeds Office, and registration. The typical timeline from acceptance of offer to registration is eight to twelve weeks, depending on the complexity of the transaction and the efficiency of the parties involved.
Sectional title transactions add one step that can cause delay: the conveyancer must obtain a levy clearance certificate from the body corporate confirming that the seller’s levy account is up to date. Body corporates have a statutory obligation to issue this certificate, but processing times vary. If the seller has levy arrears, clearance cannot be issued until those arrears are settled, and this can stall the entire transfer.
Control over the property is where the two tenure types diverge most sharply in daily life.
Dispute resolution pathways differ significantly between freehold and sectional title South Africa ownership.
In a freehold property, the owner is solely responsible for insuring the building and its contents. The bond-holder (bank) will require buildings insurance as a condition of the bond, and the owner selects and pays for the policy directly.
In a sectional title scheme, the body corporate is legally required to insure the buildings, including all sections and the common property, under a single policy. The cost of this insurance is included in the monthly levies. Individual owners are responsible for insuring their own contents and any improvements to the interior of their unit that exceed the original specification. This arrangement means sectional title owners benefit from group insurance rates but have no control over the insurer, the sum insured, or the excess, all of which are determined by the body corporate trustees.
Three developments have shifted the freehold vs sectional title South Africa calculus in 2026:
The net result: in 2026, buyers can no longer default to sectional title for affordability without also scrutinising levy history, reserve fund adequacy, and body corporate governance quality.
| If your priority is… | Choose |
|---|---|
| Maximum control and privacy | Freehold |
| Lowest entry cost in a specific area | Sectional title |
| Ability to subdivide or extend | Freehold |
| Managed security and maintenance | Sectional title |
| Avoiding monthly levy obligations | Freehold |
| Access to CSOS dispute resolution | Sectional title |
| Long-term land-value appreciation | Freehold |
| Lock-up-and-go lifestyle | Sectional title |
Many buyers assume a conveyancer is only needed after the offer to purchase is signed. That assumption is wrong, and it is more dangerous in sectional title purchases, where the legal risks are concentrated in documents the buyer may never see unless a conveyancer requests them. Engage a conveyancer before you make an offer in any of the following situations:
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Lalisha Visser at Balden, Vogel & Partners (Harrismith), a member of the Global Law Experts network.
posted 46 seconds ago
posted 5 minutes ago
posted 26 minutes ago
posted 29 minutes ago
posted 1 hour ago
posted 2 hours ago
posted 2 hours ago
posted 2 hours ago
posted 3 hours ago
posted 3 hours ago
posted 4 hours ago
posted 4 hours ago
No results available
Find the right Legal Expert for your business
Sign up for the latest legal briefings and news within Global Law Experts’ community, as well as a whole host of features, editorial and conference updates direct to your email inbox.
Naturally you can unsubscribe at any time.
Global Law Experts is dedicated to providing exceptional legal services to clients around the world. With a vast network of highly skilled and experienced lawyers, we are committed to delivering innovative and tailored solutions to meet the diverse needs of our clients in various jurisdictions.
Global Law Experts is dedicated to providing exceptional legal services to clients around the world. With a vast network of highly skilled and experienced lawyers, we are committed to delivering innovative and tailored solutions to meet the diverse needs of our clients in various jurisdictions.
Send welcome message