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Anyone preparing to buy or sell land in Uganda in 2026 should verify land agent credentials before signing a single document or parting with any money. The Ministry of Lands, Housing & Urban Development has intensified its push to regulate property brokers, while the Building Control (Amendment) Act and the Stamp Duty (Amendment) Bill have introduced fresh disclosure and compliance obligations that directly affect how agents operate. These reforms arrive against a backdrop of persistent fraud: rogue land brokers in Uganda continue to exploit gaps in registration oversight, costing buyers millions of shillings every year.
This guide provides a practical, step-by-step conveyancing due diligence checklist, drawn from current Ugandan law, Ministry of Lands procedures and frontline conveyancing practice, so that homebuyers, property investors, sellers and lawyers can protect themselves at every stage of a land transaction.
Before engaging any property broker or land agent, work through the following eight steps. Each one is expanded in the sections below, but this quick-reference list is designed for immediate use by buyers, sellers and conveyancers.
Each step is explained in detail below, with sample scripts, document checklists, comparison tables and template language you can adapt for your own transactions. Industry observers expect that as Uganda’s regulatory framework matures, these verification steps will become even more critical for every buyer checklist in a land purchase.
The single most important action when you set out to verify a property broker is confirming that the individual and their firm are properly registered. Uganda’s estate agency sector has historically operated without a dedicated national licensing regime. The Ministry of Lands’ “Final Draft Issues Paper: Estate Agency” acknowledged that transactions conducted by unsupervised salespersons “can give rise to problems,” and recommended mandatory registration. In 2026, regulatory pressure has increased, but a fully operational national agent registry has not yet been launched in all districts. Until it is, buyers should rely on the following interim checks.
The Uganda National Land Information System (UgNLIS), managed by the Ministry of Lands, Housing & Urban Development, is specifically designed to manage spatially referenced land registration, valuation and planning data. While UgNLIS primarily verifies title information rather than agent licences, it is the first place to confirm whether the property an agent is marketing actually exists in the registry and whether the purported owner matches the registered proprietor.
Every legitimate brokerage or estate agency firm operating in Uganda should be registered with the Uganda Registration Services Bureau (URSB). Ask the agent for their company registration number and search the URSB online registry to confirm:
If the agent cannot provide a URSB registration number, or the number does not match, treat this as a serious red flag. The absence of land agent registration in Uganda’s formal records is one of the strongest indicators of a rogue operator.
No buyer should transfer money, whether as a deposit, commission or purchase price instalment, before collecting and verifying a specific set of documents. Agent disclosure requirements in Uganda are tightening under the 2026 regulatory changes, and the prudent approach is to insist on full documentation from the outset.
The documents every buyer must demand include:
Forged land titles remain a persistent problem. When reviewing documents, look for these common fraud markers:
Physical verification of the land is vital to ensure its existence and ascertain that the boundaries mentioned on the title align with the actual location. If any document raises doubt, do not proceed, instruct a conveyancer to conduct a formal search at the lands registry.
Title documents can be forged, but land itself does not lie. Every buyer should physically visit the property before committing any funds, ideally accompanied by a licensed surveyor. The surveyor’s role is to verify that the plot’s boundaries, dimensions and access routes correspond to what is described on the title plan.
During your site visit, take the following steps:
If the physical reality does not match the title, halt the transaction. Discrepancies between the ground position and registered particulars are among the most common entry points for land fraud in Uganda.
A question that recurs in every property market is: do I still need a conveyancer if I already have a land agent? The answer is unequivocally yes. In Uganda, a land agent may introduce buyer and seller, arrange viewings and negotiate price, but an agent is not authorised to conduct title searches, draft transfer instruments, witness statutory declarations or lodge documents at the lands registry. These are functions reserved for qualified legal practitioners.
Conveyancing due diligence in Uganda includes:
When a client instructs a conveyancer after an agent has already been involved, the retainer letter should include a scope limitation clause. The following is a suggested template:
“This firm is instructed to act on the conveyancing aspects of the proposed purchase of [property description]. We note that [Agent Name / Agency Name] has acted as estate agent in this transaction. Our instructions do not extend to verifying the agent’s credentials, business standing or conduct, and we accept no liability for any representations made by the agent prior to our engagement. The client acknowledges that our title search and due diligence will be conducted independently of any information supplied by the agent.”
This clause allocates risk clearly and ensures that the conveyancer’s professional indemnity is not exposed to losses caused by agent misrepresentation.
Rogue land brokers in Uganda operate with recognisable patterns. Any one of the following red flags should trigger an immediate pause in the transaction:
If red flags appear, send a written message immediately. A simple WhatsApp or email suffices:
“Dear [Agent Name], I am pausing this transaction pending independent verification of the title and your registration details. Please provide your URSB company registration number, a copy of your property broker licence (if any), and the seller’s signed authority to sell, within 48 hours. No further payments will be made until these documents are verified by my conveyancer. Regards, [Your Name].”
If the agent responds with hostility, evasion or threats, report the matter immediately.
Knowing where to report is as important as knowing how to check a land agent. The following table sets out the reporting pathway by entity type:
| Entity | Who to Report To | Typical Remedy / Timeline |
|---|---|---|
| Land agent (individual) | Ministry of Lands / local police / land regulator (if new agent registry exists) | Licence suspension or cancellation; criminal complaint or civil claim, typically 1–3 months for initial enforcement action (varies by district) |
| Brokerage or agency (firm) | Ministry of Lands / URSB (company checks) / consumer complaints bodies | Administrative fines; client compensation by court order, typically 2–6 months for investigations |
| Conveyancer (professional misconduct) | Uganda Law Society / professional disciplinary committee | Professional discipline; compensation orders, timeline depends on disciplinary process (weeks to months) |
When filing a complaint, include the following evidence:
Simultaneously, instruct your bank’s fraud unit to freeze or reverse any recent payments if possible, and ask your conveyancer to lodge a caveat on the title (if applicable) to prevent the property from being transferred to a third party while the complaint is investigated.
If title problems surface after completion, for example, a competing claim, a forged transfer, or an unregistered encumbrance, the conveyancer should act swiftly. Immediate steps include:
Early legal intervention dramatically improves the chances of a favourable outcome. A detailed guide to the conveyancer’s role when title irregularities arise after a broker-led sale is a related resource that practitioners and buyers should also consult.
| Law / Instrument | What Changed in 2026 | Action for Buyers and Conveyancers |
|---|---|---|
| Ministry of Lands, agent regulation initiative | Intensified push toward mandatory broker registration; enhanced UgNLIS public portal for direct engagement with the Ministry | Verify agents against any new registry as soon as it goes live; use UgNLIS for all title checks |
| Building Control (Amendment) Act | Expanded disclosure and compliance obligations for parties involved in property transactions, including agents facilitating sales of developed land | Ensure building compliance certificates are obtained and verified before completing purchases of developed property |
| Stamp Duty (Amendment) Bill | Proposed adjustments to stamp duty calculations and reporting requirements that may affect transfer costs and agent commission disclosures | Recalculate stamp duty projections for all pending transactions; require agents to disclose commission structures in writing |
For a detailed analysis of each legislative change and its practical impact on conveyancing workflows, see Uganda Conveyancing Changes In 2026 on this site.
The following resources are available for download and can be adapted for your own transactions:
These templates provide general guidance and should be reviewed by a qualified conveyancer before use in a specific transaction.
The ability to verify a land agent in Uganda is no longer optional, it is a fundamental step in every property transaction. With 2026 regulatory reforms raising the bar for broker registration, disclosure and compliance, buyers, sellers and conveyancers must follow a structured verification process from first contact through to completion. The eight-step checklist in this guide provides a practical framework, but professional legal advice remains irreplaceable. If you are buying, selling or advising on land in Uganda, consult a qualified conveyancer to protect your interests and ensure full compliance with current law.
This article provides general information about Ugandan property law and practice as of June 2026. It does not constitute legal advice. Readers should consult a qualified conveyancer for guidance specific to their circumstances.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Patrick Kabagambe at Birungyi, Barata & Associates, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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