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Every residential property sale in South Africa forces a single, high‑stakes choice before the Offer to Purchase (OTP) is even signed: which conveyancer will handle the transfer? The question of seller‑nominated vs buyer‑chosen conveyancer in South Africa is one that buyers, sellers and estate agents face in virtually every transaction, yet most guidance available online only explains the default rule without helping you decide what is best for your situation. Under South African common law the seller traditionally nominates the transferring attorney, but the parties are free to agree otherwise in the OTP.
With 2024–2026 changes to Deeds Office electronic lodgement workflows and updated fee guidelines from the Law Society of South Africa (LSSA), the conveyancer you choose now directly affects transfer speed, cost transparency and your exposure to professional liability risk. This guide delivers a structured, side‑by‑side comparison, with actionable contract clauses, so you can make the right call before you sign.
South African common law gives the seller the right to nominate the conveyancing attorney who will attend to the transfer of the property. The practical mechanism is a clause in the OTP (sometimes called the Deed of Sale) that names the seller’s chosen firm. If the OTP is silent on the point, the common‑law default still favours the seller. The rationale is straightforward: because the seller must deliver a clean, marketable title, free of bonds, rates arrears and other encumbrances, the seller has a legitimate interest in appointing a conveyancer it trusts to manage that process efficiently.
The Deeds Registries Act 47 of 1937 does not prescribe which party must appoint the transferring attorney, but its procedural requirements around lodgement, examination and registration are most easily met when a single conveyancer coordinates the seller’s title documents.
A buyer can choose the conveyancer, but only if this is expressly agreed and recorded in writing. The cleanest route is a clause in the OTP itself, for example: “The transferring attorney shall be [Firm Name], appointed by the Purchaser, whose contact details are [address/email].” Alternatively, buyers can negotiate an addendum to an existing OTP before signature. The key is that the clause must be unambiguous; if it merely says “to be agreed” the common‑law default reverts to the seller. In practice, a buyer who wants to appoint its own conveyancer should raise the point at the offer stage, not after the OTP has been signed by both parties.
The table below is the centrepiece of this guide. Use it to identify which option aligns with your priorities across eight decision dimensions.
| Dimension | Seller‑Nominated Conveyancer (Option A) | Buyer‑Chosen Conveyancer (Option B) |
|---|---|---|
| Who appoints | Seller nominates in OTP or deed of sale (common‑law default). | Buyer appoints; must be expressly agreed in writing in OTP or addendum. |
| Who pays | Buyer typically pays transferring attorney fees and SARS transfer duty; seller pays own cancellation attorney. | Buyer pays own conveyancer fees; fee‑sharing can be negotiated in OTP. |
| Cost predictability | Seller’s firm supplies fee quote based on LSSA guideline tariff, predictable if firm is reputable. | Buyer shops for quotes; may secure lower fees but risks cost duplication on disbursements. |
| Timing & Deeds Office access | Seller’s conveyancer often has existing e‑lodgement credentials and Deeds Office batch routines, can speed processing. | Buyer’s conveyancer must coordinate with seller’s attorney; may cause short delays but gives buyer control of lodgement timing. |
| Conflict of interest | Conveyancer represents seller’s title interests, potential conflict on buyer protections. | Conveyancer owes duties directly to buyer, stronger client protection. |
| Liability & remedies | Buyer’s direct claims limited unless independent negligence proven; complaint via LPC under Legal Practice Act 28 of 2014. | Buyer has direct retainer, clearer malpractice and negligence remedy path. |
| Enforceability | Appointment enforced by OTP clause or common‑law default if OTP silent. | Enforceable when expressly recorded in OTP or addendum; clause must be unambiguous. |
| Dispute resolution | Buyer must rely on LPC discipline or litigation if conveyancer acts improperly, process is lengthy. | Buyer enforces instructions via direct retainer; quicker remedial steps and clearer standing. |
Key takeaways from the table:
Below we unpack the five dimensions that most frequently determine which option is right: tax, cost, timing, liability and enforceability.
Transfer duty is a tax on the acquisition of property, payable by the buyer to SARS regardless of which conveyancer handles the transfer. The choice between a seller‑nominated conveyancer and a buyer‑chosen alternative does not change the amount of transfer duty owed. What it can change is who handles the SARS filing, the speed of the transfer duty receipt, and whether the buyer receives independent confirmation that the correct amount has been calculated.
| Item | Seller‑Nominated | Buyer‑Chosen |
|---|---|---|
| Transfer duty threshold (residential, effective 1 April 2025) | Buyer liable for transfer duty on acquisitions above R1,100,000 (0% on first R1,100,000). Progressive rates apply above this threshold per SARS schedule. | Same, duty is a statutory tax on acquisition; conveyancer choice does not alter liability. |
| Conveyancer professional fees | LSSA guideline tariff used by most firms; seller’s nomination may default to LSSA rates without negotiation. | Buyer may shop for lower quotes; fees still typically follow the LSSA guideline but are subject to individual negotiation. |
| Deeds Office fees & disbursements | Prescribed Deeds Office schedule applies (registration fees, search fees). | Same prescribed schedule; conveyancer merely pays and recovers from client. |
Buyers should confirm the exact transfer duty brackets on the SARS website at the offer stage and request an independent calculation from their own conveyancer, even if the seller has nominated a firm, to avoid overpayment.
The general rule is that each party pays its own attorney. The buyer pays the transferring attorney’s professional fees and disbursements, plus transfer duty. The seller pays its own cancellation attorney (to discharge any existing bond) and any compliance certificates required. This allocation holds regardless of whether the seller or the buyer chose the transferring attorney. Where a buyer appoints its own conveyancer, the buyer retains full control over the fee negotiation and can request itemised billing. Where the seller nominates, the buyer still pays the bill but has less leverage to negotiate the tariff down. The LSSA publishes recommended conveyancing fee guidelines, updated periodically, the most recent update took effect on 1 August 2025.
These guidelines are not binding, but most firms use them as a baseline.
The Deeds Registries Act 47 of 1937 governs the registration process. Recent developments in electronic lodgement (e‑DRS) mean that conveyancing firms with established electronic credentials at a particular Deeds Office can lodge, track and correct deeds more efficiently than firms without those credentials. This has made the choice of conveyancer materially relevant to transfer speed. A seller’s nominated firm that lodges hundreds of transfers per year at the relevant office will usually have shorter turnaround times than a buyer’s independently chosen firm that must establish new workflows. Buyers should ask any proposed conveyancer: “Do you lodge electronically at this Deeds Office, and what is your current average turnaround?
” For a fuller discussion of how Deeds Office changes in 2024–2026 affect transfers, see our guide on conveyancing changes in South Africa for 2026.
Every conveyancer in South Africa is regulated under the Legal Practice Act 28 of 2014 and must hold a Fidelity Fund Certificate. The conveyancer owes professional duties to its client, the party that appointed it. When the seller nominates the conveyancer, the buyer is not the primary client. The buyer can still lodge a complaint with the Legal Practice Council or pursue a delictual (negligence) claim, but the burden of proof is higher than it would be under a direct retainer. If independent buyer protection is important, for example, where there are concerns about undisclosed defects, rates arrears or servitudes, appointing your own conveyancer creates a direct professional relationship with clear accountability.
The appointment of a conveyancer is enforceable through the OTP clause. Buyers who want to appoint their own firm should include an express, unambiguous clause in the OTP before signing. Template language (to be adapted by local counsel): “The Purchaser shall appoint the transferring attorney, being [Firm Name], and the Seller hereby consents to such appointment.”
Three developments between 2024 and 2026 have shifted the practical calculus of the seller‑nominated vs buyer‑chosen conveyancer decision in South Africa:
| If your priority is… | Choose… |
|---|---|
| Speed and a single coordinated process (seller has a reputable, high‑volume conveyancer with e‑lodgement capability) | Seller‑nominated conveyancer (Option A), but insist on protective OTP clauses. |
| Independent representation and buyer protections (title checks, bond handling, professional liability) | Buyer‑chosen conveyancer (Option B), appoint in writing and pay retainer. |
| Reducing out‑of‑pocket risk where seller may default on pre‑closing obligations (clearances, rates, compliance) | Buyer‑chosen conveyancer (Option B), include seller warranties and a retention clause. |
| Minimising transaction costs on a straightforward, low‑value residential sale | Seller‑nominated conveyancer (Option A), avoids fee duplication. |
Choose the seller‑nominated conveyancer (Option A) when:
Choose a buyer‑appointed conveyancer (Option B) when:
Most straightforward residential sales do not require separate legal advice on the conveyancer appointment alone. However, the following situations should prompt you to consult an independent conveyancing attorney before signing the OTP:
If any of these triggers apply, use the Global Law Experts lawyer directory to find a qualified conveyancer in South Africa who can review your OTP and advise on the appointment clause.
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.
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