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Last reviewed: 7 May 2026 · Updated after Deeds Office fees update, 1 Apr 2026
Engaging conveyancing lawyers in South Africa is the unavoidable first step in every property transaction, yet many buyers and sellers still enter agreements without a clear understanding of who is liable for which costs. Two statutory changes that took effect in early 2026, amendments to the Deeds Registries Regulations on 1 March 2026 and a revised Deeds Office fee schedule on 1 April 2026, have restructured the disbursements that conveyancers must recover from their clients.
This article provides a complete breakdown of transfer costs in South Africa for 2026, explains the legal and contractual rules that determine who pays each line-item, walks through a worked fee calculation for a typical residential purchase, and supplies sample contract clauses that buyers, sellers and estate agents can adapt immediately.
Two separate but related regulatory instruments reshaped the cost landscape for conveyancing in South Africa during the first quarter of 2026. Understanding the timeline is essential because transactions lodged before or after each effective date attract different fee structures and procedural requirements.
The amendments to the Deeds Registries Regulations, published in the Government Gazette, updated several administrative and lodgement rules that conveyancers must follow when preparing and submitting documents at any of South Africa’s Deeds Offices. The practical impact includes revised documentation requirements for certain categories of transfer, updated rules around electronic lodgement procedures, and adjustments to the administrative steps that attract disbursement charges. Industry observers expect these changes to modestly increase the preparation time, and therefore the disbursement quantum, for complex transactions such as deceased-estate transfers and sectional-title conversions.
One month later, the revised Deeds Office fee schedule came into force, directly increasing the registration, search and administrative fees that the Deeds Office charges for processing property-related documents. These fees are published on the official Deeds Office website and are non-negotiable: conveyancers collect them as disbursements and remit them to the Deeds Office on behalf of clients.
| Date / Event | Rule / Change | Practical Effect |
|---|---|---|
| 1 March 2026 | Deeds Registries Regulations amended | Changed lodgement, documentation and administrative rules, affects which disbursements are charged and process timings |
| 1 April 2026 | Deeds Office fee schedule updated | Increased and restructured registration and search fees, raises buyer disbursements in many transactions |
| Ongoing | Commercial practice: purchaser pays transfer costs unless contract states otherwise | Necessitates clear contract clauses to avoid disputes and allocate risk |
Together, these changes mean that any conveyancer fee calculator or cost estimate generated before 1 April 2026 is now outdated. Buyers who signed offers to purchase before that date but whose transfers are lodged afterwards will be subject to the new fee schedule, making it critical to confirm the applicable fee regime with your conveyancing attorneys in South Africa before signing.
The total cost of transferring property in South Africa is not a single fee. It is an aggregate of at least five distinct components, each governed by different rules and paid by different parties. Understanding this breakdown is the key to avoiding surprises at registration.
Conveyancing lawyers in South Africa charge a professional fee for the legal work involved in preparing transfer documents, liaising with the Deeds Office, and ensuring compliance with all regulatory requirements. There is no legislated tariff for professional fees, the guideline tariffs previously published by the Law Society of South Africa serve as a benchmark, but conveyancers may charge above or below these guidelines depending on the complexity of the transaction and their practice. For a standard residential transfer, professional fees typically range from approximately R8,000 to R30,000 (excluding VAT), scaling with the property’s purchase price. VAT at the standard rate of 15% is charged on top of the professional fee.
These are statutory charges set by the Deeds Office and published in the Deeds Registry fee schedule. Conveyancers have no discretion over these amounts, they are collected from the client and paid directly to the Deeds Office. Following the 1 April 2026 update, the most commonly encountered Deeds Office fees for residential transfers include the following:
| Fee Item | Description | Indicative Amount (2026) |
|---|---|---|
| Transfer registration fee | Fee for registering transfer of ownership, scaled by property value | R800 – R3,500+ |
| Deed search fee | Fee for searching the deeds registry to confirm ownership and encumbrances | R120 – R200 per search |
| Copy of deed fee | Fee for obtaining a certified copy of a deed | R130 – R180 |
| Bond registration fee | Fee for registering a new mortgage bond, scaled by bond amount | R500 – R2,500+ |
| Bond cancellation fee | Fee for cancelling an existing bond over the property | R400 – R600 |
Note: The amounts shown are indicative ranges based on the Deeds Office fee schedule effective 1 April 2026. Exact figures depend on the property value, bond amount, and the specific Deeds Office. Always confirm current fees on the official Deeds Office website.
Transfer duty is a tax levied by the South African Revenue Service (SARS) on the acquisition of immovable property. It is calculated on a sliding scale based on the purchase price or market value of the property (whichever is higher). Properties sold below a certain threshold attract zero transfer duty, this threshold and the applicable rates are published by SARS and are updated periodically. Importantly, transfer duty does not apply where the seller is a registered VAT vendor and the transaction is subject to VAT at 15%. The purchaser is responsible for paying transfer duty to SARS before the transfer can be registered.
Where the buyer is financing the purchase through a mortgage bond, a bond attorney (often a different firm from the transfer conveyancer) registers the bond. The buyer pays the bond attorney’s professional fee plus Deeds Office fees for bond registration. These costs are in addition to transfer costs and are typically quoted separately by the bondholder’s appointed attorney.
Several additional charges arise during most residential transfers:
| Cost Item | Who Normally Pays | Legal / Contractual Basis |
|---|---|---|
| Conveyancer professional fee (transfer) | Purchaser | Contractual, standard commercial practice |
| Deeds Office fees (transfer) | Purchaser | Disbursement collected by conveyancer, contractual |
| Transfer duty / VAT | Purchaser | Transfer Duty Act / VAT Act |
| Bond registration fee & attorney | Purchaser | Contractual, required by bondholder’s bank |
| Bond cancellation fee & attorney | Seller | Contractual, seller’s obligation to deliver clear title |
| Rates / levy clearance certificates | Seller | Contractual + municipal compliance requirement |
| Estate agent commission | Seller | Mandate agreement between seller and agent |
One of the most frequently asked questions about conveyancing fees in 2026 is: who pays the conveyancer fee? The short answer is that there is no statutory provision in South African law that expressly compels either party to pay the transfer conveyancer’s professional fee. Liability is determined almost entirely by contract, specifically, the offer to purchase (agreement of sale) signed by the parties. However, deeply entrenched commercial practice in South Africa places the financial burden of transfer costs on the purchaser.
In the overwhelming majority of residential and commercial transactions, the buyer pays the conveyancer’s professional fee, all Deeds Office registration disbursements, and transfer duty (or VAT where applicable). This allocation is typically stated expressly in the offer to purchase. If the agreement is silent on the point, the established market norm, confirmed by practitioner guidance from multiple South African law firms, is that the purchaser bears these costs. Buyers should budget for total transfer costs of between 5% and 8% of the purchase price on a mid-range residential property, depending on whether bond registration is required.
The seller is generally responsible for the costs of cancelling any existing mortgage bond over the property, obtaining rates and levy clearance certificates, and paying the estate agent’s commission. In certain circumstances, such as deceased-estate transfers, insolvency proceedings, or where the agreement expressly provides, the seller may also contribute to or bear the transfer conveyancer’s fee. Where a seller appoints a specific conveyancer and the agreement allocates that conveyancer’s fee to the purchaser, the purchaser should be made aware of this before signing.
Estate agents play a pivotal role in ensuring that fee allocations are clearly documented before signature. The early indication from 2026 market trends suggests that disputes over who pays the conveyancer fee most frequently arise where the estate agent’s standard-form agreement is ambiguous or where the seller’s appointed conveyancer charges above guideline tariffs without prior disclosure to the purchaser. Agents should verify that the offer to purchase contains an explicit clause identifying the appointed conveyancer and confirming the purchaser’s obligation to pay the stated fees and disbursements. This protects all parties and avoids post-signature conflict.
The following worked example illustrates how conveyancing lawyers in South Africa calculate transfer costs for a typical residential purchase. This is a simplified illustration, actual costs will vary based on the specific conveyancer’s fee, the Deeds Office where the transfer is lodged, and the applicable transfer duty rates published by SARS.
Scenario: Residential property purchase at R2,500,000. Buyer obtains a mortgage bond of R2,000,000. Seller has an existing bond to be cancelled.
| Cost Item | Estimated Amount (R) | Who Pays |
|---|---|---|
| Conveyancer professional fee (transfer) | R18,000 – R25,000 | Purchaser |
| VAT on professional fee (15%) | R2,700 – R3,750 | Purchaser |
| Deeds Office transfer registration fee | R2,200 | Purchaser |
| Deeds Office search & admin fees | R600 | Purchaser |
| Transfer duty (SARS) | R30,000 – R35,000 | Purchaser |
| Bond registration, attorney fee + Deeds Office fee | R14,000 – R18,000 | Purchaser |
| Miscellaneous disbursements (PIR, FICA, postage) | R1,500 – R2,500 | Purchaser |
| Estimated total, purchaser | R69,000 – R87,250 | Purchaser |
| Bond cancellation, attorney fee + Deeds Office fee | R4,500 – R6,000 | Seller |
| Rates & levy clearance certificates | R1,200 – R3,000 | Seller |
| Estate agent commission (e.g. 5%) | R125,000 | Seller |
For those who want to build their own spreadsheet estimate, the basic formula structure is:
Total Purchaser Transfer Costs = Conveyancer Fee + (Conveyancer Fee × 0.15) + Deeds Office Transfer Fee + Search Fees + Transfer Duty + Bond Attorney Fee + Bond Deeds Office Fee + Miscellaneous Disbursements
Transfer duty can be calculated using the SARS sliding scale. For properties valued between R1,100,001 and R1,512,500 there is a 3% rate applied to the amount above R1,100,000, with increasing marginal rates for higher price bands as published by SARS. Always confirm the current thresholds and rates on the SARS website, as these are subject to annual adjustment through the national budget process.
Clear contractual wording prevents disputes over who pays conveyancer fees in South Africa. The offer to purchase should contain at least three key clauses addressing fee allocation, tax liability, and title deed custody. The following sample clauses are adapted from commercial conveyancing practice and represent widely recommended wording.
“The Purchaser shall be liable for and shall pay, on demand, the transferring conveyancer’s professional fee, all Deeds Office registration fees, search fees, and disbursements incurred in connection with the transfer of the Property, together with VAT thereon at the applicable rate. The Purchaser acknowledges that fees are calculated in accordance with the Deeds Office fee schedule in force at the date of lodgement and the conveyancer’s quoted professional fee.”
“The Purchaser shall be responsible for the payment of transfer duty payable to SARS in respect of the acquisition of the Property, or, where the sale is subject to VAT, the VAT component shall be included in the purchase price. The transferring conveyancer is hereby authorised to submit the transfer duty declaration and collect the transfer duty from the Purchaser prior to lodgement.”
“The Seller shall deliver the original title deed to the transferring conveyancer within 14 (fourteen) days of the fulfilment of all suspensive conditions. Upon registration of transfer, the title deed shall be held by the bondholder’s appointed attorney for the duration of the mortgage bond or, in the absence of a bond, shall be delivered to the Purchaser or the Purchaser’s appointed attorney.”
Estate agents should include these clauses, or substantively similar wording, in every standard-form offer to purchase. Where the seller appoints the conveyancer, the agreement should disclose the identity and fee structure of the appointee so the purchaser can make an informed decision before signing.
Understanding the conveyancing process timeline helps both conveyancers in South Africa and their clients plan cash-flow and identify potential delays. The table below outlines the standard sequence for a residential property transfer.
| Step | Responsible Party | Typical Timeframe |
|---|---|---|
| Offer to purchase signed by both parties | Buyer & Seller (agent facilitates) | Day 0 |
| Deposit paid into trust account | Buyer | Within 7 days |
| Bond approval obtained | Buyer (bank) | 14 – 30 days |
| FICA documents & title deed delivered to conveyancer | Buyer & Seller | Within 21 days |
| Rates & levy clearance certificates applied for | Seller (via conveyancer) | 21 – 60 days |
| Transfer duty paid to SARS | Buyer (via conveyancer) | Before lodgement |
| Documents lodged at Deeds Office | Conveyancer | Once all requirements met |
| Deeds Office examination & registration | Deeds Office | 7 – 14 working days after lodgement |
| Title deed issued / delivered | Deeds Office → Conveyancer → Buyer or Bond Holder | Upon registration |
The overall timeline from signature to registration typically ranges from 8 to 12 weeks for a straightforward residential transfer. Delays are most commonly caused by outstanding rates clearance certificates, incomplete FICA documentation, or delays in bond cancellation by the seller’s existing bondholder.
The 2026 amendments to the Deeds Registries Regulations and the updated Deeds Office fee schedule have introduced material changes to the cost and process of property transfers in South Africa. For buyers, the practical effect is higher disbursements and a need to budget carefully using current, not outdated, fee estimates. For sellers and estate agents, the priority is ensuring that offers to purchase contain clear, enforceable clauses that allocate every cost component to the correct party. Conveyancing lawyers in South Africa play an indispensable role in navigating these changes, and engaging a qualified conveyancer early in the transaction remains the most reliable way to avoid costly disputes and registration delays.
For assistance finding a qualified conveyancer, visit the Global Law Experts lawyer directory.
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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