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how to transfer property in zimbabwe

How to Transfer Property in Zimbabwe (2026): Step-by-step Process, Fees & SI 76 Title-deed Replacement

By Global Law Experts
– posted 1 hour ago

Understanding how to transfer property in Zimbabwe has taken on fresh urgency since Statutory Instrument 76 of 2025 (the Deeds Registries Regulations, 2025) came into force on 1 January 2026, introducing a mandatory 24-month window for owners to validate and replace old paper title deeds. Whether you are buying your first home in Harare, selling a family plot in Bulawayo, or donating land to a relative, the conveyancing process in Zimbabwe now carries an additional compliance layer that every party must navigate correctly.

This guide walks sellers, buyers and conveyancers through each phase of the transfer, from the agreement of sale to the collection of a new registered deed, while explaining the taxes, fees and title deeds replacement SI 76 obligations that apply in 2026.

Step-by-Step: How to Transfer Property in Zimbabwe

Quick answer: A property transfer in Zimbabwe moves through four phases, agreement of sale, conveyancer document collection, lodgement at the Deeds Office, and registration of the new title. The entire process typically takes 8 to 16 weeks, depending on how quickly clearances are obtained and whether SI 76 validation is required on the existing deed.

Phase A, Pre-Sale and the Agreement of Sale

Every property transfer begins with a binding agreement of sale between the seller and the buyer. This document sets out the purchase price, deposit arrangements, any suspensive conditions (such as bond approval), the agreed transfer date and which party will instruct the conveyancer. In Zimbabwe, it is standard practice for the seller to choose the conveyancer, though the parties may agree otherwise.

At this stage both parties must assemble their foundational documents:

  • Seller’s documents: original title deed (or certified copy if the original is with a bondholder), national identity document or passport, marriage certificate (if applicable), proof of residence for FICA (financial intelligence) compliance, rates and levy account statements, and a special power of attorney if the seller will not attend signing in person.
  • Buyer’s documents: national identity document or passport, proof of residence, proof of source of funds (FICA requirement), and bond approval letter if the purchase is mortgage-financed.

If you are transferring property between family members, whether through a donation, an inheritance distribution, or an inter-spouse transfer, the agreement of sale is replaced by the appropriate instrument (deed of donation, Master’s letter of executorship, or court order). The conveyancing process in Zimbabwe otherwise follows the same clearance and lodgement steps described below. Where a trust is involved, the trustee must provide trust deed extracts and the authority resolution permitting the transaction.

Phase B, Conveyancer Instructions and Document Collection

Once the agreement of sale is signed, the instructed conveyancer becomes the central coordinator. This phase is document-intensive and often determines the overall timeline. The conveyancer’s core tasks include the following:

1. Municipal rates clearance. The conveyancer writes to the relevant local authority (city council or rural district council) requesting a rates clearance certificate. This certificate confirms that all municipal rates and levies on the property are paid up to at least three months ahead of the anticipated transfer date. Obtaining rates clearance typically takes 7 to 21 days, although delays can occur where the seller has arrears or where the local authority’s billing records are incomplete.

2. Levy clearance (sectional title or body-corporate properties). If the property falls within a body corporate or homeowners’ association, a separate levy clearance certificate must be obtained from the managing agent, confirming that levies are current.

3. ZIMRA tax clearances. The conveyancer applies to the Zimbabwe Revenue Authority for two clearances: a stamp duty assessment (payable by the buyer) and, where applicable, a capital gains tax (CGT) clearance certificate for the seller. ZIMRA processing can take 7 to 14 days once a complete application with all supporting valuations is submitted.

4. Deeds Office search and title verification. The conveyancer conducts a search at the Deeds Registry to verify the chain of ownership, confirm the property description, and check for any registered bonds, caveats, or interdicts. Under the new SI 76 framework, the conveyancer must also confirm whether the existing title deed has been validated or whether it must be submitted for replacement before, or concurrent with, the transfer.

5. Drafting the deed of transfer. Using the verified information, the conveyancer prepares the deed of transfer Zimbabwe, the formal instrument that will be registered at the Deeds Office to effect the change of ownership. The draft deed is accompanied by sworn declarations from both the seller (declaring authority to sell) and the buyer (declaring receipt of possession or intention to take possession). Drafting and internal review typically take 7 to 14 days.

Throughout Phase B, the conveyancer also coordinates with any bondholder: the seller’s existing mortgage must be cancelled, and the buyer’s new bond (if applicable) must be registered simultaneously in a process known as “linked lodgement.”

Phase C, Transfer Signing, Payment and Lodgement at the Deeds Office

With all clearances in hand and the draft deed approved, the conveyancer arranges a signing appointment. Both parties (or their duly authorised attorneys) attend the conveyancer’s office to execute the transfer documents. The key documents signed at this stage are:

  • Deed of transfer, signed by the seller (transferor) and the buyer (transferee) before a notary or conveyancer.
  • Power of attorney to pass transfer, signed by the seller, authorising the conveyancer to attend to registration at the Deeds Office on the seller’s behalf.
  • Declarations, identity and marital-status declarations by both parties.
  • Bond documents (if applicable), the buyer signs the new mortgage bond, and the seller’s bondholder signs consent to the cancellation of the existing bond.

Before lodgement, the conveyancer confirms that all financial conditions have been met. The buyer must have paid:

  • The balance of the purchase price (held in the conveyancer’s trust account).
  • Stamp duty to ZIMRA (or provided proof of ZIMRA assessment and payment).
  • The conveyancer’s professional fees and Deeds Office lodgement fees.

Once all signed documents and proof of payment are assembled, the conveyancer lodges the transfer (and any linked cancellation and new bond) at the Deeds Office. In Harare, lodgement is at the Deeds Registry on Samora Machel Avenue; regional offices operate in Bulawayo and Masvingo. Lodgement is done in person, and the documents enter a queue for examination by the Registrar of Deeds.

The Deeds Office examination period varies. Under normal conditions, registration takes approximately 4 to 12 weeks from lodgement. Delays may arise from requisitions, where the examiner identifies errors or requests additional documentation, or from administrative backlogs. The conveyancer monitors the file and responds to any requisitions promptly. Where the property’s existing title deed has not yet been validated under SI 76, the Registrar may raise a requisition requiring compliance before proceeding, adding further time to the process. Industry observers expect that lodgement timelines may lengthen in 2026 and 2027 as the Deeds Office processes a surge of SI 76 validation applications alongside routine transfers.

Phase D, Registration, Post-Registration and Collection of the New Deed

When the Registrar of Deeds is satisfied that all documents are in order, the transfer is registered. Registration has several immediate legal effects: the seller’s name is removed from the title, the buyer’s name is endorsed as the new registered owner, and any new mortgage bond is simultaneously recorded against the property.

After registration, the conveyancer collects the newly endorsed title deed from the Deeds Office. The conveyancer then disburses funds from the trust account: the seller receives the net purchase price (after deducting any bond settlement, agent commissions and agreed costs), and the buyer’s bondholder receives confirmation of the registered mortgage. The buyer is notified that the transfer is complete and arrangements are made for collection or secure delivery of the original title deed.

It is prudent for the new owner to verify the registered details by requesting a Deeds Office search confirming their name, the property description, and any registered encumbrances. This independent verification serves as a safeguard against administrative errors.

Standard Procedural Timeline

Step Responsible party Typical duration
Agreement of sale signed Seller & buyer 1–7 days
Conveyancer instructed & FICA compliance Conveyancer 3–5 days
Rates clearance obtained Conveyancer / local authority 7–21 days
ZIMRA stamp duty & CGT clearance Conveyancer / ZIMRA 7–14 days
Deed of transfer drafted & approved Conveyancer 7–14 days
Signing appointment Seller, buyer & conveyancer 1–3 days
Lodgement at Deeds Office Conveyancer 1–2 days
Deeds Office examination & registration Registrar of Deeds 4–12 weeks
Post-registration collection & disbursement Conveyancer 3–7 days

Property Transfer Fees Zimbabwe: Costs, Taxes and Who Pays

Quick answer: The total cost of transferring property in Zimbabwe depends on the property’s value and includes stamp duty (paid by the buyer to ZIMRA), conveyancer professional fees, Deeds Office lodgement fees, and, for the seller, possible capital gains tax. As a broad guide, buyers should budget between 5 % and 10 % of the purchase price for transfer-related costs.

Stamp Duty and Transfer Duty

Stamp duty in Zimbabwe is levied under the Stamp Duties Act and is calculated as a percentage of the greater of the purchase price or the property’s market value as assessed by ZIMRA. The buyer is responsible for paying stamp duty before the deed of transfer can be lodged at the Deeds Office. The applicable rate is set by ZIMRA and has historically been structured on a graduated scale, properties below a prescribed threshold may attract a lower rate or an exemption for first-time buyers, while higher-value properties attract a proportionally higher duty.

To pay stamp duty, the conveyancer submits a completed stamp duty return together with the agreement of sale and a property valuation (if ZIMRA requires one) to the nearest ZIMRA office. Once assessed, ZIMRA issues a stamp duty assessment notice. The buyer pays the assessed amount at a ZIMRA cashier or via an approved banking channel and receives a receipt, which the conveyancer attaches to the lodgement documents. Buyers should budget stamp duty as a significant line item, it is typically the single largest transfer cost after the purchase price itself.

Conveyancer Fees and Deeds Office Fees

Conveyancer professional fees in Zimbabwe are generally calculated as a percentage of the purchase price, subject to a minimum fee. There is no statutory tariff, so fees are negotiable; however, the Law Society of Zimbabwe publishes guideline tariffs that most practitioners follow. Buyers should request an itemised quotation from the instructed conveyancer before signing the agreement of sale. The conveyancer’s quote should separately itemise:

  • Professional fee, the conveyancer’s charge for preparing the transfer.
  • Deeds Office lodgement fee, a government fee payable to the Registrar of Deeds upon lodgement.
  • Disbursements, out-of-pocket costs such as rates clearance application fees, Deeds Office search fees, and courier or postage charges.

In most sale transactions, the buyer pays the conveyancer’s transfer fees. However, where the seller’s existing bond must be cancelled, the seller typically bears the bond cancellation conveyancer’s fees separately.

Capital Gains Tax on Property

Capital gains tax on property in Zimbabwe is a seller’s obligation. CGT is levied on the gain realised when the property is disposed of, calculated as the difference between the selling price and the allowable cost base (original purchase price plus qualifying improvements and allowable costs). ZIMRA must issue a CGT clearance certificate before the transfer can be lodged. The seller’s conveyancer applies for this certificate, and ZIMRA may require a valuation. The principal private residence exemption may apply if the seller occupied the property as their main home, but conditions and limits apply. Sellers should consult a tax professional or conveyancer to confirm their CGT position before committing to a sale.

Example Fee Calculation

Cost item Low-value property (USD 20,000) Mid-value property (USD 80,000) High-value property (USD 250,000)
Stamp duty (estimated) USD 600–800 USD 2,400–4,000 USD 7,500–12,500
Conveyancer professional fee (estimate 2–4 %) USD 400–800 USD 1,600–3,200 USD 5,000–10,000
Deeds Office lodgement fee USD 20–50 USD 50–100 USD 100–200
Rates clearance & disbursements USD 30–80 USD 50–120 USD 80–200
Estimated total buyer cost USD 1,050–1,730 USD 4,100–7,420 USD 12,680–22,900

Note: These figures are illustrative estimates based on typical market ranges as of early 2026. Actual amounts depend on current ZIMRA rates, the conveyancer’s quoted fee, and any arrears or additional requirements. Always obtain a formal quotation from your instructed conveyancer.

Title Deeds Replacement SI 76: Replacing Old Title Deeds and Compliance Steps

Quick answer: Under Statutory Instrument 76 of 2025, all owners of immovable property in Zimbabwe must submit their original paper title deeds for validation within 24 months of the regulation’s effective date, by 31 December 2027. The Registrar of Deeds will issue securitised, digitised deed entries to replace validated paper deeds.

What SI 76 Requires of Owners

The Deeds Registries Regulations, 2025, empower the Registrar of Deeds to require the production and validation of existing paper title deeds as part of a nationwide digitisation programme. Owners must submit the original title deed, together with supporting identification documents (national ID or passport, proof of current address) and any documents evidencing changes in ownership since the deed was last endorsed. Copies alone are not sufficient, the Registrar must inspect the original document to verify authenticity and detect any forgery or alteration. For a detailed analysis of the regulation’s scope and practical impact, see our Zimbabwe title-deed law (practical guide).

How to Validate and Replace Title Deeds, Practical Steps

  1. Locate your original title deed. If held by a bank as mortgage security, request it from the bondholder in writing.
  2. Verify the chain of ownership. Confirm that all prior transfers, endorsements and name changes are reflected on the deed. If there are gaps, a conveyancer can conduct a Deeds Office search and advise on corrective steps.
  3. Attend the Deeds Registry or follow the prescribed submission process. Submit your original deed and supporting documents at the relevant Deeds Office (Harare, Bulawayo or Masvingo). Obtain an official receipt acknowledging submission.
  4. Await validation. The Registrar examines the deed, cross-references the Deeds Office register, and either validates the deed for digitisation or issues a requisition identifying defects.
  5. Collect your securitised deed entry or address defects. If validated, the Registrar issues a securitised, digitised record. If rejected, engage a conveyancer to cure defects through affidavits, court applications or title deed validation procedures.

Risks and Remedies if You Miss the Deadline

Owners who fail to submit their deeds by 31 December 2027 risk having unvalidated deeds that may not be accepted for future transfers, mortgage registrations or other dealings at the Deeds Office. Early indications suggest that non-compliant deeds could effectively freeze the owner’s ability to transact until the validation process is completed. Where an owner has lost the original deed, a conveyancer can apply to the Registrar for a certified copy, though this process involves additional costs and a statutory notice period. The practical advice is clear: act now rather than risk being locked out of the property market.

SI 76 Compliance Timeline

Date / Deadline Requirement under SI 76 Action for owner
1 January 2026 (SI effective) Registrar empowered to require validation and begin digitisation Locate deeds and begin documentation review
Within 24 months, deadline 31 December 2027 Submit original paper title deed and required supporting documents for validation Submit to Deeds Registry; follow local office instructions; obtain receipt
Post-validation Registrar issues securitised/digitised deed entry or may reject if defects found If rejected, engage conveyancer to cure defects (title investigations / affidavits)

Common Problems, Red Flags and How Conveyancers Mitigate Them

Quick answer: The most frequent obstacles in a Zimbabwean property transfer are missing title deeds, municipal rates arrears, unregistered mortgage charges, and disputed or forged documents. Experienced conveyancers resolve these through Deeds Office searches, affidavit applications, arrears negotiations and, where necessary, litigation.

  • Missing title deed. If the original cannot be located, the conveyancer applies for a certified copy from the Registrar. A statutory notice must be published, and a waiting period observed before the copy is issued.
  • Forged or altered deeds. The Deeds Office examiner may flag inconsistencies in signatures, descriptions or endorsements. Where forgery is suspected, the transfer is halted and the matter referred for investigation. SI 76 validation is expected to surface many of these issues proactively.
  • Rates arrears. The local authority will not issue a rates clearance certificate until all arrears (and, typically, three months’ advance rates) are settled. Sellers should address arrears before marketing the property.
  • Unregistered or undisclosed mortgage bonds. A Deeds Office search reveals all registered encumbrances. Buyers should insist on a clean search before paying any deposit.
  • Disputed ownership. Where multiple parties claim ownership, common in deceased estates or informal settlements, the conveyancer may need to obtain a court order or Master’s directive before proceeding.

Practical Checklist for Sellers and Buyers

Use the checklists below to track your progress through the conveyancing process in Zimbabwe. Each item should be confirmed before proceeding to the next phase.

Seller checklist:

  • Locate original title deed (or request from bondholder)
  • Settle municipal rates and levy arrears
  • Gather ID, marriage certificate, proof of residence
  • Obtain estate agent mandate or prepare private sale agreement
  • Confirm SI 76 validation status of the title deed
  • Sign power of attorney if unable to attend transfer signing
  • Cooperate with conveyancer on ZIMRA CGT clearance application

Buyer checklist:

  • Obtain bond pre-approval (if mortgage-financed)
  • Gather ID, proof of residence, proof of source of funds (FICA)
  • Request itemised fee quotation from conveyancer
  • Pay stamp duty as assessed by ZIMRA
  • Pay conveyancer fees and Deeds Office lodgement fee
  • Verify Deeds Office search results post-registration
  • Collect and securely store new title deed

Conclusion: Act Before the SI 76 Deadline

Knowing how to transfer property in Zimbabwe in 2026 means more than following the traditional conveyancing steps, it means integrating the new title-deed validation requirements introduced by Statutory Instrument 76 of 2025. With the 31 December 2027 deadline approaching, every owner, seller and buyer should prioritise locating original deeds, engaging a qualified conveyancer, and ensuring SI 76 compliance before commencing any property transaction. Delays in validation could stall transfers and freeze dealings at the Deeds Office. For tailored guidance on your specific situation, find a lawyer or contact Global Law Experts to connect with an experienced Zimbabwean conveyancing practitioner.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Ostern Mutero at Sawyer & Mkushi, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. Deeds Registries Regulations (Statutory Instrument 76 of 2025), Veritas Zimbabwe
  2. Global Law Experts, Zimbabwe Title Deed Law 2026
  3. Muvingi & Mugadza, Deed Registries Regulations 2025: Implications for Conveyancing and Property Transactions
  4. Property.co.zw, How Do I Transfer Property Ownership in Zimbabwe
  5. Honey & Blanckenberg, Statutory Instrument 76 of 2025
  6. Bulawayo City Council, Procedure for Obtaining Title Deeds
  7. Propertybook, New Zimbabwe Law: You Have 24 Months to Replace Your Old Title Deeds
  8. ZIMRA (Zimbabwe Revenue Authority), Stamp Duty & CGT Guidance

FAQs

Q: How do I change ownership of a house in Zimbabwe?
A: Sign an agreement of sale, instruct a conveyancer, obtain rates and ZIMRA clearances, sign the deed of transfer, lodge documents at the Deeds Office, and await registration of the new title in the buyer’s name.
A: Total costs typically range from 5 % to 10 % of the purchase price, covering stamp duty (payable to ZIMRA), conveyancer professional fees, Deeds Office lodgement fees and disbursements. See the fee table above for illustrative examples.
A: Essential documents include the original title deed, national identity documents for both parties, municipal rates clearance, levy clearance (if applicable), ZIMRA stamp duty and CGT clearances, and the signed deed of transfer.
A: Owners must submit their original paper title deeds to the Registrar of Deeds for validation within 24 months of the regulation’s effective date (by 31 December 2027). Validated deeds will be securitised and digitised by the Registry.
A: The buyer typically pays stamp duty, Deeds Office lodgement fees and the conveyancer’s transfer fee. The seller bears capital gains tax and bond cancellation costs. Fee allocation can be varied by agreement between the parties.
A: In principle, yes, the conveyancer can lodge the transfer and SI 76 validation concurrently. However, this may extend the registration timeline. Confirm the approach with your conveyancer before listing the property for sale.
A: Instruct a conveyancer to apply to the Registrar of Deeds for a certified copy. The process involves publishing a statutory notice, observing a waiting period, and paying an application fee. Start this process as early as possible to avoid delaying any planned transaction or SI 76 submission.
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How to Transfer Property in Zimbabwe (2026): Step-by-step Process, Fees & SI 76 Title-deed Replacement

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