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Understanding transfer costs in South Africa has become more urgent since three overlapping regulatory changes took effect in the first half of 2026. Amendments to the Deeds Registries Regulations came into force on 1 March 2026, updated Deeds Office tariffs followed on 1 April 2026, and the Law Society of South Africa’s (LSSA) recommended conveyancing fee guidelines, effective since 1 August 2025, continue to shape what practitioners charge. Together, these updates alter the paperwork, the timelines and the rand-and-cent totals that buyers, sellers, estate agents and bond originators must budget for. This practical checklist consolidates every cost line item, explains who pays what, and walks through the transfer process step by step so that no party is caught off guard.
Here are four immediate action points before reading further:
The table below provides a high-level range for each major cost component. Exact figures depend on the purchase price, the bond amount and the province in which the Deeds Office processes the transfer. All fee references below draw on the SARS transfer duty schedule, the LSSA Conveyancing Fee Guidelines (effective 1 August 2025) and the Deeds Office tariff notice published in Government Gazette No. 54039.
For a quick interactive estimate, industry observers recommend using the Ooba transfer cost calculator or the BetterBond bond-and-transfer calculator as convenient starting points, but always verify the outputs against the official SARS and LSSA sources cited in this article.
Three distinct instruments drive the 2026 changes. Each operates on its own effective date, and each has a different practical consequence for transfer costs in South Africa.
| Date | Instrument / Notice | Practical Impact |
|---|---|---|
| 30 January 2026 | GN 7056 published in Government Gazette No. 54039 | Deeds Registries Regulations amendments gazetted; practitioners given notice of new requirements. |
| 1 March 2026 | Deeds Registries Regulations amendments effective | New document-preparation, requisition and compliance standards apply to all lodgements from this date. |
| 1 April 2026 | Deeds Office fee tariff effective | Updated lodgement, certified-copy and withdrawal fees payable on all transactions processed from this date. |
| 1 August 2025 | LSSA Conveyancing Fee Guidelines (current edition) | Recommended fee bands used by conveyancers for quoting transfer and bond-registration fees. |
One of the most common questions around transfer costs in South Africa is who pays transfer costs, the buyer or the seller? The general rule is straightforward: the buyer carries most of the costs associated with transferring ownership, while the seller bears the costs of clearing the property for transfer. The table below allocates each line item.
| Cost Item | Typically Paid By | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Transfer duty (SARS) | Buyer | Payable to SARS before or at registration. Nil if purchase price ≤ R1,210,000. |
| Conveyancing / transfer attorney fees | Buyer | Guided by LSSA tariff + VAT. Covers preparation, lodgement and registration of transfer. |
| Deeds Office levies (lodgement & search fees) | Buyer | Included in conveyancer’s account as disbursements. |
| FICA verification & compliance certificates | Buyer (transfer) / Seller (cancellation) | Each party covers their own FICA costs in their respective attorney’s file. |
| Bond registration fees (new bond) | Buyer | Payable to the bank’s bond attorney; similar tariff structure to transfer fees. |
| Bond cancellation fees (existing bond) | Seller | The seller’s bank appoints a cancellation attorney; the seller pays the fee. |
| Rates clearance certificate | Seller | Municipality issues the certificate once all outstanding rates and taxes are paid. |
| Electrical compliance certificate (COC) | Seller | Required by regulation; seller must provide a valid certificate at transfer. |
| Estate agent commission | Seller | Typically 5 %–8 % of the sale price + VAT, payable on registration. |
| VAT (instead of transfer duty) | Buyer (inclusive in price or added) | Applies when the seller is a VAT-registered vendor; transfer duty is then nil. |
Practical tip: Always request a fully itemised quote from the conveyancer before signing. Confirm which funds must be deposited into the conveyancer’s trust account and the date by which they are due, typically well before the anticipated registration date. Late deposits are the single most common cause of transfer delays.
Conveyancing fees are the professional fees charged by the transfer attorney (conveyancer) for preparing the transfer documents, liaising with the Deeds Office and ensuring that registration occurs correctly. These fees are distinct from transfer duty, which is a tax payable to SARS.
The LSSA publishes recommended conveyancing fee guidelines that set out fee bands linked to the property’s value or the bond amount. The current edition, effective 1 August 2025, is used by most practitioners as a starting point. Fees are quoted exclusive of VAT (15 %) and exclusive of disbursements.
| Property Value Band | Recommended Fee (Excl. VAT) |
|---|---|
| Up to R300,000 | R8,700 |
| R300,001 – R600,000 | R12,200 |
| R600,001 – R1,000,000 | R16,500 |
| R1,000,001 – R2,000,000 | R22,000 |
| R2,000,001 – R4,000,000 | R33,000 |
| R4,000,001 – R8,000,000 | R47,500 |
| Above R8,000,000 | R70,000+ |
Source: LSSA Conveyancing Fee Guidelines, effective 1 August 2025. Bands are approximate mid-points within each range; consult the full LSSA schedule for precise calculations.
Worked example, R2,000,000 purchase: Conveyancing fee ≈ R22,000 + VAT (R3,300) = R25,300. Add disbursements of approximately R4,500 (Deeds Office levy, FICA, postage, petties) and the buyer’s transfer attorney account totals roughly R29,800 before transfer duty.
The LSSA guidelines are recommendations, not statutorily binding tariffs. Conveyancers may quote above or below the guideline, particularly for high-value transactions, repeat clients or bulk estate-agency mandates. Buyers should obtain at least two comparable quotes, ensuring each includes the same line items (professional fee, VAT, Deeds Office charges and disbursements) so that comparisons are meaningful.
In South Africa, a conveyancer is an attorney who has passed additional examinations in conveyancing law and is admitted to practise before the Deeds Office. A general attorney (sometimes loosely called a “solicitor”) may handle the contractual aspects of a property sale but cannot lodge documents at the Deeds Office unless separately admitted as a conveyancer. For standard residential transfers, a conveyancer is the correct appointment. Fees for the conveyancing work itself are comparable under the LSSA guidelines, but engaging a general attorney who must then brief a conveyancer can introduce an additional layer of cost.
Transfer duty is a tax levied by SARS on the acquisition of property. It is separate from, and additional to, conveyancing fees. The current transfer duty brackets (2025/26 tax year, still in force) apply a sliding scale based on the property’s value.
Key point: Properties acquired for R1,210,000 or less attract nil transfer duty. Above that threshold, rates escalate from 3 % to 13 % on the portion of value within each bracket.
| Property Value | Rate |
|---|---|
| R0 – R1,210,000 | 0 % |
| R1,210,001 – R1,663,800 | 3 % on the amount above R1,210,000 |
| R1,663,801 – R2,329,300 | R13,614 + 6 % on the amount above R1,663,800 |
| R2,329,301 – R2,994,800 | R53,544 + 8 % on the amount above R2,329,300 |
| R2,994,801 – R12,095,001 | R106,784 + 11 % on the amount above R2,994,800 |
| R12,095,001 and above | R1,107,806 + 13 % on the amount above R12,095,000 |
Source: SARS, Transfer Duty rates.
Transfer duty must be paid within six months of the date of acquisition. Late payment attracts interest and penalties under the Transfer Duty Act. Conveyancers generally collect the duty amount as part of the buyer’s deposit into the trust account and submit payment to SARS via eFiling before lodgement at the Deeds Office.
Transfer duty vs transfer fees: Transfer duty is a government tax (paid to SARS). Transfer fees are the professional fees charged by your conveyancer (paid to the attorney’s firm). These are two separate cost items, though they are often conflated in everyday conversation.
The amended deeds registries regulations effective 1 March 2026 introduce tighter document-preparation standards and expanded compliance checks. Industry observers expect that the average transfer timeline, already typically eight to twelve weeks, may extend by one to two weeks for transactions lodged during the initial adjustment period. Below is a step-by-step conveyancing checklist that accounts for these changes.
After registration, the original title deed is held at the Deeds Office. If the property is bonded, the bank typically retains a certified copy or the original deed as security until the bond is cancelled. Buyers can request a certified copy from the Deeds Office for their own records. The 2026 regulatory amendments do not change the fundamental custody rules but do update formatting requirements for certified copies issued by the registrar.
Where a buyer finances the purchase through a mortgage bond, a bond attorney (appointed by the lending bank) handles the bond registration in parallel with the transfer. Bond registration costs mirror the structure of transfer fees and are guided by the same LSSA fee schedule.
The bond registration timeline runs concurrently with the transfer process. Delays in bond approval or document preparation ripple through to the registration date, so early engagement with the bank and bond attorney is critical.
Experienced conveyancers encounter a recurring set of problems that delay transfers and inflate costs. Awareness of these red flags saves both money and time.
The 2026 landscape for transfer costs in South Africa is shaped by three overlapping changes, the Deeds Registries Regulations amendments (1 March 2026), updated Deeds Office tariffs (1 April 2026) and the LSSA conveyancing fee guidelines (effective 1 August 2025). Buyers should request itemised quotes from their conveyancer, verify transfer duty using the SARS brackets, and allow extra time for the additional compliance steps introduced by the amended regulations. Sellers should settle municipal arrears early, confirm their VAT status and ensure that all existing bonds are disclosed and accounted for. By following the step-by-step checklist in this article and confirming every line item against the official sources cited, both parties can approach registration day with confidence and without cost surprises.
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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