The information on the Form 24 is required for the Queensland Revenue Office and to monitor compliance with legislative requirements relating to electrical safety switches (Electrical Safety Office) and smoke alarms (Queensland Fire and Emergency Services); and to update information held on the valuation and sales ...
– Quitclaim Deed: This deed transfers the grantor's interest in the property without any warranties or guarantees. It is often used for transfers between family members where the grantor may not want to warrant the current status of title.
Checklist of what to include Form 1 — Transfer (completed, signed, dated and witnessed) Form 24 — Property information (completed) Form 25 — Foreign ownership information (for foreign persons only: completed, signed, dated and witnessed) duty has been accounted for on the transfer with the Queensland Revenue Office.
Recall the Titles Registry, previously legally part of the Department of Resources, was legally changed to a Pty Ltd company, owned by multiple investment funds of the Queensland Government, just prior to 30 June 2021.
How long does registration take? Most correctly prepared dealings are registered within our service time of 3–5 working days. You can use the dealing number on your lodgement summary to check the status of your lodgement using our online dealing status search enquiry.
Queensland has been using eConveyancing since 2013 and since then it has become the dominant platform through which titles instruments are lodged by industry professionals.
Titles Queensland does not issue paper certificates of title following the commencement of the Land, Explosives and Other Legislation Amendment Act 2019 (Qld), amending the Land Title Act 1994 (Qld), where since 1994 up until 2019, it was optional to receive a physical certificate of title and it did nothing more than ...
An important note, however, is that Certificates of Title and Title Deed are paper documents that show the current owner/s of a property, and any encumbrances that may be registered against the property, such as mortgages, easements, caveats, covenants, leases, charges or other registered notices.