Course Content
Module 3 — Property and Mortgage Law (MRL)
Property, mortgage and real estate law in Nigeria — Land Use Act, ethics, cybersecurity, mortgage fraud. 4 lessons (Lesson 4 pending).
0/72
Module 5 — Property and Real Estate Environment (PRE)
Real estate development, land tenure, sale of land, land titles, deeds, leases, and mortgage security. 12 lessons + appendices.
0/25
Module 6 — Mortgage Business Operations and Technology (MBO)
The mortgage broker role, IMBL licensing, origination pipeline, client relationships, products, and building a brokerage business. 6 lessons.
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Module 7 — Certification and Final Research Paper
Qualifying examination and professional research project. Required for the flagship CMP designation. Procedural information lesson included.
0/1
Chartered Mortgage Professional (CMP)

INSTITUTE OF MORTGAGE BROKERS AND LENDERS OF NIGERIA

MODULE 5 — MORTGAGE AND REAL ESTATE OPERATIONS

LM6

Land Title Registration Process

IMBLN Professional Certification Programme

Required for ALL certification levels  |  2026 Edition

Introduction

Land registration in Nigeria is required by law but treated by many buyers as optional. The case of Ogunleye v. Oni (1990) 2 NWLR (Pt. 135) 745 established that a purchaser who registers his interest takes priority over an earlier purchaser who failed to register. Section 22 of the Land Use Act imposes a 30-day deadline for commencing registration after execution of any deed involving a right of occupancy.

6.1 Purpose and Legal Basis of Land Registration

6.1.1 Why Register Title?

Registration provides legal recognition and protection of the holder’s interest, prevents fraud, creates a public record of encumbrances, and facilitates transactions. In Lagos, the price difference between a property with registered title and an identical property with unregistered title can range from 15% to 30%.

6.1.2 Registration Systems in Nigeria

Nigeria operates two distinct systems:

Registration of Deeds — governed by the Lands Registration Act. Records instruments (documents). Filing cabinet that stores documents faithfully but does not check truthfulness.

Registration of Titles — governed by the Registration of Titles Act, applied primarily in Lagos State. Based on the Torrens system (originated in South Australia, 1858). Three principles: mirror principle, curtain principle, and insurance principle.

In a titles registration jurisdiction like Lagos, a registered mortgage enjoys stronger protection. In a deeds registration jurisdiction, the lender’s security depends on the validity of the underlying documents. Romanes v. Romanes (1963) 1 All NLR 8.

6.1.3 Key Legislation

  • Land Use Act 1978 (Cap L5, LFN 2004)
  • Registration of Titles Act (Lagos State)
  • Land Registration Act (Cap L4, LFN 2004) — FCT and states without their own
  • Stamp Duties Act (Cap S8, LFN 2004)
  • Conveyancing Act 1881
  • Property and Conveyancing Law (Lagos State)
6.2 The Land Search Process

6.2.1 Land Search in Lagos State

Conducted at the Land Registry Directorate of the Lagos Lands Bureau. Search fee approximately ₦3,750. Lagos has introduced an e-search process for electronic access. Turnaround typically a few days to two weeks.

Search reveals: survey plan accuracy, property details (location, size, plot number), currently recognised owner, and encumbrances (mortgages, court orders, caveats, pending applications for Governor’s Consent).

6.2.2 Land Search in Abuja/FCT

Through the Director of Lands Administration. Search fees: ₦10,000 residential / ₦20,000 commercial. Must present original certificate. AGIS database confirms allocations; manual records also checked.

6.2.3 Additional Searches

  • Corporate Affairs Commission (CAC) search — for corporate vendors/borrowers
  • Probate Registry search — for estates being sold
  • Community verification — for South-East/South-South properties with family land
  • Physical inspection and survey verification
6.3 Governor's Consent and Registration in Lagos

Governor’s Consent is the single biggest procedural requirement. Savannah Bank v. Ajilo (1989) 1 NWLR (Pt. 97) 305 — mortgage created without Governor’s Consent is null and void.

  1. Cover letter to Land Registry Directorate
  2. Application Form 1C — signed, sworn before Magistrate
  3. Four copies of Deed of Assignment with survey plan
  4. Evidence of charting and endorsement fees (~₦10,500)
  5. Photograph of property
  6. Tax Clearance Certificates for parties
  7. Four passport photos / CAC documents
  8. Payment of statutory fees
  9. Proof of Land Use Charges/Ground Rent payment

Statutory Fees in Lagos:

Fee Component Rate
Consent Fee 1.5% of transaction value
Capital Gains Tax (CGT) 0.5% of transaction value
Stamp Duties 0.5% of property value
Registration Fee 0.5% of transaction value
Neighbourhood Improvement Charges ₦2/sqm × years title held

Standard budget: approximately 12% of the transaction value for all registration-related expenses. On a ₦50 million transaction, that’s ₦6 million in costs.

6.3.2 Timeline and Costs

Full cycle in Lagos typically 6 months to 1 year, sometimes more. Queries are the main source of delay.

6.3.3 Deed Recording (Lagos Innovation)

When an application for Governor’s Consent is submitted, the transaction is electronically recorded — creating a prior encumbrance visible to anyone who conducts a search. Powerful protection against double-selling.

6.4 Title Registration in Abuja/FCT

Through the Abuja Geographical Information System (AGIS).

6.4.1 Requirements

  • Application form
  • Processing fee: ₦100,000 commercial / ₦50,000 residential
  • Two passport photos
  • Valid means of identification
  • Tax Clearance Certificate

6.4.2 Additional Requirements (Development/Commercial)

  • Schematic design from registered architect
  • Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA) where applicable
  • Evidence of financial and technical capacity
  • For corporate applicants: CAC documents and corporate tax clearance

6.4.3 Special Abuja Provisions

For undeveloped land — AGIS registers Powers of Attorney rather than outright transfers. The original allottee grants a Power of Attorney to the buyer, who then applies for fresh allocation.

For developed land — conveyance through Deed of Assignment.

Building permits handled by the Department of Development Control (DODC) — separate from AGIS.

6.5 The 14-Stage Registration Procedure
  1. Pre-transaction due diligence and search
  2. Negotiation and agreement on terms
  3. Contract of sale execution
  4. Survey and plan preparation or verification
  5. Deed of Assignment preparation
  6. Execution and attestation of deed
  7. Application for Governor’s Consent
  8. Charting and endorsement
  9. Assessment and payment of statutory fees
  10. Processing and verification
  11. Consent approval and endorsement on deed
  12. Stamping at FIRS/state revenue authority
  13. Registration at the Land Registry
  14. Collection of registered title documents

6.5.2 Common Bottlenecks

  • Documentation deficiencies
  • Charting disputes
  • Fee assessment disagreements

Digital initiatives: Lagos electronic filing + Deed Recording; KADGIS (Kaduna); EdoGIS (Edo State).

6.6 State-by-State Variations

Lagos — most developed registration infrastructure, both deeds and titles systems. Timeline 6–12 months.

Abuja/FCT — runs through AGIS. Distinction between developed and undeveloped land. Higher fees than most states.

South-West states (Ogun, Oyo, Ondo, Ekiti, Osun) — similar to Lagos model but less automation.

South-East and South-South (Anambra, Imo, Abia, Enugu, Rivers, Bayelsa) — customary land tenure strong; less automation; oil-related federal interests in some.

Northern states — customary tenure under Islamic law alongside formal system. Kano, Sokoto, Borno: less registration. Kaduna’s KADGIS is a notable exception.

Summary

Land title registration is the process by which private transactions become public facts. Nigeria operates two systems — registration of deeds (instruments only) and registration of titles (guaranteed ownership). Lagos is the primary titles-system jurisdiction. The Governor’s Consent requirement is the most time-consuming step. In Lagos, total registration costs approximate 12% of transaction value over 6–12 months.

Key Terms
  • Land Registration — recording interests in land in a public register
  • Registration of Deeds — records instruments without guaranteeing title
  • Registration of Titles — examines title and guarantees ownership (Torrens system)
  • Governor’s Consent — required under Section 22 LUA for transfer/assignment/mortgage
  • Deed Recording — Lagos innovation, electronic recording on application
  • AGIS — Abuja Geographical Information System
  • Charting — verifying survey plan against master plan
  • Stamping — paying stamp duty for court admissibility
  • Consent Fee — typically 1.5% of transaction value
  • Capital Gains Tax — 0.5% of transaction value on disposal
Review Questions
  1. What is the legal consequence of failing to register a land transaction within 30 days of executing the Deed of Assignment?
  2. Compare the land search process in Lagos and Abuja.
  3. Calculate the approximate total registration costs for a property with a transaction value of ₦50 million in Lagos.
  4. Explain how Deed Recording in Lagos protects mortgage lenders from fraud.
  5. Why do state-by-state variations in registration procedures matter for a national mortgage lender?

📋 Case Study: The Unregistered Deed

Zenith Mortgage Bank is about to disburse a ₦35M mortgage to Mr. Tunde Fashola for a ₦48M property in Magodo. Vendor Mrs. Adaeze Nwosu holds a 2008 C of O. Land search clean. Deed signed but NOT submitted for Governor’s Consent. Mr. Fashola pressing for immediate disbursement because Mrs. Nwosu has another interested buyer.

Under Savannah Bank v. Ajilo, a mortgage created without Governor’s Consent is void. The two-week window does not allow time for the full consent process (6 months to a year). If bank disburses, ₦35M is at risk.

— End of Lesson 6 —

APPENDIX A.6–A.12

Registration Forms and Fee Schedules

Lagos Form 1C, AGIS (Abuja), KADGIS (Kaduna), and PLAGIS (Plateau) application forms; Lagos & Abuja land search forms; consolidated fee schedule across four jurisdictions.

Appendix A — Registration Forms and Fee Schedules

These application forms and the fee schedule cover the four jurisdictions a Nigerian mortgage practitioner is most likely to encounter — Lagos, FCT/Abuja, Kaduna, and Plateau.

A.6 Lagos Form 1C — Application for Governor’s Consent

Form 1C is the standard application form used in Lagos State to apply for Governor’s Consent to a land transaction. Whether the transaction is a sale (assignment), a mortgage, or a sublease, this form must be completed and filed with the Lagos State Lands Bureau. Mortgage professionals encounter it constantly because every mortgage over land in Lagos requires Governor’s Consent, and Form 1C is the first step in that process.

LAGOS STATE LANDS BUREAU
FORM 1C — APPLICATION FOR GOVERNOR’S CONSENT
Application Reference No.: ____________________
SECTION 1: APPLICANT DETAILS
Full Name: ____________________
Address: ____________________
Phone Number: ____________________
Email Address: ____________________
Means of Identification: ____________________
SECTION 2: PROPERTY DETAILS
Property Address: ____________________
Plot Number: ____________________
Block / District: ____________________
Area (Sq. Metres): ____________________
Current Title Reference (C of O No.): ____________________
Survey Plan Number: ____________________
SECTION 3: TRANSACTION DETAILS
Type of Transaction: [ ] Assignment [ ] Mortgage [ ] Sublease [ ] Other: ___________
Consideration (Purchase Price / Loan Amount): ____________________
Date of Deed: ____________________
Name of Solicitor who prepared Deed: ____________________
SECTION 4: VENDOR / ASSIGNOR DETAILS
Full Name: ____________________
Address: ____________________
Phone Number: ____________________
SECTION 5: PURCHASER / ASSIGNEE DETAILS
Full Name: ____________________
Address: ____________________
Phone Number: ____________________
SECTION 6: SOLICITOR DETAILS
Firm Name: ____________________
Solicitor’s Name: ____________________
Address: ____________________
Phone Number: ____________________
NBA Enrollment Number: ____________________
DECLARATION
I, ______________________________________________, the applicant named above, do hereby declare that all information provided in this application is true and correct to the best of my knowledge and belief.
Applicant’s Signature: ____________________
Date: ____________________
Sworn to at the ______________ Magistrate Court this _____ day of ____________, 20___.
Before me (Commissioner for Oaths): ____________________
CHECKLIST OF REQUIRED ATTACHMENTS
[ ] Original and 3 certified copies of the Deed of Assignment / Mortgage Deed
[ ] Certified True Copy of the Certificate of Occupancy
[ ] Current Tax Clearance Certificate (3 years)
[ ] Survey Plan (charted and approved)
[ ] Evidence of payment of Capital Gains Tax (10% of consideration)
[ ] Evidence of payment of Consent Fee
[ ] Evidence of payment of Stamp Duty (varies)
[ ] Passport photographs of Assignor and Assignee (4 copies each)
[ ] Valid means of identification (both parties)
[ ] Current Land Use Charge receipt
[ ] Company documents (if corporate) — CAC certificate, Memorandum & Articles, Board Resolution

Notes for Mortgage Professionals

Form 1C is one of those documents that seems routine but can trip up a transaction if it is not filled in correctly. Common errors include mismatching the C of O number, wrong plot numbers, and incomplete solicitor details. These mistakes cause the Lands Bureau to reject the application and can add weeks or months to the consent timeline. A lending officer tracking a mortgage transaction should confirm that the Form 1C has been filed, check the application reference number, and follow up on the processing status at the Lands Bureau. Lagos has moved parts of the consent process online through its electronic Document Management System (eDMS), which has improved tracking. The consent process in Lagos typically takes three to six months but can take longer if there are queries or if fees are disputed.

A.7 AGIS Application Form — Application for Right of Occupancy (Abuja/FCT)

The Abuja Geographic Information System (AGIS) manages all land administration in the Federal Capital Territory. Any person or corporate body seeking a grant of right of occupancy over a plot in Abuja must apply through AGIS. The form below shows the standard fields. Abuja operates a different system from the states because land in the FCT is administered directly by the federal government through the Federal Capital Territory Administration (FCTA).

FEDERAL CAPITAL TERRITORY ADMINISTRATION
ABUJA GEOGRAPHIC INFORMATION SYSTEM (AGIS)
APPLICATION FOR GRANT OF RIGHT OF OCCUPANCY
SECTION A: APPLICANT PARTICULARS
Full Name (Surname first): ____________________
Residential Address: ____________________
Postal Address: ____________________
Phone Number: ____________________
Email: ____________________
Nationality: ____________________
State of Origin: ____________________
Occupation: ____________________
Type of Identification: [ ] National ID [ ] Int’l Passport [ ] Voter’s Card [ ] Driver’s Licence
ID Number: ____________________
SECTION B: ORGANISATION DETAILS (If Corporate Body)
Name of Organisation: ____________________
RC Number (CAC): ____________________
Registered Address: ____________________
Nature of Business: ____________________
Contact Person: ____________________
TIN (Tax Identification Number): ____________________
SECTION C: LAND PARTICULARS
Preferred District: [ ] Maitama [ ] Asokoro [ ] Wuse [ ] Garki [ ] Gwarinpa [ ] Kubwa [ ] Other: ___________
Plot Size Requested: [ ] 500 sqm [ ] 800 sqm [ ] 1,000 sqm [ ] 1,200 sqm [ ] Other: ___________
Intended Use: [ ] Residential [ ] Commercial [ ] Industrial [ ] Institutional [ ] Mixed Use
Any Existing Allocation (if upgrading): ____________________
SECTION D: SUPPORTING DOCUMENTS CHECKLIST
[ ] 4 passport-sized photographs
[ ] Photocopy of valid means of identification
[ ] Tax Clearance Certificate (3 years)
[ ] Evidence of means / income
[ ] For corporate bodies: CAC Certificate of Incorporation
[ ] For corporate bodies: Memorandum and Articles of Association
[ ] For corporate bodies: Board Resolution authorising the application
[ ] For corporate bodies: Company TIN and Tax Clearance
SECTION E: DECLARATION
I/We hereby declare that the information given above is true and correct. I/We understand that any false declaration may result in the rejection of this application and possible prosecution.
Applicant’s Signature: ____________________
Date: ____________________
PROCESSING FEES
Residential Application: N50,000
Commercial Application: N100,000
Industrial Application: N100,000
(Fees are non-refundable and do not guarantee allocation)
FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY
Date Received: ____________________
File Number: ____________________
Receiving Officer: ____________________
Payment Receipt Number: ____________________
Processing Status: ____________________

Notes for Mortgage Professionals

Land allocation in Abuja follows a different path from the states. The AGIS application is the starting point, but allocation of a plot does not by itself confer a right of occupancy. The applicant must receive a formal offer letter (Right of Occupancy offer), accept it, pay the required fees and development charges, and eventually receive the Certificate of Occupancy. Mortgage lenders should verify where in this process a borrower’s title stands. An offer letter alone, without acceptance and payment, is weak security. Also note that Abuja has faced widespread issues with plot revocations, duplicate allocations, and land-grabbing. A search at AGIS is a must before accepting any Abuja property as collateral.

A.8 KADGIS Application Form — Application for Certificate of Occupancy (Kaduna State)

Kaduna State has been one of the more forward-looking states in land administration reform. The Kaduna State Geographic Information Service (KADGIS) was set up to digitise and streamline the entire process of land registration, title issuance, and property transactions. KADGIS has moved much of its operations online, and applicants can now initiate and track applications through a web portal. The form below reflects the fields captured in the application process.

KADUNA STATE GEOGRAPHIC INFORMATION SERVICE (KADGIS)
APPLICATION FOR CERTIFICATE OF OCCUPANCY
Digital Application Reference: ____________________
GIS Reference Number: ____________________
APPLICANT DETAILS
Full Name: ____________________
Residential Address: ____________________
Phone Number: ____________________
Email: ____________________
Nationality: ____________________
Occupation: ____________________
NIN (National Identification Number): ____________________
Type of Identification: [ ] NIN Slip [ ] Int’l Passport [ ] Voter’s Card [ ] Driver’s Licence
CORPORATE DETAILS (If Applicable)
Company Name: ____________________
RC Number: ____________________
TIN: ____________________
Registered Address: ____________________
LAND DETAILS
Location / Area: ____________________
LGA: ____________________
Plot Number (if known): ____________________
Size (Sq. Metres): ____________________
Intended Use: [ ] Residential [ ] Commercial [ ] Industrial [ ] Agricultural [ ] Institutional
Current Occupant (if different): ____________________
Existing Title Reference (if any): ____________________
DECLARATION
I/We declare that all information above is accurate. I/We understand that providing false information is an offence under the laws of Kaduna State.
Applicant’s Signature: ____________________
Date: ____________________
PROCESSING FEES (KADGIS FEE SCHEDULE)
C of O Processing (Residential, up to 1,000 sqm): N75,000
C of O Processing (Residential, above 1,000 sqm): N150,000
C of O Processing (Commercial): N200,000
C of O Processing (Industrial): N250,000
Survey and Charting Fee: N50,000 – N150,000 (varies by size)
Ground Rent (Annual): Varies by location and size
FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY
Date Received: ____________________
Application ID (Digital): ____________________
Processing Officer: ____________________
Verification Status: ____________________

Notes for Mortgage Professionals

KADGIS is worth studying because it represents where land administration in Nigeria is headed. The digital application tracking means that a lending officer can verify the status of a C of O application or search for encumbrances without the delays associated with manual registries. When dealing with Kaduna properties, ask the borrower for their KADGIS digital reference number and use it to run a verification. Pay attention to plots in areas where the transition from the old manual system to the KADGIS digital system is still ongoing — there have been cases of conflicting records, and a careful search is needed to confirm that the plot is not subject to competing claims.

A.9 PLAGIS Application Form — Application for Right of Occupancy / Certificate of Occupancy (Plateau State)

Plateau State established the Plateau State Geographic Information Service (PLAGIS) to handle land administration across the state. Jos, the state capital, and its environs have a distinctive land history shaped by tin mining, which left behind a patchwork of mining leases, surface rights, and government acquisitions that make land transactions there more complicated than in many other parts of Nigeria. The PLAGIS application form captures the details needed to process a grant of right of occupancy or issuance of a C of O.

PLATEAU STATE GEOGRAPHIC INFORMATION SERVICE (PLAGIS)
APPLICATION FOR RIGHT OF OCCUPANCY / CERTIFICATE OF OCCUPANCY
Application Reference Number: ____________________
APPLICANT DETAILS
Full Name: ____________________
Residential Address: ____________________
Phone Number: ____________________
Email: ____________________
Nationality: ____________________
State of Origin: ____________________
LGA of Origin: ____________________
Occupation: ____________________
Means of Identification: ____________________
CORPORATE DETAILS (If Applicable)
Company / Organisation Name: ____________________
RC Number: ____________________
TIN: ____________________
Registered Address: ____________________
LAND DETAILS
Location: ____________________
LGA: ____________________
District / Village: ____________________
Plot Number (if known): ____________________
Area (Sq. Metres / Hectares): ____________________
Intended Use: [ ] Residential [ ] Commercial [ ] Agricultural [ ] Industrial [ ] Institutional
Previous Mining Lease Reference (if applicable): ____________________
Existing Title or Allocation Reference: ____________________
SPECIAL CONSIDERATIONS (PLATEAU-SPECIFIC)
Jos and surrounding areas have land parcels with historical mining lease interests. Applicants must declare any knowledge of existing or expired mining rights over the land.
Is the land on or near a former mining site? ____________________
Mining Lease Number (if known): ____________________
Has remediation been carried out? ____________________
DECLARATION
I/We declare that the above information is complete and accurate to the best of my/our knowledge.
Applicant’s Signature: ____________________
Date: ____________________
PROCESSING FEES
Right of Occupancy Application (Residential): N40,000
Right of Occupancy Application (Commercial): N80,000
C of O Processing Fee: N60,000 – N120,000 (varies)
Survey Fee: N40,000 – N100,000 (varies by size and terrain)
Ground Rent: As determined by the Plateau State Government
FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY
Date Received: ____________________
File Number: ____________________
Receiving Officer: ____________________
Verification Notes: ____________________

Notes for Mortgage Professionals

Plateau State’s mining legacy creates a layer of complexity that is not found in most other states. Land in and around Jos may be subject to mining leases granted under the Minerals and Mining Act, and these leases can co-exist with or conflict with rights of occupancy under the Land Use Act. Before accepting Plateau State land as mortgage collateral, carry out a search not only at PLAGIS but also at the Mining Cadastre Office to confirm that no active or dormant mining lease affects the property. Also ask whether the site has been used for mining in the past — land that has been mined may have subsidence or contamination issues that affect both structural safety and value.

A.10 Land Search Request Form — Lagos

A land search is the process by which a prospective buyer, lender, or solicitor verifies the ownership status and encumbrance history of a piece of land at the state lands registry. In Lagos, the search is carried out through the Lands Bureau. It is one of the most basic and most important due diligence steps in any land transaction, and no mortgage should be originated without one.

LAGOS STATE LANDS BUREAU
APPLICATION FOR OFFICIAL SEARCH
APPLICANT DETAILS
Full Name of Applicant: ____________________
Address: ____________________
Phone Number: ____________________
Solicitor’s Name (if applicable): ____________________
Solicitor’s Firm: ____________________
PROPERTY DETAILS
Title Number / C of O Number: ____________________
File Number: ____________________
Survey Plan Number: ____________________
Property Address: ____________________
Name of Registered Owner (as known): ____________________
TYPE OF SEARCH REQUESTED
[ ] Title Search — Verify ownership and current registered holder
[ ] Encumbrance Search — Check for mortgages, liens, caveats, or court orders
[ ] Plan Verification — Confirm that the survey plan is genuine and properly charted
[ ] Full Search — All of the above
PAYMENT DETAILS
Search Fee: N3,750 (as at 2025; subject to revision)
Bank / Payment Channel: ____________________
Certificate of Payment Number: ____________________
Date of Payment: ____________________
FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY
Date Received: ____________________
Search Reference Number: ____________________
Assigned Officer: ____________________
Search Result: ____________________
Date of Search Report: ____________________

Notes for Mortgage Professionals

The search report from the Lagos Lands Bureau is the single most important verification document in a Lagos land transaction. It tells you who the registered owner is, whether there are any encumbrances (existing mortgages, court injunctions, caveats), and whether the survey plan matches the registry records. Always insist on a current search report — one conducted within the last three months. Older reports may not reflect recent transactions or encumbrances. Note that the search fee is modest (N3,750 as at 2025), but the turnaround time can range from a few days to several weeks depending on the workload at the Lands Bureau. For urgent transactions, some solicitors file the search in person and follow up daily.

A.11 Land Search Request Form — Abuja (AGIS)

Land searches in the Federal Capital Territory are processed through AGIS. The fees are higher than in Lagos, and the form captures slightly different information because land administration in Abuja is structured around the district and plot numbering system rather than the state-level title referencing used elsewhere.

FEDERAL CAPITAL TERRITORY ADMINISTRATION
ABUJA GEOGRAPHIC INFORMATION SYSTEM (AGIS)
APPLICATION FOR LAND SEARCH
APPLICANT DETAILS
Full Name: ____________________
Address: ____________________
Phone Number: ____________________
Email: ____________________
Purpose of Search: ____________________
PROPERTY DETAILS
C of O Number: ____________________
Plot Number: ____________________
District: ____________________
File Number: ____________________
Name of Registered Owner (as known): ____________________
SEARCH FEES
Residential Plot Search: N10,000
Commercial Plot Search: N20,000
Industrial Plot Search: N20,000
(Fees subject to periodic revision by AGIS)
IDENTIFICATION REQUIRED
Applicants must present a valid form of identification at the time of filing.
ID Type: [ ] National ID [ ] Int’l Passport [ ] Voter’s Card [ ] Driver’s Licence
ID Number: ____________________
FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY
Date Received: ____________________
Search Reference: ____________________
Assigned Officer: ____________________
Findings: ____________________
Date of Report: ____________________

Notes for Mortgage Professionals

An AGIS search is the starting point for any mortgage due diligence on Abuja property. Be aware that AGIS records have, in the past, contained discrepancies — particularly in areas where allocations were made before the GIS system was fully implemented. If the search comes back with conflicting ownership records or unresolved disputes, do not proceed with the lending until the matter is cleared up. Also note that the search report from AGIS will indicate whether the plot has been revoked. Plot revocations in Abuja have been a recurring issue, and a revoked plot is worthless as collateral regardless of what papers the borrower holds.

A.12 Fee Schedule Summary — Registration Costs Across Four Jurisdictions

The cost of registering a land transaction in Nigeria varies a great deal from one jurisdiction to another. What follows is a comparison table showing the main fees and charges a buyer or lender will face in Lagos, Abuja (FCT), Kaduna (through KADGIS), and Plateau State (through PLAGIS). The figures are based on publicly available fee schedules as at 2025 and are subject to change. Where the fee is a percentage, the base is typically the declared transaction value or the government-assessed value of the property, whichever is higher.

Fee / Charge Lagos Abuja (FCT) Kaduna (KADGIS) Plateau (PLAGIS)
Consent Fee Sliding scale: 1.5% – 3% of property value 2% – 6% of assessed value 1% – 3% of assessed value 1% – 2% of assessed value
Capital Gains Tax 10% of gains (payable by vendor) 10% of gains (payable by vendor) 10% of gains (payable by vendor) 10% of gains (payable by vendor)
Stamp Duty 1.5% for properties above N500,000; 0.75% for N500,000 and below 1.5% for properties above N500,000; 0.75% for N500,000 and below 1.5% for properties above N500,000; 0.75% for N500,000 and below 1.5% for properties above N500,000; 0.75% for N500,000 and below
Registration Fee 0.5% – 1% of property value; minimum N10,000 Varies; typically N25,000 – N100,000 per transaction N10,000 – N50,000 depending on type N5,000 – N30,000 depending on type
Search Fee N3,750 N10,000 (residential); N20,000 (commercial) N5,000 – N10,000 N3,000 – N5,000
Application / Processing Fee N25,000 – N50,000 N50,000 (residential); N100,000 (commercial) N75,000 – N250,000 (varies by type and size) N40,000 – N120,000 (varies by type)
Neighbourhood / Development Levy Varies; N50,000 – N500,000 depending on area and LGA Infrastructure Development Charge: varies widely by district Development Levy: N20,000 – N100,000 Development Levy: N10,000 – N50,000
Survey / Charting Fee N150,000 – N500,000 (depends on size and location) Included in AGIS processing or N50,000 – N200,000 N50,000 – N150,000 N40,000 – N100,000

Notes for Mortgage Professionals

The total cost of perfecting title and obtaining Governor’s Consent in Nigeria can run to 8% to 15% of the property’s value, and sometimes higher. This is a serious barrier to formal property transactions and helps explain why so many transfers happen informally. When advising borrowers or structuring a mortgage, factor these costs into the total transaction budget from the start. A borrower who has not budgeted for consent fees, stamp duty, and capital gains tax may find themselves unable to complete the registration process — leaving the lender with collateral that is not properly perfected.

Note also that fees change. Lagos revises its fee schedule periodically; AGIS has adjusted fees multiple times in recent years. KADGIS updates its portal with current charges, which is one advantage of the digital system. Always check the current fee schedule before advising a client.