Land Registry
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Land Registry
Anyone any experience recently ?
Bought our current house in November last year, no mortgage and am still waiting for the land registry to finalise the matter.
Solicitors are telling me that it's just the way it is these days. It just seems a long time. I worked in property all my life and never, ever experienced a delay like this.
Any comments would gratefully received.
Bought our current house in November last year, no mortgage and am still waiting for the land registry to finalise the matter.
Solicitors are telling me that it's just the way it is these days. It just seems a long time. I worked in property all my life and never, ever experienced a delay like this.
Any comments would gratefully received.
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Re: Land Registry
That does seem like an interminably long time, Fd.Funkydrummer wrote: ↑Mon Aug 18, 2025 9:59 amAnyone any experience recently ?
Bought our current house in November last year, no mortgage and am still waiting for the land registry to finalise the matter.
Solicitors are telling me that it's just the way it is these days. It just seems a long time. I worked in property all my life and never, ever experienced a delay like this.
Any comments would gratefully received.
I moved in May having started the conveyancing process in late January. So around 13 weeks to completion. Fortunately, things went relatively smoothly.
I'd keep pestering your brief.
Have you not actually completed yet?
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Re: Land Registry
Just sold 2 completed in 3 months give or take a odd week the land registry side was slow I used foleys in accrington & the hold up was from the buying sides solicitors. It shouldn't take that long. You need to find out precisely where they are at & question why things are taking so long.
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Re: Land Registry
Made an application on 21/1/25 expected completion was May now August !!!!
Rang and chased the other day and basically told that's just how it is we have a backlog.
Asked if they could give me an expected time scale they No.
I questioned surely they must know where I'm in the queue and how many they are doing a month so they must have a idea of how much longer they said 'No"
Rubbish
Rang and chased the other day and basically told that's just how it is we have a backlog.
Asked if they could give me an expected time scale they No.
I questioned surely they must know where I'm in the queue and how many they are doing a month so they must have a idea of how much longer they said 'No"
Rubbish
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Re: Land Registry
Yeah, completed back in November believe it or not !!!! Gonna chase the solicitors again today, but just wondered if anyone else is having/ has had the same experience.ElectroClaret wrote: ↑Mon Aug 18, 2025 10:09 amThat does seem like an interminably long time, Fd.
I moved in May having started the conveyancing process in late January. So around 13 weeks to completion. Fortunately, things went relatively smoothly.
I'd keep pestering your brief.
Have you not actually completed yet?
Thanks for the reply.
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Re: Land Registry
Land reg takes forever these days, but they seem to be going for a record with that one! If you search the property on the website and click the option for request official copies there should be a note stating there is an update pending on the title in question. That’ll at least show it’s in progress.Funkydrummer wrote: ↑Mon Aug 18, 2025 9:59 amAnyone any experience recently ?
Bought our current house in November last year, no mortgage and am still waiting for the land registry to finalise the matter.
Solicitors are telling me that it's just the way it is these days. It just seems a long time. I worked in property all my life and never, ever experienced a delay like this.
Any comments would gratefully received.
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Re: Land Registry
Regardless of the continually negative media hype, a lot of the Civil Service is hopelessly understaffed.
You get the service you pay for.
You get the service you pay for.
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Re: Land Registry
That’s pretty normal timescales at the moment.Funkydrummer wrote: ↑Mon Aug 18, 2025 9:59 amAnyone any experience recently ?
Bought our current house in November last year, no mortgage and am still waiting for the land registry to finalise the matter.
Solicitors are telling me that it's just the way it is these days. It just seems a long time. I worked in property all my life and never, ever experienced a delay like this.
Any comments would gratefully received.
Part of the delay is that there is a big piece of work underway with ordinance survey and trying to make sure that titles, boundaries etc are much more accurately defined than the historical records we have now. This involves the ordinance people coming out to land that is being registered to measure and draw these up (obviously also leads to queries, parties needing to agree etc)
Some land registrations can be expedited but normal domestic house sales are lower priority. Might be frustrating but it’s not an issue for you. If for some reason you had to sell the house then that would classify for expediting and then it would be weeks not months.
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Re: Land Registry
Do we? It feels as if most (all?) civil service departments moved over to home working during Covid, resulting in a substantial fall in productivity. But with that now behind us, a large proportion of civil service employees continue to work from home and pre-covid productivity levels have never recovered and at an additional cost too, with'expenses' being paid for said commuting-cost saving employees to use their own homes. Tome it appears that nowadays we're getting less than we're paying for.dougcollins wrote: ↑Mon Aug 18, 2025 10:44 amRegardless of the continually negative media hype, a lot of the Civil Service is hopelessly understaffed.
You get the service you pay for.
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Re: Land Registry
We were told deeds currently take 6 to 12 months to come thru after a sale.
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Re: Land Registry
Given the size of the land Registry office in Lytham/Warton, you would expect to see traffic coming on and off the main road there. I don't think I've ever seen a car waiting to turn into said office or out of. Kind of supports the covid/working from home argument.
Re: Land Registry
Give the LR a ring and ask them to look it up on their system rather than be told “we have a back log” at that point ask them to expedite it.
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Re: Land Registry
It suits the media to feed you that crap, just don't believe everything you're told.AfloatinClaret wrote: ↑Mon Aug 18, 2025 11:19 amDo we? It feels as if most (all?) civil service departments moved over to home working during Covid, resulting in a substantial fall in productivity. But with that now behind us, a large proportion of civil service employees continue to work from home and pre-covid productivity levels have never recovered and at an additional cost too, with'expenses' being paid for said commuting-cost saving employees to use their own homes. Tome it appears that nowadays we're getting less than we're paying for.
And no, I'm not a Govt employee, far from it.
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Re: Land Registry
We were also told up to 12 months. I questioned that with the conveyancer we'd used and said surely that's a typo, you meant 12 weeks not months, and they said no, months.Cardclaret wrote: ↑Mon Aug 18, 2025 11:21 amWe were told deeds currently take 6 to 12 months to come thru after a sale.
We're 4 months in on our wait.
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Re: Land Registry
Extremely slow and have been since Covid which they’ve been using as an excuse for the last few years. Public sector inefficiency with people ‘working ‘from hone.
Re: Land Registry
We have been gardening a plot at the top of our garden (between us and the railway) for nigh on 30 years as have all the houses from us to the end of our road.... we applied through our solicitors a couple of yrs ago to put it on our deeds as it was unclaimed land ... Land registry were supposed to be coming out to look at it to finalise it ... Still nowt sortedFunkydrummer wrote: ↑Mon Aug 18, 2025 9:59 amAnyone any experience recently ?
Bought our current house in November last year, no mortgage and am still waiting for the land registry to finalise the matter.
Solicitors are telling me that it's just the way it is these days. It just seems a long time. I worked in property all my life and never, ever experienced a delay like this.
Any comments would gratefully received.
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Re: Land Registry
Public sector worker here . Probably more process and problems with that than people working from home being the issue . However a lot of organisations come under that title " public sector " so hard to speak for all of them .
Re: Land Registry
Hmmmm, too many people reading right wing bilge and taking it all in...but yes, we're probably paying even more and getting less.AfloatinClaret wrote: ↑Mon Aug 18, 2025 11:19 amDo we? It feels as if most (all?) civil service departments moved over to home working during Covid, resulting in a substantial fall in productivity. But with that now behind us, a large proportion of civil service employees continue to work from home and pre-covid productivity levels have never recovered and at an additional cost too, with'expenses' being paid for said commuting-cost saving employees to use their own homes. Tome it appears that nowadays we're getting less than we're paying for.
We've been getting less since 2012 with the Cameron/Clegg coalition. Public Services were cut back drastically to the point where even the working textile museums at Harle Syke and Helmshore were put in mothballs and public conveniences were shut down as Local Authorities couldn't afford to run them.
Front line police officers were lost and nurses run ragged on the wards, social workers were given bigger case loads and waste disposal operatives averaged pay increases way less than inflation for the subsequent decade....hence rubbish piling up in Birmingham even now....
.......but I digress....yes, HM Land Registry is quite slow as i noted with a house purchase some time back.
No doubt running on a shoe string like the rest of the public sector.
Seem to recall Cameron introducing the Big Society...the Government running the country using volunteers!!
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Re: Land Registry
Thanks for all your contributions. Didn't consider that it may veer towards a political debate along the way but, thankfully, that was largely avoided.
Sent an email to the solicitors and, in the meantime, will actually enquire of the Land Registry.
Sent an email to the solicitors and, in the meantime, will actually enquire of the Land Registry.
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Re: Land Registry
Me and Mrs PLC bought our current house in Dec-23. I got a letter from my solicitor to confirm the HM Land Reg was all sorted in about May-25.
Re: Land Registry
Tories cut public service and public winders why everything they need is either a long time coming or in the hands of folk exploiting them.Funkydrummer wrote: ↑Mon Aug 18, 2025 9:59 amAnyone any experience recently ?
Bought our current house in November last year, no mortgage and am still waiting for the land registry to finalise the matter.
Solicitors are telling me that it's just the way it is these days. It just seems a long time. I worked in property all my life and never, ever experienced a delay like this.
Any comments would gratefully received.
Re: Land Registry
Sorry, but these (and a lot of the entries on this thread) are just rubbish.ElectroClaret wrote: ↑Mon Aug 18, 2025 10:09 amThat does seem like an interminably long time, Fd.
I moved in May having started the conveyancing process in late January. So around 13 weeks to completion. Fortunately, things went relatively smoothly.
I'd keep pestering your brief.
Have you not actually completed yet?
1. The time it takes for a transaction to be processed will depend on what you bought.
2. The present delays for first registration, transfer of part, adverse possession, and anything else vaguely complicated is over a year and has been like that for quite some time.
3. Yes it has been like that before. In the 1990's delays forecast at 72 weeks, 84 weeks were not uncommon.
4. The land registry will expedite, but only if there is good reason to do so. I see no good reasons on this thread, just whinging.
5. Ringing "your brief" will only do any good if they have not submitted the application. If they have, then you need to wait your turn like everybody else.
6. Calling somebody "your brief", translates to mean "I am a criminal". Nobody else uses that expression.
7. Delays are caused for all sorts of reasons. Covid? Yes. Working from home? Yes. People keep ringing them up? Yes - which is why they now won't answer the phone on a Friday. Thanks. Government's **** ing about with staamp duty? Yes.
At this point, they should slowly be catching up because volume has dropped off for a few months, but that won't help anybody that completed in the period prior to, say, May very much.
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Re: Land Registry
I understand everything that you are saying. BUT are you also saying they shouldn't have a realistic time scale on anyone's application? If that's the case why bother giving a time scale in the first place as they did in my case. They raised my expectations by saying when I sent my application in January it would be complete by May.timshorts wrote: ↑Mon Aug 18, 2025 11:24 pmSorry, but these (and a lot of the entries on this thread) are just rubbish.
1. The time it takes for a transaction to be processed will depend on what you bought.
2. The present delays for first registration, transfer of part, adverse possession, and anything else vaguely complicated is over a year and has been like that for quite some time.
3. Yes it has been like that before. In the 1990's delays forecast at 72 weeks, 84 weeks were not uncommon.
4. The land registry will expedite, but only if there is good reason to do so. I see no good reasons on this thread, just whinging.
5. Ringing "your brief" will only do any good if they have not submitted the application. If they have, then you need to wait your turn like everybody else.
6. Calling somebody "your brief", translates to mean "I am a criminal". Nobody else uses that expression.
7. Delays are caused for all sorts of reasons. Covid? Yes. Working from home? Yes. People keep ringing them up? Yes - which is why they now won't answer the phone on a Friday. Thanks. Government's **** ing about with staamp duty? Yes.
At this point, they should slowly be catching up because volume has dropped off for a few months, but that won't help anybody that completed in the period prior to, say, May very much.
With all the planned building of houses will it not take longer moving forward? You say a lot of comments are "rubbish'" but people are paying for a service.
So if the time scale to quote you should maybe 84 weeks then say so at the outset. I'm one of the people whinging but only because of what I was originally told. How many years is the "Covid" excuse going to get played out for.
Re: Land Registry
Perhaps they meant May 26?Yorkshirelad wrote: ↑Wed Aug 20, 2025 7:24 amI understand everything that you are saying. BUT are you also saying they shouldn't have a realistic time scale on anyone's application? If that's the case why bother giving a time scale in the first place as they did in my case. They raised my expectations by saying when I sent my application in January it would be complete by May.
With all the planned building of houses will it not take longer moving forward? You say a lot of comments are "rubbish'" but people are paying for a service.
So if the time scale to quote you should maybe 84 weeks then say so at the outset. I'm one of the people whinging but only because of what I was originally told. How many years is the "Covid" excuse going to get played out for.
Re: Land Registry
The 84 week thing was years ago, when we used to get estimates in multiples of 6 (or 12 when they were very behind).Yorkshirelad wrote: ↑Wed Aug 20, 2025 7:24 amI understand everything that you are saying. BUT are you also saying they shouldn't have a realistic time scale on anyone's application? If that's the case why bother giving a time scale in the first place as they did in my case. They raised my expectations by saying when I sent my application in January it would be complete by May.
With all the planned building of houses will it not take longer moving forward? You say a lot of comments are "rubbish'" but people are paying for a service.
So if the time scale to quote you should maybe 84 weeks then say so at the outset. I'm one of the people whinging but only because of what I was originally told. How many years is the "Covid" excuse going to get played out for.
Unless your application was, say, a DJP, that estimate looks over optimistic for most of the last 5 years.
The "new houses" will likely all take over a year to register as they are generally all going to get new titles, so it will go to somebody more senior. Those are the ones taking forever.
Re: Land Registry
My wife is a solicitor. She says this is absolutely normal in terms of timescales. Things are improving but at a very slow rate
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Re: Land Registry
Bought a new home in 2019 and wanted to put up for sale the start of 2024 and deeds still not registered at land registry !!
Solicitors said to me unless you ring/contact them saying there's a urgency i.e. selling - your just stuck in a very big backdated Q.
Solicitors said to me unless you ring/contact them saying there's a urgency i.e. selling - your just stuck in a very big backdated Q.
Re: Land Registry
There seem to be conflicting stories about the Land Registry and other government bodies. One being that covid and working from home made the system grind to a halt, and the other being that working from home is just as good as working from the office.