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Fees are LPC guideline tariffs — negotiable in some cases. These are the standard market reference for 2026.

Total Attorney Fees (incl. VAT)
R 70 493
5.04% of property value
Transfer Attorney (on R 1 400 000)
Fee excl. VATR 30 649
VAT (15%)R 4 597
Fee incl. VATR 35 246
Bond Attorney (on R 1 260 000)
Fee excl. VATR 30 649
VAT (15%)R 4 597
Fee incl. VATR 35 246
Combined excl. VATR 61 298
Total VATR 9 195
Total incl. VATR 70 493

Three levels of detail — pick yours

Tier 1 — Simple

Property value + bond amount → total attorney fees excl./incl. VAT. Instant result.

Tier 2 — Extended

Complete breakdown with Deeds Office + bank fees, full LPC fee scale table with your value highlighted, and negotiation guide.

Tier 3 — Professional

Multiple attorney quote comparison tool, complete transaction cost timeline, and full disbursements breakdown.

What Is Conveyancing and Who Pays?

Conveyancing is the legal process of transferring property ownership and registering a mortgage bond at the Deeds Office. Two separate conveyancers (attorneys) are involved in a typical home purchase — a transfer attorney and a bond attorney — and the buyer pays both sets of fees.

  • Transfer attorney — appointed by the seller; handles the Deeds Office transfer of ownership; fee based on the purchase price
  • Bond attorney — appointed by the bank; registers the mortgage bond; fee based on the bond (loan) amount

In some transactions a single attorney may handle both transfer and bond registration (typically when the same law firm acts for both), but the buyer still pays two separate fee accounts.

How Conveyancing Fees Are Calculated

South African conveyancing fees follow the Legal Practice Council (LPC) guideline tariff. The tariff uses a tiered formula: a base fee for each bracket, plus an incremental fee per unit of value above the bracket threshold. All fees are subject to 15% VAT.

Fee (excl. VAT) = Base Fee + ceil((Value − Threshold) ÷ Unit Size) × Per-Unit Rate

Example: For a R1,400,000 property:

Tier: R1,000,001–R5,000,000 (base R26,385, +R2,132 per R200,000 above R1,000,000)
Amount above threshold: R1,400,000 − R1,000,000 = R400,000
Units: ceil(400,000 ÷ 200,000) = 2 units
Fee excl. VAT: R26,385 + 2 × R2,132 = R30,649
VAT (15%): R4,597
Fee incl. VAT: R35,246

LPC Guideline Conveyancing Fee Tariff (2026)

The table below shows the full LPC guideline tariff tiers and example fees at various property values. Fees are calculated according to the formula above, with VAT added at 15%.

Fee Structure by Tier

Value Range Base Fee Per-Unit Rate Unit Size
R0 – R100 000 R6 906
R100 001 – R500 000 R6 906 R1 102 R50 000
R500 001 – R1 000 000 R15 725 R2 132 R100 000
R1 000 001 – R5 000 000 R26 385 R2 132 R200 000
R5 000 001 – above R69 025 R5 366 R1 000 000

Example Fees at Common Property Values

Property / Bond Value Fee excl. VAT VAT (15%) Fee incl. VAT
R100 000 R6 906 R1 036 R7 942
R200 000 R9 110 R1 367 R10 477
R300 000 R11 314 R1 697 R13 011
R500 000 R15 722 R2 358 R18 080
R750 000 R22 121 R3 318 R25 439
R1 000 000 R26 385 R3 958 R30 343
R1 500 000 R32 781 R4 917 R37 698
R2 000 000 R37 045 R5 557 R42 602
R3 000 000 R47 705 R7 156 R54 861
R5 000 000 R69 025 R10 354 R79 379
R10 000 000 R95 855 R14 378 R110 233

Fees are LPC guideline tariffs for 2026, excluding disbursements (postage, FICA, etc). Actual fees charged by individual firms may differ.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I negotiate conveyancing fees in South Africa?

The LPC guideline tariff is exactly that — a guideline. South African attorneys may charge more or less than the guideline, depending on the complexity of the transaction and their firm's pricing policy. In practice, most conveyancers charge at or near the guideline.

For the transfer attorney: the seller appoints them, but the buyer pays. You can request that the seller appoint a firm that charges closer to the guideline, but you have limited direct influence. For the bond attorney: appointed by the bank, so fees are largely non-negotiable unless your bank offers promotions.

Why are there two separate attorneys for one property transaction?

The transfer and bond registration are legally separate transactions at the Deeds Office, and each party — the seller/buyer and the bank — is represented by their own attorney to protect their respective interests. The transfer attorney ensures ownership transfers correctly; the bond attorney ensures the bank's security interest (the mortgage) is properly registered.

In some transactions the same attorney may act as both transfer and bond attorney, but they still issue two separate fee accounts representing the two distinct legal functions performed.

What disbursements are charged on top of the conveyancing fee?

In addition to the LPC guideline professional fee, conveyancers charge disbursements — out-of-pocket expenses incurred in performing the transaction. Common disbursements include:

  • FICA (financial intelligence) compliance: R200–R500 per person
  • Deeds Office transfer fee: R50–R7,751 (depending on value)
  • Electronic lodgement fees
  • Postage and couriers: R300–R600
  • Deeds Office searches: R19–R100

Total disbursements typically add R1,000–R2,000 to the attorney account, quoted separately from the professional fee.

When must I pay the conveyancing fees?

Both the transfer and bond attorneys will request payment of their accounts approximately 1–2 weeks before the Deeds Office lodgement date. Funds must be received and cleared before lodgement can proceed. The Deeds Office registration typically takes 8–15 business days after lodgement.

Payment is usually required via EFT directly to the attorney's trust account. You will receive a formal account with the exact amount — do not pay based on estimates alone.

Do I need my own attorney when buying property?

You are not legally required to appoint your own attorney when buying property — the transfer attorney (appointed by the seller) represents the transaction, not specifically either party. However, for complex transactions, high-value purchases, or situations where you have concerns about the seller or the title deed, appointing an independent attorney to review documents and advise you is prudent.

If you do appoint your own attorney, their fees are separate from and in addition to the transfer and bond attorney costs.