Conveyancer vs Solicitor — Who Settles Your Property Purchase
Australian property settlement requires legal paperwork. Two professionals can do it: a conveyancer or a solicitor. They’re not the same. Here’s when to choose each in 2026.
What Conveyancers Do
A licensed conveyancer is a property-law specialist. Their role is narrow but deep:
- Review and amend the contract of sale
- Conduct property searches (title, council, water rates)
- Manage transfer of ownership
- Coordinate with lender and seller’s representative
- Calculate adjustments at settlement (rates paid in advance, etc.)
- Lodge transfer with the relevant Land Registry
Cost in 2026: $700–$1,800 depending on state and property type.
What Solicitors Add
A solicitor can do all of the above plus:
- Handle disputes (contract breaches, easement issues)
- Advise on tax structuring (trust ownership, family settlements)
- Manage complex contracts (off-the-plan, multiple titles, mixed-use)
- Defend or initiate litigation if it arises
- Handle related estate or family-law matters
Cost: $1,500–$3,500+ for a property matter, more if complications arise.
When a Conveyancer Is Enough
Most residential purchases. You’re a 95% candidate for conveyancer if:
- Standard freehold residential property
- Straight purchase (no trust, no estate complications)
- Standard finance arrangement
- No prior litigation involving the property
- Clean title with no easement issues
When You Need a Solicitor
- Off-the-plan purchase — multi-year contracts with complex clauses
- Investment property in a trust or company name — entity structuring
- Title problems — covenants, easements, encroachments
- Inheritance-related purchase or sale — probate intersection
- Cross-jurisdiction property (e.g., trustee in one state, property in another)
- Disputes — boundary, body corporate, undisclosed defect post-settlement
State-by-State Notes
- NSW & VIC: Licensed conveyancers are common and well-regulated. For standard purchases, conveyancer is the default choice.
- QLD: Most settlements done by solicitors due to historical regulation. Conveyancers exist but are less prevalent.
- WA: Both common.
- SA: Conveyancers heavily regulated under Conveyancers Act; very competent for standard work.
The Hybrid Approach
Some buyers engage a conveyancer for settlement and a tax advisor separately for structuring questions. This often costs less than a full-service solicitor doing both.
What to Ask Either Professional Before Hiring
- Are you a licensed conveyancer / admitted solicitor with current insurance?
- What’s your typical timeline for a standard settlement?
- What’s not included in your quoted fee (extras you charge for)?
- Have you handled my specific property type recently?
- How will you communicate during the process — email, phone, online portal?
Bottom Line
For a standard residential purchase by an individual, a licensed conveyancer is sufficient and saves $1k–$2k versus a solicitor. Use a solicitor for off-the-plan, trust ownership, disputed titles, or anything beyond a vanilla transaction.