glossary Glossary 3 min read

Registrar-General (NSW)

The Registrar-General is the NSW statutory officer responsible for the land titles register under the Real Property Act 1900. Title dealings registered via NSW LRS.

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The Registrar-General is the statutory officer responsible for the NSW land titles register, established under the Real Property Act 1900 (NSW). The office:

  1. Maintains the Torrens-system register of land titles for NSW.
  2. Registers, modifies, and cancels easements, restrictive covenants, mortgages, caveats, leases, and other dealings that affect title.
  3. Issues Certificates of Title (now substantially electronic since the 2019 abolition of paper certificates).
  4. Operates the NSW Land Registry Services (NSW LRS) as the public-facing service layer.

The Registrar-General’s office sits within the NSW Department of Customer Service (operationally) and the Real Property Act provides its statutory powers. Verified 2026-05-16.

Where the Registrar-General appears in a residential project:

  • Title searches return information from the Registrar-General’s register.
  • New easements (sewer, drainage, right-of-way) created on subdivision are registered via the Registrar-General under a Section 88B instrument.
  • Restrictive covenants on title (e.g. minimum dwelling size, building-setback covenants) are registered via the Registrar-General and cannot be discharged without their formal cancellation.
  • Mortgages over the land are registered against the Registrar-General’s register.
  • Caveats lodged by parties claiming an interest (e.g. an unpaid builder lodging a caveat for a Builder’s Lien under the Civil and Administrative Tribunal Act in NSW) become a public record once accepted.

Cross-state equivalents:

StateEquivalent office
NSWRegistrar-General (this)
VicRegistrar of Titles
QldRegistrar of Titles
WARegistrar of Titles
SARegistrar-General
TasRecorder of Titles
NTRegistrar-General
ACTRegistrar-General (Access Canberra)

What the Registrar-General does NOT do:

  • Planning approval. That’s councils and the Department of Planning (under the EP&A Act).
  • Building approval. That’s certifiers under the EP&A Regulation.
  • Title dispute resolution. Disputes go to court (Supreme Court of NSW, Land and Environment Court for planning-related, or local courts for smaller matters); the Registrar-General is a registry, not a tribunal.
  • Validity of underlying title documents. The Registrar-General registers what is presented if it satisfies the form; the substantive validity of an instrument can be challenged in court.

Also known as: R-G; NSW Registrar; Land Titles Registrar.

Category: Approvals.

See also


Last updated: 2026-05-16. Verified: 2026-05-16. Quarterly review for currency.