You don't need to be physically present in Ghana to verify a land title. What you need is the right process, a competent lawyer, and an understanding of how Ghana's land registry system works.
This guide walks you through the exact 5-step verification process used by professionals who handle diaspora property transactions daily.
Why the Lands Commission Is Your Best Friend
Ghana's Lands Commission maintains the official land registry. Every registered parcel of land in Ghana should have a record there—including the current owner, any encumbrances, and the land's official dimensions.
The problem? Many Ghana land transactions happen outside this system. Family land, stool land, and informally transferred plots may not appear in the official registry at all. That's why verification is critical.
The 5-Step Verification Process
Step 1: Obtain the Official Land Details from the Seller
Before anything else, get the following from the seller:
The plot number and location address
The registered owner's name (as it appears on the title)
The land certificate number or instrument number
The original indenture or land title document
If the seller can't or won't provide these, that's your first red flag.
Step 2: Conduct a Manual Search at the Lands Commission
Your lawyer should physically visit or file online with the Lands Commission to conduct a search using:
The land certificate/instrument number, or
The registrable instrument (deed) number, or
The owner's name and location
The search reveals the current registered owner, any caveats, liens, or encumbrances on the land, and the land use classification.
"A clean search result doesn't mean the land is problem-free—it means the registered title is clear. Always verify physical possession too."
Step 3: Verify the Seller's Identity Against the Registry
This step is often skipped but critically important. Confirm that:
The seller's name matches exactly what's on the title document
The seller's Ghana Card or passport matches the identity on file
The seller has the legal authority to sell (not a third party without power of attorney)
For family land or stool land, verify who actually has the authority to sell. It may require a family meeting or chief's consent.
Step 4: Conduct a Site Inspection
Even from 5,000 miles away, you need someone on the ground to:
Physically visit the land and confirm it exists
Verify the boundaries match what's described in documents
Check if anyone else is currently occupying or claiming the land
Photograph the land with identifiable landmarks
You can use a trusted family member, a property inspection service, or your lawyer's network.
Step 5: Verify with the District Assembly and Utility Companies
Two additional checks complete the picture:
District Assembly: Confirm the land is in a zone approved for residential development
Utility companies: Check if there are plans to run roads, power lines, or drainage through the plot
What to Do If Problems Surface
If your verification reveals issues:
Owner mismatch: Don't proceed until resolved
Encumbrances: Understand what they are and get them cleared before purchase
Occupants: Negotiate for them to vacate or reduce the price accordingly
Unregistered land: Proceed with extreme caution and get legal advice
How Much Does Verification Cost?
Budget for:
Lands Commission search: GHS 500-2,000
Lawyer's due diligence fee: GHS 3,000-8,000
Site inspection (if using a service): GHS 500-1,500
District Assembly verification: GHS 200-500
This might seem expensive, but it's nothing compared to losing your entire investment.
The Bottom Line
Verifying a Ghana land title is not optional—it's the difference between a secure investment and a devastating loss. The 5 steps above take 1-2 weeks if you have a competent lawyer. Take the time. Do it right.
Lands Commission Land Verification Ghana Land Title Due Diligence Diaspora