Local land charges
Search fees
We currently offer an expedited search service for LLC1 and CON29 requests costing an additional 50% of the original search fee. Results will be returned within 24 hours of the searches acceptance, or we will refund you the difference between the cost of the expedited and standard search.
Please note that searches submitted to us after 3.30pm are accepted the next working day.
Search type |
Charge |
---|---|
Residential* LLC1 and CON29 |
£115 |
Commercial* LLC1 and CON29 |
£143.50 |
CON29O Q4 to Q21 (with LLC1 and CON29) |
£13 each |
CON29O Q22 (with LLC1 and CON29) |
£21 |
Certificate of search (LLC1) | £25.50 |
Residential* CON29 only |
£89.50 |
Commercial** CON29 only |
£118 |
CON29O Q4 to Q21 (without LLC1 and CON29) |
£15 each |
CON29O Q22 (without LLC1 and CON29) |
£23 |
Additional typed enquiries |
£17.50 each |
Additional parcel of land** (LLC1 only) |
£5.50 each |
Additional parcel of land** (CON29 and/or CON29O) |
£20.50 each |
Responses to enquiries about official search results |
£41 each |
Refresher search (when requested within three months receipt of the original official search) |
One free update |
Personal search |
*Definitions of residential and commercial property/land can be found on our submit a search page.
**Parcel of land means land (including a building or part of a building), which is separately occupied or rated or, if not occupied or rated, in separate ownership e.g. a block of flats or several industrial/commercial units.
Multiple parcels on one official search request
Multiple parcels on one official search request are valid if:
- a single purchaser is buying all the parcels in one single transaction
- the applicant has confirmed in writing the above to be true
- all parcels have common boundaries or are separated only by a road, railway, river, stream or canal
Multiple parcels on one official search request are invalid if:
- a single purchaser cannot be proven for all parcels
- all parcels are not being purchased in one single transaction
- the parcels do not have a common boundary and are separated by more than a road, railway, river, stream or canal
Something becomes a separate parcel when:
- it is separately occupied
- it is separately ‘rated’ for council tax or non-domestic rate purposes
- it is allocated a unique property reference number (UPRN) or it is street name and numbered with an official postal address