Buyer Guides
Land Buying Checklist for First-Time Buyers in Sri Lanka
10 min read
A step-by-step checklist covering everything from budget planning and document verification to surveying and deed transfer - so you don't miss a thing.
Before You Start Looking
- Decide your budget including legal fees (1–2%), taxes (approx. 8% on transfer), and surveying costs
- Decide what you're buying land for: residential construction, investment, or agriculture
- Choose your preferred districts and towns
- Set a realistic timeline - land transactions in Sri Lanka take 1–3 months
During Property Search
- View the land in person - never buy without visiting
- Visit at different times of day (morning traffic, evening lighting)
- Check the land during or after rain to assess drainage and flooding
- Talk to neighbours about the area's history and flood risk
- Confirm road access is tarred and direct
Document Checklist
- Title deed (original, not photocopy)
- Encumbrance certificate (last 25 years minimum)
- Approved survey plan (government-licensed surveyor)
- Up-to-date property tax receipts
- Certificate of conformity from local authority (if applicable)
- Seller's NIC or passport for identity verification
Engaging Professionals
- Hire a licensed notary for the deed transfer
- Optionally hire a property lawyer to review all documents
- Use a licensed government surveyor to verify boundaries on site
- Get a valuation from a licensed valuer if taking a bank loan
The Transfer Process
- Negotiate price and sign a sale agreement (sale agreement / memo)
- Pay an agreed deposit (typically 10–25%)
- Complete document verification with your lawyer/notary
- Pay stamp duty and registration fees at the Divisional Secretariat
- Sign the transfer deed before the notary
- Register the deed - you are now the legal owner
After Purchase
- Keep the original deed in a fireproof safe or bank safety deposit box
- Register for property tax in your name
- Fencing or physical demarcation of your boundary is strongly recommended