Title Register and Title Plan Bundle
The bundle supplies a copy of the title register and a copy of the title plan for the same registered property or piece of land in England and Wales. The two documents are designed to be read together, so the bundle is the recommended way to understand a registered title as a whole. Order both for £39.95.
Why the two documents belong together
The title register and the title plan are two halves of one record. The register names the registered owner and sets out the tenure, rights, restrictions, covenants and charges where recorded — and it describes the land by referring to the plan. The plan shows the general extent of that land on a map, using coloured edging, tinting and reference letters that only the register explains.
Read on its own, each document leaves questions open. The register may say that the land “edged blue” is subject to a right of way, but without the plan you cannot see where that land is. The plan may show an area tinted pink, but without the register you cannot know what that tint means. Ordering both closes the loop.
What each document covers
| Title Register | Title Plan | |
|---|---|---|
| Registered owner | Yes, where recorded | No |
| Tenure (freehold or leasehold) | Yes, where recorded | No |
| Rights, covenants and restrictions | Yes, where recorded | Colour references only |
| Mortgages and charges | Yes, where recorded | No |
| Extent of the land | Text description referring to the plan | Map-based general extent |
| Title number | Yes | Yes |
| Boundary precision | Not a boundary document | General boundaries — not usually precise boundary evidence |
Bundle pricing
Ordered separately, the register (£24.95) and the plan (£24.95) come to £49.90. The bundle costs £39.95, a saving of £9.95 for the same two documents.
When the bundle is the right choice
- Checking who owns a property and seeing the extent of the land they own
- Reviewing a property before buying, extending or starting a boundary conversation
- Replacing lost paper deeds with the current registered record
- Understanding which land a covenant, right of way or charge affects
- Preparing background information before instructing a solicitor or surveyor
If you are confident you only need one document, the title register and title plan are available individually.
How your order is handled
- You give us the property address, or a description for land without an address.
- A person checks the details and identifies the registered title.
- If more than one title could match — common with flats, garages and parcels of land — we contact you before continuing.
- We retrieve both documents and deliver them as PDFs through a secure, expiring link.
What the bundle does not include
- Filed documents referred to in the register — see filed documents for how to request these.
- Precise legal boundary positions — title plans usually show general boundaries.
- Legal advice or interpretation of either document.
- Documents for unregistered land, because no registered title exists.
Frequently asked questions
What is included in the bundle?
The bundle includes a copy of the title register and a copy of the title plan for the same registered title. The register is the written ownership record; the plan shows the general extent of the land on a map.
Why order both documents together?
The register and the plan are designed to be read together. The plan uses coloured markings and references that only the register explains, and the register describes land by referring to the plan. Ordering both gives the fullest view of the registered title.
Do both documents relate to the same title?
Yes. The bundle supplies the register and the plan for the same registered title, so the references in each document line up with the other.
Is the bundle cheaper than buying separately?
Yes — the bundle is priced below the combined cost of ordering the register and the plan as separate orders. The exact saving is shown on this page and at checkout.
Does the bundle include filed documents or the lease?
No. Filed documents — deeds, transfers, conveyances and leases referred to in the register — are separate. If the register refers to a document you need, see our filed documents page or contact us for a quote.
What if the property is not registered?
A small proportion of land in England and Wales is still unregistered, meaning there is no register or plan to retrieve. If that appears to be the case, we contact you to discuss options, which may include a refund in line with our refund policy.
Related guides
Order the Title Register and Title Plan together
Provide the property details, choose the documents you need and we’ll locate and securely deliver the relevant copies.
