Title insurance has become a common feature of British Columbia real estate transactions. Many purchasers first encounter it as a single premium collected at completion—easy to overlook until a title or property issue surfaces years later and the question becomes: who pays to fix it?
Understanding what title insurance covers (and what it does not), and how it differs from conveyancing due diligence, allows property owners and lenders to make informed choices about risk.
What Is Title Insurance?
Title insurance is a one-time premium insurance product issued by private insurers. It is designed to indemnify an owner or a lender for specific losses and legal costs arising from covered title defects or related risks. An owner’s policy typically remains effective for as long as the insured retains the insured interest in the property, while a lender’s policy generally remains in place for the life of the mortgage—subject to the policy terms.
How Title Insurance Fits Within BC’s Land Title System
British Columbia’s land title system operates under the Land Title Act and is based on a Torrens-style registration model. As a general rule, legal title and registered charges are determined by the land title register, which provides a high degree of certainty for purchasers and lenders.
That said, no system is immune from risk. Fraud, registration errors, and document defects—while uncommon—can occur. Title insurance is one tool used in practice to allocate the financial consequences of certain covered problems if they arise after completion.
What Title Insurance Can Cover (and What “Coverage” Really Means)
Coverage depends on the insurer and the policy wording. In most transactions, title insurance is intended to respond to certain risks that may not be revealed through routine closing searches or that arise from specific covered events after completion. These often include fraud or forgery affecting a transfer or mortgage, certain defects in title or document issues within the chain of title, and (in some policies) narrowly defined “off-title” risks such as particular encroachment, zoning, or permit-related issues.
It is worth being precise about “unknown liens.” Properly registered charges are generally discoverable through a standard title search. Where title insurance responds, it is typically because the issue falls within the policy’s definition of a covered defect or covered risk, not simply because something was “unknown” in a general sense.
Title Insurance vs. a Lawyer’s (or Notary’s) Role
Title insurance and conveyancing due diligence do different work. A lawyer or notary conducts the conveyancing process, reviews the state of title and registered charges, prepares and registers documents, and structures completion to comply with applicable BC requirements. Title insurance does not prevent defects from existing. Instead, it is a contractual promise to indemnify for covered loss and, in many cases, to fund or manage the legal response if a covered issue is discovered after closing.
Is Title Insurance Mandatory in BC?
Title insurance is not generally required by BC statute for every purchase. In practice, many mortgage lenders require it as a financing condition. Purchasers without financing may still opt for an owner’s policy depending on the property, the transaction’s complexity, and risk tolerance.
When Title Insurance Becomes Important
Claims commonly arise long after completion. For example, an owner might discover that a prior instrument in the chain of title was affected by fraud or forgery, that a document defect has created a covered title problem, or that a covered encroachment or permit issue has resulted in a defined loss or legal expense. Without title insurance, the cost of addressing the problem—whether through negotiation, remediation, litigation, or settlement—typically falls on the owner, subject to any other available remedies.
What Title Insurance Does Not Cover
Title insurance is not a catch-all. Policies commonly exclude issues that were known or disclosed before purchase (depending on wording), matters caused or permitted by the current owner after closing, risks that fall outside the policy’s definitions of “defect,” “covered risk,” or “loss,” and categories of risk that are expressly excluded (which may include certain boundary, environmental, or use-related issues, depending on the product).
Bottom Line
In British Columbia, title insurance is best understood as a targeted risk-transfer product. It does not replace conveyancing due diligence and should not be described as guaranteeing that no title problem can arise. It can, however, provide meaningful financial protection and a funded response if a covered issue emerges after closing—particularly where the cost of resolving the issue would otherwise be significant.
Whether title insurance is appropriate depends on the nature of the property, the transaction, and individual risk tolerance. Coverage and limitations can vary. To discuss how title insurance fits into your real estate transaction, please contact Northam Law Corporation at 604-630-2350 or melissa@northam-law.com.
** The information in this article is for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Laws can and do change over time and every legal situation is unique. You should consult with a qualified legal professional, such as the team at Northam Law, to obtain advice tailored to your specific circumstances before making any decisions.
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