How to Prepare for Settlement Day in Victoria 

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Settlement day is when ownership of a property officially transfers, but the work that ensures the day runs smoothly starts long beforehand.
In Victoria, most of the pressure around settlement comes not from the moment the transfer occurs but from whether lenders, documents and financial details are organised early.Across suburbs like Pakenham, Officer, Clyde North, Berwick, Cranbourne and Drouin, buyers and sellers often describe settlement as a “black box” until the steps are explained. Once the process is understood, settlement becomes far more predictable and significantly less stressful.This guide outlines what buyers and sellers should do before settlement, where delays usually arise and how to reduce last-minute issues.

What Buyers Need to Do Before Settlement

Complete lender requirements early

Most lender delays occur because signed mortgage documents or identification checks were returned too late. Banks generally need several business days to process paperwork. Returning everything promptly is one of the most effective ways to avoid a stalled settlement.

Arrange the pre-settlement inspection

Under the standard Contract of Sale of Real Estate used in Victoria, buyers are entitled to a final inspection before settlement. This allows them to confirm that the property is in the same condition as when the contract was signed and that any agreed repairs have been completed.

Check insurance requirements

Many lenders require buyers to have building insurance in place before they will book settlement. Even though the standard Victorian contract places risk on the seller until settlement (unless possession is taken earlier), buyers should confirm their lender’s insurance requirements early to avoid delays.

Prepare any required funds

If the buyer is contributing personal funds in addition to their loan, the conveyancer will provide instructions for transferring these into the digital settlement workspace. Sending funds too late is a common cause of last-minute settlement disruption.

What Sellers Need to Do Before Settlement

Arrange discharge of mortgage

If the property is mortgaged, the seller’s bank must prepare discharge documents before settlement. Banks often require 10–15 business days to complete this. The conveyancer requests discharge early to prevent delays.

Respond to adjustment queries

Council rates, water charges and other outgoings are adjusted between the parties at settlement. Sellers help by providing recent statements so calculations can be prepared accurately.

Deliver keys and remotes to the agent

Providing keys, remotes and manuals to the selling agent ahead of time ensures they can be released as soon as settlement is confirmed.

Prepare the property for vacant possession

If the contract requires vacant possession, the property must be fully vacated, clean and ready for handover before settlement is completed.

What Actually Happens During Settlement in Victoria

Many people picture settlement as an in-person meeting with cheques, paperwork and keys exchanged across a table. In Victoria, settlement has not worked that way for years.

Settlement is now digital

Nearly all settlements occur electronically through platforms such as PEXA. Conveyancers, lenders and Land Use Victoria communicate and complete the legal and financial steps online. Buyers and sellers do not attend.

Conveyancers complete the checks digitally

Inside the electronic workspace, conveyancers for each party:

• verify identity and authority
• review and agree on adjustment figures
• confirm loan funds or payout figures
• approve the transfer of land
• confirm bank instructions
• set the settlement time

When all parties have signed off, the platform completes the settlement automatically.

Funds move electronically

The buyer’s lender provides funds. The seller’s bank receives the payout for the mortgage. Any balance is transferred to the seller’s nominated account.

Title updates instantly

Once financial settlement is complete, Land Use Victoria updates the electronic title. The buyer becomes the registered proprietor and any mortgage is added or discharged as required.

The agent is notified

Only after settlement is confirmed will the conveyancer notify the selling agent to release the keys.

What Can Delay a Property Settlement?

Most settlement issues result from tasks that were not completed early enough.

Lender delays

If the buyer’s lender has not finalised loan documents or the seller’s bank has not completed the discharge, settlement cannot proceed.

Outstanding contract conditions

If finance approval, building inspections or other conditions have not been met, settlement cannot occur until they are satisfied or resolved.

Errors in financial information

Incorrect payout figures or missing account details inside the digital workspace will prevent settlement from completing.

Last-minute changes

Attempting to alter settlement dates or instructions late in the process often causes avoidable delays.

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A Scenario That Reflects Common Experience

A buyer in Clyde North arranged a 60-day settlement. Their loan was approved, but their signed mortgage documents were returned during the week of settlement. The bank could not process them in time. The buyer’s conveyancer rescheduled settlement, contacted the seller’s representative and managed expectations early so the delay did not escalate. Once the documents were finalised, the settlement proceeded smoothly.

How to Make Settlement Day Predictable

Buyers can reduce stress by returning lender documents early, arranging inspections promptly and staying in contact with their conveyancer. Sellers can keep the process moving by organising mortgage discharge requests early and preparing the property for handover.Most importantly, any early signs of delay should be raised with the conveyancer as soon as they appear. With clear preparation and communication, settlement day becomes a straightforward transfer rather than a moment of uncertainty.