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Can You Amalgamate a Land Office Title with a Registry Title in Malaysia?

Can You Amalgamate a Land Office Title with a Registry Title in Malaysia?

You can amalgamate mixed title types with State Authority sanction; the new combined lot will be under a Registry title. Learn the law, steps and alternatives

Amalgamate Land Office vs Registry Title? (Malaysia Guide)

Can You Amalgamate a Land Office Title with a Registry Title in Malaysia?

Updated: • 6–8 min read

Amalgamating adjacent lots with different title types requires State Authority sanction.
TL;DR: You can amalgamate when one lot is a Land Office title (e.g., HS(D)/Mukim) and the other a Registry title (e.g., GR/PN) — but only with State Authority sanction. If sanctioned, the new combined lot will be held under a Registry title, and the State Authority may direct how to align tenure, rent, category of land use, and conditions.

What the Law Says (National Land Code, 1965)

  • Who can apply: A proprietor of two or more contiguous lots may apply to amalgamate them into one title.
  • Approving officer: If all lots are Land Office titles and the combined area = 4 hectares ? Land Administrator; otherwise ? State Director.
  • Mixed titles case: If the lots are held partly under Registry and partly under Land Office title, approval requires State Authority sanction. Upon sanction, the combined area is held under Registry title; the State Authority may direct a uniform tenure, rent, category of land use and conditions/restrictions to be endorsed on the title.
  • Issue of new title: After approval, a single document of title is issued for the combined area.

Eligibility & Pre-Check Checklist

  1. Contiguity: Lots must share at least one common boundary.
  2. Same proprietor(s): Names on both titles should match (complete transfers first if needed).
  3. Planning compliance: Secure any required Kebenaran Merancang/local council clearances.
  4. Encumbrances: Get written consent from chargees/lienholders (banks/financiers).
  5. Revenue up to date: Settle quit rent & assessment.
  6. Title types: If mixed (Land Office + Registry), be ready to seek State Authority sanction and expect the new title to be Registry.

Two Practical Pathways

A) Mixed Titles (Land Office + Registry) — Standard Route

Path: Apply for amalgamation and obtain State Authority sanction.

Outcome: New single Registry title with aligned tenure, rent, land-use category and conditions as directed.

B) SBKS Alternative (Surrender & Re-Alienation)

When useful: You also plan to re-plan the site, change land category/conditions, or standardise very different lease balances. SBKS lets the State accept surrender and re-alienate as one purpose-built lot with harmonised terms.

Who Signs Off (At a Glance)

  • All Land Office titles = 4 ha: Land Administrator
  • Any other case (incl. mixed titles or > 4 ha): State Director, plus State Authority sanction where required

Documents & Steps

  1. Application: Submit in Form 9C with prescribed fees.
  2. Plans: Site plan showing all lots to be amalgamated (copies as required by Land Office).
  3. Planning approval: Attach any required KM/OSC approvals (if applicable).
  4. Consents: Written consents from chargees/lienholders.
  5. Processing: Land Administrator/State Director checks statutory conditions; if State Authority sanction is needed, the file is escalated with recommendations.
  6. Survey & fees: Pay survey and title-preparation fees; pay any premium if tenure/category extensions are directed.
  7. New title issuance: Receive a single title for the combined area (Registry title for mixed cases).

Real-World Scenarios

  • GM 1.5 acres + GR 12 acres (contiguous): Apply with State Authority sanction ? final title will be Registry with aligned terms.
  • Two HS(D) lots totaling 3.8 ha: Standard amalgamation by Land Administrator (no mixed titles, = 4 ha).
  • Two HS(D) lots totaling 6 ha: Approval by State Director due to area > 4 ha.

FAQ

Can I directly amalgamate Land Office + Registry titles?
Not by default. You’ll need State Authority sanction. If granted, the new title will be a Registry title with directions to align tenure, rent, land-use category and conditions.

Do the lots need identical categories/conditions first?
Not necessarily. Dissimilarities are a bar to ordinary approval, but the State Authority may direct standardisation as part of its sanction.

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Tags:

land lawNLC 1965amalgamationregistry titleland office titleSBKSMalaysia property

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