
2200 square metres of serviced land awaits your vision in Mount Pleasant Heights. This residential low-density stand offers a ZESA connection ready for your development plans. The area features well-m...
2200 square metres of serviced land awaits your vision in Mount Pleasant Heights. This residential low-density stand offers a ZESA connection ready for your development plans. The area features well-maintained tarred roads and rich red soil, ideal for building your dream home. With developer cession available, this is a prime opportunity to invest in a growing suburb known for its tranquility and accessibility. Reach out to discuss how this stand fits your plans.
What you'll be on the hook for each month; providers, reliability, and the seller's existing backup setup.
Costs are estimates provided by the listing agent and may vary with usage and tariff changes.
The tenure, deed and zoning rules in plain language. Confirm specifics with your conveyancer before signing.
Instead of a Title Deed for a specific flat, you buy shares in a private company that owns the entire apartment block. Your share certificate grants you the exclusive legal right to occupy a specific unit. Transferring ownership is fast and avoids Deeds Office backlogs, but getting a mortgage is extremely difficult because banks cannot register a bond against company shares.
You are buying a stand or unit from a private developer who holds the Parent Deed for the entire tract of land. The developer guarantees your right to your specific subdivision, but you do not get your own Title Deed until the developer completes all mandated servicing, like roads, water, and sewer infrastructure, and the local authority issues a Certificate of Compliance. If the developer goes bankrupt or stalls on servicing, your capital is tied up and transferring ownership requires their direct approval.
These are properties in affluent or spacious suburbs (like Borrowdale, Greendale, or Highlands). Stands are typically large, ranging from 1,000 square meters up to several acres. Municipal by-laws strictly regulate how much of the land you can build on to maintain the spacious character. These properties often attract higher municipal rates and require significant investment in independent utilities like boreholes and solar due to their size.
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The government recently announced the restitution of 67 commercial farms to foreign white owners protected under Bilateral Investment Promotion and Protection Agreements (BIPPAs), alongside 840 locally-owned farms. Over the last two decades, corrupt "land barons" and informal developers illegally subdivided many of these peri-urban farms around Harare into residential stands.
If you purchase a vacant stand on one of these contested peri-urban farms (especially in the North and West of Harare), your "offer letter" or "cession" is legally worthless. The government is returning the master title to the original investors. Your investment will be wiped out without compensation. Never buy peri-urban land without your conveyancer conducting a rigorous Deeds Office history search to confirm the land is not subject to a BIPPA restitution claim.
Developers frequently advertise stands as "fully serviced" and sell them off-plan. Legally, a stand is not serviced until the City Council issues a formal Certificate of Compliance verifying the roads, water, and sewer infrastructure meet statutory standards.
If you buy a stand without this certificate, the Deeds Office will not issue your Title Deed, and the council will reject your building plans. You will be legally barred from building, living on, or financing the land. Never pay a deposit to a developer without your EAC-registered agent verifying both the subdivision permit and the Certificate of Compliance.
A cession is a contract, not a property right. When you buy under a developer cession, the developer retains the master Title Deed. If the developer goes bankrupt, engages in double-allocation fraud, or defaults on a bank loan secured by the master deed, the bank will seize your stand—even if you have already built a house on it.
The only secure form of land ownership is a registered Deed of Transfer in your name, verified digitally against the SI 76 of 2025 framework. If you are forced to buy under cession, your lawyer must review the developer's master title to ensure it is unencumbered before you deploy capital.
Commercial banks in Zimbabwe almost universally refuse to issue mortgages for vacant land due to extreme collateral risk. They will only finance land if it possesses a fully registered Title Deed and comes packaged with council-approved building plans ready for immediate construction.
Consequently, land acquisition is a hard USD cash game. While developers offer 12 to 24-month installment plans, these are unsecured, high-risk contracts. If you miss a single payment, developers routinely cancel the contract and seize your deposit. Do not commit to buying land unless you have the liquid cash to execute the transaction fully.
Buying a stand simply to hold it for years carries severe holding costs. Local councils penalize land banking by applying escalating, punitive municipal rates to undeveloped stands. These rates bind the land—you cannot eventually sell or transfer the stand without clearing this accumulated debt.
Additionally, if you buy in a gated estate, you are immediately liable for full Homeowners' Association (HOA) monthly levies regardless of whether you have built. You are also legally required to clear the stand of tall grass; if you fail, council contractors will clear it and bill the punitive costs directly to your rates account.
The only secure, bankable form of ownership in Zimbabwe is a registered Deed of Transfer (or Deed of Grant) recorded at the Deeds Office. However, the regulatory landscape has recently shifted. Under Statutory Instrument (SI) 76 of 2025, all traditional paper title deeds are undergoing a compulsory digital validation process. Before purchasing, your conveyancer must now verify that the seller’s paper deed has been validated or converted to a secure digital deed to prevent forged-document fraud.
The Cession Trap: Many new cluster developments and high-density stands are sold under "Cession." This means the developer or local council holds the master Title Deed, and you only own a contractual right to the property. You do not own the land. If the developer goes bankrupt or used the master deed as collateral for a bank loan that defaults, your property is at risk. Never buy a high-value property on cession without a conveyancer reviewing the developer's master title and subdivision permits.
Under the Regional, Town and Country Planning Act, a property’s zoning dictates its maximum yield, but the real market value is driven by commercial conversion potential and densification.
Commercial Conversions: Suburbs bordering the CBD (such as Eastlea, Milton Park, and Belvedere) command massive premiums because residential properties are being converted to commercial offices. However, operating a business on a residentially zoned stand without applying for "Special Consent" or a formal rezoning permit from the City of Harare is illegal. The council can issue enforcement orders forcing you to shut down. Do not pay a "commercial premium" for a residential property unless the agent can provide the approved commercial use permit.
Cluster Densification: In northern suburbs (Borrowdale, Highlands), large low-density stands are being bought for cluster housing. A seller cannot simply carve off a piece of their garden and sell it to you. A legal subdivision requires a Dispensation Certificate and a Certificate of Registered Title. If you buy an "unapproved subdivision," you will not be able to get a Title Deed or build legally.
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