Land fraud is one of the oldest and most common financial crimes in Nigeria. It takes many forms. Sometimes a seller presents documents that look completely legitimate but that are forged or apply to a different piece of land entirely. Sometimes the land is real and the documents are real but the person selling it has no legal authority to do so. Sometimes everything appears fine until another party shows up after you have paid and claims the land as theirs.
What makes farmland particularly vulnerable is that much of it sits in peri-urban or rural areas where formal verification systems are less accessible, where community land rights are informally held, and where buyers are often purchasing remotely and relying on third parties to represent them on the ground. This combination creates significant room for deception, whether deliberate or through the genuine ignorance of a seller who does not fully understand the legal status of what they are selling.
The good news is that most land fraud follows recognisable patterns. Knowing what to look for does not require a law degree. It requires awareness of the warning signs and the discipline to walk away when they appear, regardless of how attractive the land or the price looks on the surface.
“The most dangerous land deal is not the one that looks suspicious. It is the one that looks perfect while something is quietly wrong underneath.”
Red Flag 1: The Seller Creates Urgency Around the Transaction
One of the most consistently reliable warning signs in any land transaction is artificial urgency. “Another serious buyer is coming to see this land tomorrow.” “We have two other offers and the family wants to close this week.” “If you do not confirm by Friday the price goes up.” These phrases are designed to do one thing: prevent you from taking the time to verify what you are being sold.
Legitimate land transactions take time. A registry search alone can take between one and four weeks. A lawyer needs time to review documents. A physical inspection needs to be arranged. A licensed surveyor needs to confirm the boundaries. None of this can be compressed into 48 hours without cutting corners that should not be cut.
A seller who is genuinely offering a clean piece of land with proper documentation has nothing to lose by giving you time to verify. A seller who is hiding something has everything to gain by rushing you past the point where the problem would be discovered. The moment someone pressures you to decide before your verification is complete, slow down rather than speed up. That pressure itself is the signal.
Red Flag 2: The Price Is Significantly Below Market Rate
Land in Nigeria, like any asset, has a market value that reflects its location, soil quality, accessibility, and current demand in that area. When land is offered at a price that is significantly below what comparable parcels in the same area are selling for, there is almost always a reason, and that reason is rarely good for the buyer.
Distressed land is sometimes sold cheaply because a title dispute makes it legally risky. Government-acquired land is sometimes offered below market because the seller knows the acquisition exists but hopes the buyer will not find out. Fraudulently obtained land is priced attractively to attract buyers quickly before the deception is discovered. In each of these cases, the low price is not a bargain. It is a discount being offered in exchange for a risk the seller is transferring to you.
Before engaging with any land offer, spend time understanding what comparable land in the same area is genuinely selling for. Speak to local agents, check recent transactions, and ask your lawyer or farm management company about typical prices in that corridor. If the offer is 30% or more below that range without a clear, verifiable explanation, treat it as a warning sign rather than a lucky find.
Red Flag 3: The Seller Discourages Independent Legal Verification
This is perhaps the single clearest signal in any land transaction. A seller who has a genuine, clean piece of land with proper documentation has absolutely nothing to fear from independent verification. They will welcome your lawyer reviewing the documents. They will support your application for a registry search. They will accompany you or your representative to the land for a physical inspection. They will facilitate a search at the Surveyor-General’s office.
A seller who discourages, delays, or creates obstacles to any of these steps is protecting something. The excuses vary. “The registry is slow, it will take too long.” “You can trust me, we have done this many times.” “The documents are with a family member who is travelling, we can sort it later.” “My lawyer says the search is not necessary for this type of land.” None of these are acceptable reasons to proceed without verification. All of them are reasons to stop.
It is also worth noting that some sellers genuinely do not understand why certain verification steps are needed. They may not be acting in bad faith but may simply not know that a registry search is standard practice or that an unregistered deed does not fully protect the buyer. In these cases, a firm but polite insistence on proper due diligence is still the right approach. If the deal is legitimate, the additional verification will only confirm what the seller already believes to be true.
Red Flag 4: Documents Are Inconsistent or Incomplete
When you look at the documents in a land transaction, they should tell a coherent story. The name on the C of O should match the name of the person signing the Deed of Assignment. The parcel number on the C of O should match the file number on the Survey Plan. The dates should follow a logical sequence. Previous transactions in the chain of title should be properly documented and registered.
Inconsistencies in land documents are not always the result of fraud. Sometimes they arise from clerical errors, name changes after marriage, or administrative oversights in the registration system. But every inconsistency must be investigated and explained before a transaction proceeds, and the investigation must be done by a qualified lawyer rather than resolved by accepting the seller’s verbal explanation.
Common document problems to watch for include a Survey Plan signed by a surveyor whose license has expired or who cannot be verified with the Surveyor-General’s office, a C of O that was issued but later revoked by the state for unpaid ground rent or breach of conditions, a Deed of Assignment that was never registered and therefore has no public record at the lands registry, and a power of attorney used to authorise the sale that is outdated, unsigned, or unregistered. Your lawyer should check each of these specifically rather than only doing a general review.
Red Flag 5: A Third Party Is Already on or Using the Land
When you visit a piece of land that is being offered for sale and you find that someone else is already using it, whether they are farming on it, living on it, or have structures built on it, this is not simply a matter of clearing tenants before development. It is a signal that a competing claim to the land exists and that the seller’s title may be contested or incomplete.
In some cases, the person in possession is a caretaker or tenant who has been placed there by the legitimate owner, and the situation is straightforward. In other cases, the person in possession claims their own right to the land that predates or competes with the seller’s. In a third scenario, which is more common than many buyers realise, the person in possession is the actual legitimate holder of the land and the seller is a fraudulent third party who has no genuine connection to it at all.
Nigerian courts have consistently held that a person in long-term peaceful possession of land has a legal interest that cannot simply be ignored or overridden. This means that buying land with someone already on it, without fully resolving the legal basis of their presence first, is buying into an active dispute. The cost of resolving that dispute after purchase almost always exceeds whatever savings you made on the purchase price.
What to Do When You Spot a Red Flag
The first thing to do when you notice any of the warning signs above is to stop the transaction at that point and not resume it until the issue has been fully investigated and resolved. This sounds simple but it is harder in practice because of the psychological pull of a deal that has already taken up your time and energy. Sunk cost thinking leads many buyers to proceed with a transaction they have doubts about simply because they have already spent time negotiating it. That is exactly the wrong approach.
When a red flag appears, engage a lawyer immediately if you have not already done so and share the specific concern with them. Ask them to focus their review on that issue. If the concern is about documents, ask for a registry search to be filed. If the concern is about a third party in possession, ask your lawyer what the legal basis of their presence is and what steps would be needed to resolve it before purchase. If the concern is about seller authority, ask for documented evidence of the right to sell.
If the seller refuses to cooperate with the investigation or if the investigation reveals that the concern is legitimate and cannot be resolved, walk away. The land was not the only land available. The money you would have paid is still intact. The time you spent is the only loss, and that time was well spent if it prevented a far more costly mistake.
Why Buying From a Verified Source Changes the Equation
The most effective way to avoid all five of these red flags is to buy from a source that has already done the verification work before you come into the picture. This is the model Vantage Nigeria operates on. Every parcel of farmland we sell has already gone through a full title verification process, including registry searches, survey plan confirmation with the Surveyor-General’s office, and legal review of the chain of title. Our clients receive copies of all these documents and are encouraged to have their own lawyers review them independently.
This does not mean buyers should skip their own due diligence. It means that when you buy from a company with a proper verification process in place, you are starting from a much cleaner position than if you are navigating an unverified private transaction on your own. The red flags described in this article are far less likely to appear because the problematic land never made it into the inventory in the first place.
Remember: No seller’s reassurance, however convincing, replaces a properly conducted registry search, an independent legal review, and a physical inspection of the land in question. These three steps are the minimum standard for any farmland purchase in Nigeria, and none of them should ever be skipped regardless of how much you trust the person selling to you.
Vantage Nigeria sells only verified, dispute-free farmland
We have already done the registry searches, the legal reviews, and the physical verifications on every parcel we offer. When you ask us about a piece of land, you are asking about land that has already passed all five of these checks. Our team is happy to walk you through the documentation on any available parcel before you make any commitment. Reach us at vantagenigeria.com.
Oyindamola works with Vantage Nigeria’s land acquisition and client advisory team, helping investors understand the legal and operational landscape of farmland investment in southwest Nigeria. Her work focuses on making complex land and agribusiness topics accessible to both first-time and experienced investors.
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