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The Building Control (Amendment) Act 2026 has fundamentally altered the risk landscape for every property transaction in Uganda that involves a structure. Signed into law on 19 February 2026 as part of a package of three housing and construction statutes (State House, Uganda), the amendment expands the enforcement powers of the National Building Review Board (NBRB), introduces scale-based financial penalties linked to building size, and grants local Building Committees explicit demolition and evacuation authority.
For practising conveyancers, bank legal teams and buyers, these changes mean that conveyancer due diligence in Uganda must now include a structured building-compliance verification process before any transfer is registered, or face penalties, title encumbrances and potential lender exposure that did not exist under the original Building Control Act (Cap 136) of 2013.
The Building Control Act Uganda originally enacted in 2013 (Act No. 10 of 2013) established a framework for building standards, plan approvals and the NBRB. The 2026 building control amendment act introduced several material changes that directly affect conveyancing practice:
Key timeline: The Building Control (Amendment) Bill was passed by Parliament and received Presidential Assent on 19 February 2026 (State House). Practitioners should treat the Act as operative and adjust their title transfer building compliance procedures immediately.
The practical consequences of these amendments ripple directly into conveyancing transactions. A property with an unapproved or non-compliant building now carries measurable statutory risk that can delay or defeat a transfer.
Industry observers expect that lender building compliance requirements will tighten rapidly as banks update their internal policies to reflect the new penalty regime.
Understanding the institutional architecture is essential before running any verification checklist. The building control amendment act distributes responsibilities across three tiers:
The following conveyancing checklist sets out every document a practitioner should obtain and review before completing a property transfer involving a building. This checklist reflects the enhanced requirements under the Building Control Act Uganda as amended in 2026.
| Document | Issuer | How to Verify | Typical Red Flags |
|---|---|---|---|
| Approved building plan | Local Building Committee / KCCA | Request certified copy from issuing authority; cross-check against BIMS reference number | Unsigned plans; plans that do not match the as-built structure; no BIMS record |
| Building permit | Local Building Committee / KCCA | Obtain original or certified copy; verify permit number on BIMS portal | Expired permit; permit issued for a different plot or owner; no record in authority files |
| Pre-construction inspection report | Building Control Officer | Request from local authority records | Absent report; report noting material objections that were never resolved |
| In-construction inspection records | Building Control Officer | Request inspection file from local authority; verify inspection stamps on permit | Gaps in inspection sequence; stop-work notices that were not lifted |
| Building compliance certificate / Occupation certificate | Local Building Committee / KCCA | Obtain certified copy; verify on BIMS; confirm it matches current use | No certificate issued; certificate issued for a different use class; conditional certificate with unmet conditions |
| NBRB building approval (where required) | NBRB | Check BIMS or write directly to NBRB | No record of NBRB involvement where the building class requires it |
| Certificate of structural safety | Registered structural engineer (endorsed by Building Committee) | Verify engineer’s registration; check endorsement stamp | Unsigned certificate; engineer not registered with relevant professional body |
| Permit for change of use (if applicable) | Local Building Committee / KCCA | Request from authority; compare with original approved plan | Building used for a purpose different from the approved plan without a change-of-use permit |
| Certificate of no pending enforcement action | Local Building Committee / NBRB | Written search request to both bodies | Outstanding demolition or evacuation order; pending investigation |
| Evidence of payment of development charges | Local authority | Obtain receipts; confirm with local authority accounts department | Unpaid charges that could result in an encumbrance on the title |
| BIMS / NBRB database search result | NBRB (via BIMS portal) | Run search by plot number, permit number or owner name | No record found; discrepancies between physical documents and digital record |
| Local authority search (general) | District / Municipal / KCCA | Submit formal search request | Outstanding notices, road-widening schemes or compulsory acquisition orders affecting the plot |
| Insurance certificate | Insurance company | Verify policy is current; confirm building is covered for its actual use | Policy excludes structures without approved plans; policy lapsed |
| Lender survey and valuation (if mortgage-funded) | Lender-appointed valuer | Review valuation report for building compliance commentary | Valuer flags unapproved extensions, change of use or structural concerns |
Note for residential vs. commercial: All documents above apply to both residential and commercial transactions. For commercial properties and multi-storey buildings, the requirement for NBRB-level approval and a certificate of structural safety is heightened. Conveyancers handling commercial transactions should also verify fire-safety certificates and environmental compliance where the building’s use class demands it.
Knowing what to check is only half the task. The following step-by-step process explains how to run an NBRB building approval search and obtain verified records from local Building Committees.
Access the BIMS portal through the NBRB website. Search using the plot number, building permit reference or the registered owner’s name. Print the search result and retain it on the conveyancing file. If the portal returns no result, this is itself a red flag, proceed to Step 2.
Submit a formal written request to the District or City Building Committee (or KCCA in Kampala) asking for certified copies of the approved plan, building permit, all inspection records, and the compliance or occupation certificate. Use the following template:
“Dear Secretary, Building Committee [District/KCCA],
Re: Building Compliance Search, Plot [Number], [Location]
We act for [Buyer/Lender] in connection with the proposed acquisition/mortgage of the above property. Pursuant to the Building Control Act (Cap 136) as amended by the Building Control (Amendment) Act 2026, kindly provide certified copies of: (a) the approved building plan; (b) the building permit; (c) all inspection records; (d) the compliance/occupation certificate; and (e) confirmation that no enforcement action, demolition order or evacuation order is pending against the property. Please also confirm the BIMS reference number, if any. We enclose the prescribed search fee.”
Check that all certificates bear the official stamp of the issuing authority, the signature of the authorised Building Control Officer and, where applicable, a BIMS digital reference number. Compare physical documents against the BIMS search result from Step 1.
Engage a qualified building surveyor to inspect the property and confirm that the as-built structure conforms to the approved building plan. Any material deviation, additional floors, extensions, change of use, must be reported and addressed before completion.
Prepare a building compliance report summarising the verification results. This report should clearly state whether the building is compliant, partially compliant (with specified remediation steps) or non-compliant. Share the report with the buyer, the lender (if mortgage-funded) and, where instructed, with the seller’s conveyancer.
Banks and financial institutions lending against Ugandan property will, as a matter of risk management, tighten their lender building compliance requirements in light of the 2026 amendments. The likely practical effect will be a standard requirement for the following items before any mortgage advance:
“It shall be a condition precedent to the advance of the Loan that the Borrower delivers to the Lender a certified building compliance certificate issued by the relevant Building Committee pursuant to the Building Control Act (Cap 136) as amended, together with a BIMS search confirmation from the NBRB confirming no pending enforcement action against the Property.”
The penalties building control Uganda framework introduced by the 2026 amendments are significantly more onerous than the original regime. Key provisions include:
For conveyancers, the critical takeaway is that a pending or potential enforcement action, even one not yet formally lodged, can defeat or delay a title transfer. Running a thorough compliance check before exchange is no longer optional; it is a professional necessity under the building control amendment act.
The following numbered checklist is designed for direct use in a conveyancing file. Each action item identifies the responsible party and a suggested timeline relative to completion.
“Completion of this Agreement is conditional upon the Seller delivering to the Buyer, not later than [number] Business Days before the Completion Date, a certified building compliance certificate issued by the [relevant Building Committee / KCCA] pursuant to the Building Control Act (Cap 136) as amended, together with a BIMS search result confirming no pending enforcement action. If the condition is not satisfied by the Long-Stop Date, the Buyer may rescind this Agreement and the Deposit shall be refunded in full.”
“Where the building compliance certificate has not been obtained prior to drawdown, the Lender shall retain [percentage/amount] of the Loan advance in an escrow account pending delivery of the certificate. The Borrower indemnifies the Lender against all losses, costs and liabilities arising from any enforcement action, demolition order or evacuation order issued under the Building Control Act (Cap 136) as amended in respect of the Property.”
Drafting notes: Clause A is appropriate where the transaction timeline allows the seller to obtain the certificate before completion. Clause B is a fallback for time-sensitive transactions where the lender is willing to proceed subject to financial protection. In all cases, early engagement with the relevant Building Committee is critical to avoid last-minute delays. Practitioners should also consider requiring the seller to provide a statutory declaration confirming that no enforcement proceedings have been threatened or commenced.
| Entity | Powers / Duties Under the 2026 Act | Practical Effect for Conveyancers |
|---|---|---|
| National Building Review Board (NBRB) | Hear complaints and appeals; expanded enforcement oversight; publish binding guidance; manage BIMS data at national level | Use NBRB resources and BIMS to verify national-level approvals; escalate ambiguities or disputes to the NBRB; check for pending complaints |
| Local Building Committee / Building Control Officer | Approve building plans; issue permits; conduct inspections; grant compliance and occupation certificates; order demolition or evacuation | Primary source for building permits and compliance certificates, obtain certified copies; request confirmation of no pending enforcement action |
| Lenders | Not statutory enforcement bodies, but will require verified compliance documentation as a condition of lending; may impose holdbacks or indemnities | Obtain lender survey and compliance certificates; include contractual protections (escrow, indemnity clauses); notify lender of any compliance issues before drawdown |
The Building Control (Amendment) Act 2026 has raised the stakes for every property transaction involving a building in Uganda. Conveyancers who fail to verify building compliance before transfer expose their clients, and themselves, to enforcement action, financial penalties and collateral risk that the original 2013 Act did not contemplate. The conveyancing checklist and sample clauses set out in this guide provide a practical framework for meeting the new standard. Practitioners are encouraged to integrate this checklist into their standard file procedures immediately, liaise proactively with the NBRB and local Building Committees, and ensure that lenders are fully informed of building compliance status before any advance is made.
For further guidance on related Uganda tax changes in 2026, including stamp duty implications, and on Uganda employment law changes in 2026 as part of the broader 2026 legislative programme, see our companion guides. Practitioners dealing with court-ordered transfers should also consult our guide on how to obtain a vesting order in Uganda.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Patrick Kabagambe at Birungyi, Barata & Associates, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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