Procedures to register property (number) - Country Ranking

Definition: Number of procedures to register property is the number of procedures required for a businesses to secure rights to property.

Source: World Bank, Doing Business project (http://www.doingbusiness.org/).

See also: Thematic map, Time series comparison

Find indicator:
Rank Country Value Year
1 Brazil 13.61 2019
2 Nigeria 11.77 2019
3 Eritrea 11.00 2019
3 Greece 11.00 2019
5 Kenya 10.00 2019
5 Algeria 10.00 2019
5 Solomon Islands 10.00 2019
5 Uganda 10.00 2019
5 Liberia 10.00 2019
5 Venezuela 10.00 2019
11 Uzbekistan 9.00 2019
11 San Marino 9.00 2019
11 St. Lucia 9.00 2019
11 Uruguay 9.00 2019
11 Trinidad and Tobago 9.00 2019
11 Eswatini 9.00 2019
11 Egypt 9.00 2019
11 Belize 9.00 2019
11 Afghanistan 9.00 2019
11 India 9.00 2019
11 Nicaragua 9.00 2019
11 Philippines 9.00 2019
23 Pakistan 8.30 2019
24 Namibia 8.00 2019
24 Grenada 8.00 2019
24 Jamaica 8.00 2019
24 Sri Lanka 8.00 2019
24 Bangladesh 8.00 2019
24 Bulgaria 8.00 2019
24 Belgium 8.00 2019
24 Ecuador 8.00 2019
24 Dem. Rep. Congo 8.00 2019
24 São Tomé and Principe 8.00 2019
24 Liechtenstein 8.00 2019
24 France 8.00 2019
24 Tanzania 8.00 2019
24 Puerto Rico 8.00 2019
24 Lebanon 8.00 2019
24 Mozambique 8.00 2019
40 Mexico 7.66 2019
41 Korea 7.00 2019
41 Kuwait 7.00 2019
41 Guatemala 7.00 2019
41 Guyana 7.00 2019
41 Malta 7.00 2019
41 Colombia 7.00 2019
41 Cyprus 7.00 2019
41 Ethiopia 7.00 2019
41 Brunei 7.00 2019
41 Bosnia and Herzegovina 7.00 2019
41 Argentina 7.00 2019
41 Luxembourg 7.00 2019
41 Cambodia 7.00 2019
41 Sierra Leone 7.00 2019
41 Slovenia 7.00 2019
41 Ukraine 7.00 2019
41 St. Vincent and the Grenadines 7.00 2019
41 Antigua and Barbuda 7.00 2019
41 The Bahamas 7.00 2019
41 Bolivia 7.00 2019
41 Barbados 7.00 2019
41 North Macedonia 7.00 2019
41 Panama 7.00 2019
41 South Africa 7.00 2019
65 Zambia 6.00 2019
65 Peru 6.00 2019
65 Paraguay 6.00 2019
65 Romania 6.00 2019
65 Myanmar 6.00 2019
65 Montenegro 6.00 2019
65 Madagascar 6.00 2019
65 Malaysia 6.00 2019
65 Turkey 6.00 2019
65 Yemen 6.00 2019
65 Serbia 6.00 2019
65 Suriname 6.00 2019
65 Sudan 6.00 2019
65 Poland 6.00 2019
65 El Salvador 6.00 2019
65 Chile 6.00 2019
65 Angola 6.00 2019
65 Chad 6.00 2019
65 St. Kitts and Nevis 6.00 2019
65 Lao PDR 6.00 2019
65 Jordan 6.00 2019
65 Japan 6.00 2019
65 Iran 6.00 2019
65 Israel 6.00 2019
65 Morocco 6.00 2019
65 Honduras 6.00 2019
65 Indonesia 6.00 2019
65 Cabo Verde 6.00 2019
65 Djibouti 6.00 2019
65 Dominican Republic 6.00 2019
65 Spain 6.00 2019
65 Gabon 6.00 2019
65 United Kingdom 6.00 2019
65 Guinea 6.00 2019
65 The Gambia 6.00 2019
65 Germany 6.00 2019
65 Malawi 6.00 2019
65 Singapore 6.00 2019
65 Equatorial Guinea 6.00 2019
65 Haiti 6.00 2019
105 Iraq 5.00 2019
105 Hong Kong SAR, China 5.00 2019
105 Croatia 5.00 2019
105 Mali 5.00 2019
105 Kiribati 5.00 2019
105 Palau 5.00 2019
105 Mongolia 5.00 2019
105 Mauritius 5.00 2019
105 Netherlands 5.00 2019
105 Costa Rica 5.00 2019
105 Guinea-Bissau 5.00 2019
105 Canada 5.00 2019
105 Dominica 5.00 2019
105 Zimbabwe 5.00 2019
105 Ireland 5.00 2019
105 Central African Republic 5.00 2019
105 Ghana 5.00 2019
105 Moldova 5.00 2019
105 Somalia 5.00 2019
105 Tunisia 5.00 2019
105 Albania 5.00 2019
105 Vietnam 5.00 2019
105 Burundi 5.00 2019
105 Côte d'Ivoire 5.00 2019
105 Cameroon 5.00 2019
105 Congo 5.00 2019
105 Senegal 5.00 2019
105 Samoa 5.00 2019
105 Thailand 5.00 2019
134 United States 4.40 2019
135 Tajikistan 4.00 2019
135 Seychelles 4.00 2019
135 Syrian Arab Republic 4.00 2019
135 Burkina Faso 4.00 2019
135 Australia 4.00 2019
135 Vanuatu 4.00 2019
135 Latvia 4.00 2019
135 Lesotho 4.00 2019
135 Italy 4.00 2019
135 Kazakhstan 4.00 2019
135 Hungary 4.00 2019
135 Botswana 4.00 2019
135 Czech Republic 4.00 2019
135 Fiji 4.00 2019
135 Switzerland 4.00 2019
135 Benin 4.00 2019
135 Azerbaijan 4.00 2019
135 Belarus 4.00 2019
135 Comoros 4.00 2019
135 Nepal 4.00 2019
135 Russia 4.00 2019
135 Tonga 4.00 2019
135 Niger 4.00 2019
135 Mauritania 4.00 2019
135 Papua New Guinea 4.00 2019
160 China 3.55 2019
161 Armenia 3.00 2019
161 Denmark 3.00 2019
161 Finland 3.00 2019
161 Estonia 3.00 2019
161 Rwanda 3.00 2019
161 Oman 3.00 2019
161 Kyrgyz Republic 3.00 2019
161 Iceland 3.00 2019
161 Lithuania 3.00 2019
161 Austria 3.00 2019
161 Bhutan 3.00 2019
161 Togo 3.00 2019
161 Slovak Republic 3.00 2019
174 Bahrain 2.00 2019
174 United Arab Emirates 2.00 2019
174 New Zealand 2.00 2019
174 Saudi Arabia 2.00 2019
178 Sweden 1.00 2019
178 Norway 1.00 2019
178 Portugal 1.00 2019
178 Qatar 1.00 2019
178 Georgia 1.00 2019

More rankings: Africa | Asia | Central America & the Caribbean | Europe | Middle East | North America | Oceania | South America | World |

Development Relevance: The economic health of a country is measured not only in macroeconomic terms but also by other factors that shape daily economic activity such as laws, regulations, and institutional arrangements. The data measure business regulation, gauge regulatory outcomes, and measure the extent of legal protection of property, the flexibility of employment regulation, and the tax burden on businesses. The fundamental premise of this data is that economic activity requires good rules and regulations that are efficient, accessible to all who need to use them, and simple to implement. Thus sometimes there is more emphasis on more regulation, such as stricter disclosure requirements in related-party transactions, and other times emphasis is on for simplified regulations, such as a one-stop shop for completing business startup formalities. Entrepreneurs may not be aware of all required procedures or may avoid legally required procedures altogether. But where regulation is particularly onerous, levels of informality are higher, which comes at a cost: firms in the informal sector usually grow more slowly, have less access to credit, and employ fewer workers - and those workers remain outside the protections of labor law. The indicator can help policymakers understand the business environment in a country and - along with information from other sources such as the World Bank's Enterprise Surveys - provide insights into potential areas of reform.

Limitations and Exceptions: The Doing Business methodology has limitations that should be considered when interpreting the data. First, the data collected refer to businesses in the economy's largest city and may not represent regulations in other locations of the economy. To address this limitation, subnational indicators are being collected for selected economies. These subnational studies point to significant differences in the speed of reform and the ease of doing business across cities in the same economy. Second, the data often focus on a specific business form - generally a limited liability company of a specified size - and may not represent regulation for other types of businesses such as sole proprietorships. Third, transactions described in a standardized business case refer to a specific set of issues and may not represent the full set of issues a business encounters. Fourth, the time measures involve an element of judgment by the expert respondents. When sources indicate different estimates, the Doing Business time indicators represent the median values of several responses given under the assumptions of the standardized case. Fifth, the methodology assumes that a business has full information on what is required and does not waste time when completing procedures.

Statistical Concept and Methodology: Data are collected by the World Bank with a standardized survey that uses a simple business case to ensure comparability across economies and over time - with assumptions about the legal form of the business, its size, its location, and nature of its operation. Surveys are administered through more than 9,000 local experts, including lawyers, business consultants, accountants, freight forwarders, government officials, and other professionals who routinely administer or advise on legal and regulatory requirements. The indicator records the procedures necessary for a business to purchase a property from another business and to formally transfer the property title to the buyer's name. The process starts with obtaining the necessary documents, such as a copy of the seller's title, and ends when the buyer is registered as the new owner of the property. Every procedure required by law or necessary in practice is included, whether it is the responsibility of the seller or the buyer and even if it must be completed by a third party on their behalf. The Doing Business project of the World Bank encompasses two types of data: data from readings of laws and regulations and data on time and motion indicators that measure efficiency in achieving a regulatory goal. Within the time and motion indicators cost estimates are recorded from official fee schedules where applicable. The data from surveys are subjected to numerous tests for robustness, which lead to revision or expansion of the information collected.

Aggregation method: Unweighted average

Periodicity: Annual

General Comments: Data are presented for the survey year instead of publication year.