Title “Clean but Dirty” Scenario
You’ve got a clean Title. No liens, no issues, everything “passed title.”
You feel smart—you closed a great deal. Congratulations… now the problem begins.
Because a clean title is one of the most misleading things in real estate.
It does not mean:
- The property is usable
- You can access it
- You can rent it
- You can even do anything with it at all
What I’ve seen in real life:
- Properties with perfect title—but no legal access
(No road. Only through a neighbor who owes you nothing) - Easements cutting through the lot—making any building plan useless
- Zoning mismatches—you bought an “investment” you legally can’t operate as intended
- Utility lines running through the land—destroying its actual value
And the best part?
Everything was “clean” on title.
Here’s the truth no one tells you:
A title company checks records. That’s it.
They don’t check:
- Usability
- Logic
- Your business plan
- Whether your strategy is even possible
The bank checks if you’ll repay the loan.
The broker wants their commission.
The property manager starts working after closing.
No one is responsible for saving you from a bad deal.
And you?
You walk in with false confidence because “it passed title.”
This is where investors crash
Not in complex deals—
but in the simple ones.
Because that’s where they lower their guard.
They think they bought a property.
In reality—they bought limitations.
And then it blows up:
- No access → you’re stuck
- Can’t build → no value creation
- Can’t rent → no cash flow
- Can’t sell → unless you drop the price
Suddenly, your “deal” becomes something
no one wants to touch.
Bottom line
A clean title is the bare minimum.
It’s not:
- Due diligence
- An advantage
- Proof of a good deal
If you’re not checking:
- Legal access
- Usability
- Zoning
- Easements
- Planning logic
You’re not investing.
You’re gambling.
And in most cases,
the ones who don’t realize they’re gambling—
lose the fastest.


















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