THE PRACTITIONER’S COMPANION
Tuesday 25 November 2025

MAGAZINE ISSUES

August 2024

2024: The annual industry check-up

We check in on the national conveyancing industry: How it's tracking, how practitioners feel, and what the future may hold. It is an annual 'health check'.

July 2024

It’s time to clean house

Authorities are closing the legal loophole that has allowed international criminals to launder money through Australian real estate transactions.

June 2024

We’re moving out

The national housing crisis, the cost of living, and the capacity to work remotely is changing the mindset of property buyers. Many are opting to relocate to metropolitan fringes and beyond.

April 2024

It’s time to say ‘hi’ to AI

Time-poor conveyancers are looking for the edge that makes them more efficient without affecting the personalized service that endears them to clients. We examine the role of AI.

March 2024

Inspiring and proud

The Australian Conveyancer pays tribute to some of the industry’s most impressive women – leaders, innovators, and groundbreakers.

February 2024

Fighting the force of nature

A specially-commission climate report that projects conditions 30 years into the future, shows the impact of bushfires, flooding, and coastal erosion will most likely have on residential housing lots.

January 2024

Welcome to Tomorrow Land

Futurists, investment experts, and city planners use scientific projects, data … and a crystal ball to give us a sense of how we will live 25 years from now. What will our homes and cities look like? And how much we will have to pay for housing?

December 2023

2023: The year interest rates came knocking

The Australian Conveyancer runs a critical eye on the housing industry, the interest rates, and the forces that impacted conveyancers in what has been an extraordinary year of change.

November 2023

Are you selling yourself short?

Conveyancers have found themselves at the bottom end of the property transaction value chain even though the services they provide are critical to the settlement process. They carry the burden of legislated compliance responsibility so the situation begs the question of whether they are being paid their dues.