AI is transforming real estate transactions, but it can't replace essential human work. Title professionals remain crucial for protecting property rights in an increasingly digital market.

The Big Picture

Title: AI's Real Estate Race — Why Humans Still Hold the Keys

AI tools are revolutionizing how real estate transactions get processed. Title companies across the country are investing heavily in automation, analytics and digital tools to make transactions more efficient. These technologies help manage increasingly complex regulatory requirements, detect fraud patterns and process large volumes of property data.

But a new study from the American Land Title Association reveals technology's limits. The research, conducted with ndp | analytics, shows that more than 80% of purchase transactions require reviewing at least 11 documents tied to a property's ownership history. More than one in five require examining over 50 records.

AI can help identify potential risks faster, but it cannot negotiate a lien payoff, resolve a probate issue or correct a decades-old recording error.

Why It Matters

Why It Matters — real-estate
Why It Matters

Those records include deeds, mortgages, tax liens, probate filings, easements and court judgments — often spanning decades of property history. Finding documents is just step one. Title professionals must analyze records, identify potential defects and resolve issues before property can transfer.