Dimension scores are derived from public data and fields; weighted into the composite. Reference only.
mypropertee is a community-driven land documentation platform designed to let land rights claimants map parcel boundaries using GPS or survey coordinates, submit property information and supporting documents, and create a searchable cloud-based registry. It explicitly states that it records “claims of rights,” not legal ownership, and that it is not a government land registry. As such, it is better suited for pre-transaction checks, identifying potential disputes, and preserving evidence.
The platform’s core workflow includes creating an account, registering via email or mobile number, completing identity verification, clicking boundary points on a satellite map to form a land parcel polygon, submitting a rights claim, topping up a wallet, and paying verification fees. Users can stand on a piece of land and search by coordinates to see whether the parcel already has an owner, co-owner, or disputed claim recorded. Its co-claimant feature supports adding spouses, siblings, heirs, and others, making it suitable for family land or multi-party ownership scenarios. Overlapping boundaries are recorded and entered into a transparent challenge process, but the platform does not determine legal ownership.
The available text does not disclose specific plans or prices. It only states that features such as identity verification and property search require wallet top-ups, and that fees are non-refundable once the service has been completed. Payment options are relatively localized, with support for Paystack, Flutterwave, and USDT. Identity verification relies on Nigeria’s NIN, with the name returned by the NIMC registry treated as the authoritative identity record. This is useful for Nigerian users, but also means its applicability across borders is limited.
On privacy, search results return only a user identifier by default and do not show the searcher a real name unless the user has explicitly consented. One important caveat is that if an account has ever held a rights claim, co-claim, or participated in conversations, then even after account deletion, boundaries, claim history, verified identity records, and conversations may be retained indefinitely for legal evidence, court proceedings, or government inquiries. This policy helps with dispute traceability, but is a clear limitation for privacy-sensitive users. The terms are governed by Nigerian law.
Its strengths are a focused use case, straightforward workflow, support for GPS-based mapping and coordinate search, and the ability to help buyers spot overlapping claims before payment. Its weaknesses are that it cannot replace statutory title registration, detailed pricing is not transparent, iOS is still unavailable, and there is no disclosed enterprise permission model, API, SLA, or self-hosting capability. It is suitable for individual landholders, heirs, land buyers, and local due diligence practitioners in Nigeria and similar markets where land fraud is common. Chinese users dealing with domestic real estate should prioritize official real estate registration systems, natural resources department platforms, and local surveying agencies. The text does not state whether access from China or payment availability is supported, so it should be treated as “unknown.”
⚠ This review is compiled from public sources and does not constitute a purchase recommendation. Verify all facts on the vendor's official site. Verify on mypropertee.com official site.
mypropertee.com is an United States Legal & Tax provider. TG4G tracks its product information, an overall rating of 6.0/10, and a China-accessibility score of Limited (proxy recommended). Click "Visit Official Site" to reach mypropertee.com directly.