Titles & Deeds

    Constructive Notice

    The legal presumption that the public is aware of a fact, such as ownership, because a document is recorded in the public record.

    Constructive notice is notice the law presumes a person has because information is available in the public record or through visible possession. Recording a deed gives constructive notice of ownership to everyone, whether or not they actually read the record.

    Actual notice, by contrast, is real, direct knowledge of a fact. Recording protects an owner by putting the world on constructive notice of the transfer.

    On the exam

    Recording gives constructive notice. Actual notice is personal, direct knowledge.

    Exam trap

    Constructive notice does not require that anyone actually saw the record. The law presumes notice once a document is properly recorded.

    Tested in

    Titles and Deeds (7% of the exam)

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    This definition is Florida real estate exam-prep education, not legal, tax, or professional advice. Verify current rules against the official source before relying on them for a real transaction. Back to the full glossary.