Hello all, Is there a way to find the land registry # of a building in Krakow according to its adress OR its entry in the old books? Thanks in advance, Eric
You have to go to: town, section, then put 00 in front of your card number, then 000000 (your card number digits) then a dash after which comes the check digit so go through 0 to 9
There is a way to find the registry number if you have the address or the identification number of the land lot - you would need to use a commercial search engine which has database od most land registry numbers indexed. Here you can find article (in polish) about it:
In very brief: All you need to do is to follow the link to the search engine mentioned on that website, the search engine enables to search for the land registry number by entering address or parcel id, author claims it works because it worked for him a few times. To use the search engine you need to log in and search for the number, no private data is required to be entered or submitted when registering.It costs about 29 zlotys (payable via wire transfer, not by credit card) and in most cases the search wiil reveal the land registry number which you can then look up in the official registry.
I don't know if this site will help you or not but Google it and give it a try. ekw.ms.gov.pl/eukw/menu.do
You need the so called "księga wieczysta" (property number) to access the data, but when you do, you can find out a wealth of information about the property.
It contains details of previous owners, current owners, mortgage on the property, everything. Wish I could offer you more help.
Thank you for trying to help me, but I know about this, but this requires a number with prefix which seems to be a new number and not a number that was used back in those old days, so this what I'm trying to figure out, how can it be converted to the new numbers or how I can figure out the new number based on the old number.
It may be an idea to actually ring up the place which issued the original document and ask them. The town is given as Strzyzow. Look for any contact and then either email or phone them and ask.
Try contacting Wydział Ksiąg Wieczystych in the local court. Perhaps they'll be able to help. I don't know if it's the town in question or if they'll speak English but it's worth a try.
Good Morning, makes a lot of sense and I tried calling them this morning, but no one understands any English. And email in Polish (translated by Google) went unanswered as well.
Any further help would be appreciated, I'm sure there must be some site or method how to figure this out.
go there in person, with someone that speaks the language. or try a notary. they should be able to work through the paper trail and get you what you need.
Here you can find all the useful information. sprawdzonanieruchomosc.pl/en/legal-status-of-a-property/ How to get the number, what to look for when dealing wit a new property. Where you can find additional information about your property and the legal status.