🤖 BARBIE MODE ACTIVATED 💗    Your adblocker was detected!    Comic Sans has been applied as cosmic punishment 💅    Ads keep this database FREE — please whitelist replacedbyrobot.info!    ✨ Everything is pink and that's entirely your fault ✨    🌸                     🤖 BARBIE MODE ACTIVATED 💗    Your adblocker was detected!    Comic Sans has been applied as cosmic punishment 💅    Ads keep this database FREE — please whitelist replacedbyrobot.info!    ✨ Everything is pink and that's entirely your fault ✨    🌸                     
Automation Risk Analysis

Will “Title Specialist” be Automated?

Historical Context: Oxford Study (2013)

Ranked #701 of 702. Estimated risk: 99.0%

Advertisement

A robot took your ad!

Ads keep this free database of 57,000+ jobs alive. Please whitelist replacedbyrobot.info — we promise our ads are tasteful!

AI Exposure Risk

60%

“Title Specialist” will maybe be replaced by AI.

Based on the cognitive demands, communication requirements, and logical reasoning intrinsic to this occupation according to O*NET data, we project a 60% probability of disruption by generative AI and Large Language Models.

Automation & Robot Risk

35%

“Title Specialist” will probably not be replaced by robots.

Evaluating the physical dexterity, repetitive motion tasks, and manual labor associated with this role, our analysis indicates a 35% likelihood of substitution by advanced robotics systems.

Personal & Financial Insights

Every occupation has a unique profile. For Title Examiners, Abstractors, and Searchers, the Bureau of Labor Statistics and O*NET classify the day-to-day work broadly as: Search real estate records, examine titles, or summarize pertinent legal or insurance documents or details for a variety of purposes. May compile lists of mortgages, contracts, and other instruments pertaining to titles by searching public and private records for law firms, real estate agencies, or title insurance companies.

Avg. Annual Salary $59,600
Avg. Hourly Wage $28.65
Available Jobs (US) 48,170
Job Title & Hierarchy Code (SOC) Title Examiners, Abstractors, and Searchers #23-2093
Wage vs. National Median
ℹ️

Data is based on the reference occupation: “Title Examiners, Abstractors, and Searchers”

Advertisement

A robot took your ad!

Ads keep this free database of 57,000+ jobs alive. Please whitelist replacedbyrobot.info — we promise our ads are tasteful!

Core Skills & Abilities

  • Assess fees related to registration of property-related documents.

  • Determine whether land-related documents can be registered under the relevant legislation, such as the Land Titles Act.

  • Prepare and issue title commitments and title insurance policies, based on information compiled from title searches.

  • Read search requests to ascertain types of title evidence required and to obtain descriptions of properties and names of involved parties.

  • Prepare lists of all legal instruments applying to a specific piece of land and the buildings on it.

  • Obtain maps or drawings delineating properties from company title plants, county surveyors, or assessors' offices.

  • Prepare reports describing any title encumbrances encountered during searching activities and outlining actions needed to clear titles.

  • Copy or summarize recorded documents, such as mortgages, trust deeds, and contracts, that affect property titles.

  • Confer with realtors, lending institution personnel, buyers, sellers, contractors, surveyors, and courthouse personnel to exchange title-related information or to resolve problems.

  • Retrieve and examine real estate closing files for accuracy and to ensure that information included is recorded and executed according to regulations.

  • Verify accuracy and completeness of land-related documents accepted for registration, preparing rejection notices when documents are not acceptable.

  • Summarize pertinent legal or insurance details, or sections of statutes or case law from reference books for use in examinations or as proofs or ready reference.

  • Direct activities of workers who search records and examine titles, assigning, scheduling, and evaluating work, and providing technical guidance as necessary.

  • Examine individual titles to determine if restrictions, such as delinquent taxes, will affect titles and limit property use.

  • Enter into record-keeping systems appropriate data needed to create new title records or to update existing ones.

  • Examine documentation such as mortgages, liens, judgments, easements, plat books, maps, contracts, and agreements to verify factors such as properties' legal descriptions, ownership, or restrictions.

Technologies & Software

  • File management software
  • LexisNexis AI
  • Contact management software
  • Llama (Meta)
  • Microsoft Excel
  • Gemini (Google)
  • Adobe Acrobat
  • Nova (Amazon)
  • Salesforce software
  • RamQuest Total Solution
  • Data Trace Title IQ
  • GATORS ANYWHERE
  • Microsoft Access
  • Web browser software
  • Microsoft Word
  • Microsoft Office software
  • Property Insight TitlePoint
  • Mistral (Mistral AI)
  • DeepSeek
  • Google Workspace software
  • SoftPro real estate closing and title software
  • Grok (xAI)
  • Geographic information system GIS databases
  • Perplexity AI
  • Microsoft Internet Explorer
  • Gemini for Workspace
  • CoCounsel (Thomson Reuters)
  • Claude (Anthropic)
  • ChatGPT (OpenAI)
  • Accounting software
  • Customer relationship management CRM software
  • First American Data Tree Parcel IQ
  • Microsoft Outlook
  • Qwen (Alibaba)
  • Landtitle USA
  • Word processing software
  • Microsoft PowerPoint
  • Kimi (Moonshot AI)
  • Operating system software
  • Microsoft Windows
  • Spellbook AI
  • Harvey AI
  • Westlaw Edge AI
  • PropertyInfo SureClose
  • Computer data input scanners
  • Computer laser printers
  • Laser facsimile machines
  • Laptop computers
  • Photocopying equipment
  • 10-key calculators
  • Desktop computers
  • Multiline telephone systems
  • Personal computers