โ† Features ยท NSW

Amendment List

The amendment list builds itself as you review. Every visible recommendation goes on, anything you hide stays off, and the finished document is ready to send to the vendor's solicitor.

NSW VIC

By the time a contract review is done, you've made dozens of small calls about what needs to change before exchange. Then comes the bit nobody enjoys, opening a separate document and typing the amendment list up from scratch. Curia Contract Review removes that step. The amendment list is generated from the recommendations you've already worked through, and it stays in sync with your review until the moment you need it.

The problem with re-typing the amendment list at the end

You've reviewed the contract, decided which clauses need to change, noted the special conditions you want struck or reworded and flagged the warranties you want added. Now you start a fresh document and rewrite all of it in formal language for the other side. It's slow, it's where transcription errors creep in and any change to the review means redoing parts of the list. For a solo conveyancer running multiple files in a week, that double handling adds up fast.

How the Amendment List works

Built from your accepted recommendations

Curia generates recommendations as it reads the contract, drawn from your firm's Library and default triggers so the wording is yours. You accept, edit, hide or add as you go. Whatever sits on the review as a recommendation is what flows onto the amendment list.

Visibility you control per item

Not every recommendation needs to go to the vendor's solicitor. Some are notes for the file, some are points for the client, some are caveats you'll raise differently. Toggle visibility off and the item drops off the amendment list while staying on your review. Toggle it back on and it returns.

A finished document, ready to send

The output is a final amendment list, formatted in your firm's style, with each requested change set out the way the other side expects to read it. You copy it and send it. No last-minute formatting, no version drift between what you reviewed and what went out.

Tuned to Australian conveyancing

Amendments work differently in different states, and Curia respects that. For a NSW standard contract , the list reflects the conventions NSW solicitors expect when proposing changes before exchange. For Victorian contracts and Section 32 statements , the list captures amendments to the contract of sale alongside any concerns raised against the vendor's statement. State-specific recommendations only appear for the matching jurisdiction, so you're never editing out items that don't belong.

Where it sits in the review

The amendment list is the natural output of the review you've already done. It pulls from your Library , the same source your firm's wording lives in, and it sits alongside the Personalised Reports Curia generates for the purchaser. One review, two finished elements, both ready to send.

See Curia in action

Book a demo and watch the amendment list build itself on a real contract.