Buying Property in Greece as a Foreigner: Step-by-Step (2026)
For many foreign buyers, Greece feels attractive but risky at the same time.
That is normal.
You like the prices, the lifestyle, the visa angle, and the upside. But you worry about:
- taxes
- paperwork
- scams
- hidden legal problems
- buying the wrong property in the wrong area
This guide is designed for exactly that stage: before you commit money.
It is not a lifestyle article. It is a practical roadmap.
Meta Description: A practical step-by-step guide for foreigners buying property in Greece in 2026: taxes, lawyer checks, due diligence, illegal additions, notary costs, and the biggest mistakes to avoid.
The Basic Flow
Most foreign purchases in Greece follow this sequence:
- Define budget and goal
- Shortlist neighborhoods
- Get Greek tax number (AFM)
- Hire an independent lawyer
- Check the property legally and technically
- Agree on price and sign reservation/preliminary docs
- Complete tax, notary, and closing process
- Register ownership
Simple on paper. The problems happen in steps 4 and 5.
Step 1: Decide What You Are Actually Buying For
Before viewings, decide if you are buying for:
- income
- Golden Visa / residency
- lifestyle use
- value-add / renovation
That changes everything:
- area selection
- acceptable risk
- yield expectations
- exit strategy
If you are still unsure whether Athens is worth it, start with Is Athens Real Estate Still Worth It in 2026?.
Step 2: Budget for More Than the Purchase Price
Foreign buyers often focus only on headline price. That is a mistake.
Typical acquisition costs to plan for
- Property transfer tax: usually around 3%
- Notary and registry costs
- Lawyer fees
- Agent fee if applicable
- Technical inspection / engineer checks
- Renovation and furnishing
If the apartment costs €150,000, your real entry cost can be meaningfully higher.
Always underwrite the full cost, not just the listing price.
Step 3: Get Your AFM and Prepare Banking
To buy Greek property, you typically need:
- passport
- Greek tax number (AFM)
- funds that can be properly documented
Depending on how the deal is structured, your lawyer and notary will guide the exact paperwork, but the important principle is simple:
Do not wait until the last minute to organize identification, tax, and payment flow.
Step 4: Hire Your Own Independent Lawyer
This step is critical.
Do not rely only on:
- seller explanations
- listing descriptions
- agent optimism
Your lawyer should represent you, not the transaction.
They should check:
- title chain
- encumbrances
- registry records
- legal status of the property
- whether there are unauthorized construction changes
Step 5: Check for Illegal Additions
This is one of the biggest risks in Greece and it deserves its own section.
An apartment can look completely normal and still have:
- unauthorized enclosed balconies
- layout changes not reflected in official plans
- extra square meters not legally regularized
- building-level irregularities
Why it matters:
- financing can become harder
- resale can become harder
- closing can be delayed
- your expected value can drop
This is why foreign buyers should never skip proper legal and engineering checks.
Step 6: Verify Fair Value Before Negotiating
Many foreign buyers overpay simply because they do not know the local baseline.
Before making an offer, calculate:
- price per sqm
- recent comparable listings or sales
- renovation burden
- realistic rent
- neighborhood demand
A pretty apartment does not automatically justify a premium.
Use a structured framework like the one in How to Analyze Property Prices in Greece.
Step 7: Understand the Area, Not Just the Apartment
A good apartment in the wrong area can still be a weak investment.
Check:
- transport
- rental demand
- resale liquidity
- short-term rental restrictions if relevant
- neighborhood reputation
- street-level quality, not just district name
Useful next reads:
- Top 7 Cheap Neighborhoods in Athens Under €150k
- Best Areas in Athens for Airbnb Investment
- Where NOT to Buy Property in Athens
Step 8: Negotiate on Facts, Not Emotion
The best negotiation arguments are usually:
- overpriced €/sqm vs local comparables
- renovation burden
- legal uncertainty
- weak floor, layout, or building condition
If you negotiate only with "I like it but can you do a better price?", you have no leverage.
Step 9: Close Properly
At the closing stage, your team should already have confirmed:
- who legally owns the asset
- whether it can be transferred cleanly
- what taxes and fees are due
- what documents are needed for notary and registration
If this feels rushed, slow down. Speed at the end often creates expensive mistakes.
Biggest Mistakes Foreign Buyers Make
1. Trusting the asking price
Asking price is marketing, not value.
2. Falling in love before checking the numbers
Emotion is expensive in property.
3. Skipping legal and engineering diligence
Especially dangerous in older Athens stock.
4. Ignoring full acquisition cost
A "cheap" apartment is not cheap once taxes and capex hit.
5. Buying without a fallback plan
If your Airbnb thesis fails, what then?
Final Take
Buying property in Greece as a foreigner is absolutely possible in 2026.
But the winners are not the people who move fastest.
They are the buyers who:
- understand the process
- verify legal status
- price the deal correctly
- choose the right area for the right strategy
If you want help checking a listing before you make an offer, we can analyze the property and highlight pricing and risk issues before you buy.