Member
No results available
The Greece property law changes 2026 represent the most significant overhaul of the country’s real-estate legal framework in over a decade. A sweeping inheritance law reform has introduced inheritance contracts and reshaped forced-heirship rules, while property-tax adjustments to ENFIA, an extended capital-gains-tax suspension, tightened Golden Visa criteria and new rental-law obligations are collectively reshaping the transaction landscape. This guide sets out each reform, explains who is affected and provides the practical checklists that buyers, owners and developers need to act on now.
The centrepiece of the Greek inheritance law reform 2026 is the introduction of inheritance contracts (klironomikí sýmvasi). For the first time in modern Greek law, a property owner can enter a binding agreement, executed before a notary, that determines how specific assets will pass on death. This mechanism allows families to plan property succession with certainty, bypassing the uncertainty of testamentary challenges.
Alongside inheritance contracts, the reform adjusts the reserved-share (forced-heirship) framework. Greek civil law has traditionally guaranteed close relatives, a spouse, children and, in some cases, parents, a mandatory share of the estate. The 2026 reform refines the calculation of the reserved share and, crucially, allows parties to an inheritance contract to agree on distributions that would previously have been challenged as violations of the reserved share, provided all affected heirs consent.
A further significant development is the proposed abolition of the 25-year rule. Under pre-reform law, a will could generally not be contested after 25 years from the testator’s death. The reform proposes to eliminate this blanket limitation period, replacing it with more nuanced prescription rules. Legal commentators have noted that this change could expose long-settled estates to reopened claims during a transitional period, making prompt legal review essential.
The inheritance reform legislation was published in the Government Gazette in early 2026. Transitional provisions apply: inheritance contracts may only govern successions that open after the law’s effective date, and existing wills executed before that date remain valid under the prior regime unless the testator executes a new instrument. Property owners who have already completed estate-planning arrangements should verify whether their existing wills interact with the new forced-heirship calculations. Where the 25-year rule is abolished, pending prescription periods for will challenges are subject to specific transitional cut-off dates set out in the enacted text.
The practical implications of the Greek inheritance law reform 2026 vary depending on residency and the composition of the estate. The following action items apply broadly:
Worked example, cross-border succession: A German national owns an apartment in Athens and has two adult children. Under Brussels IV, German succession law would apply unless the owner elected Greek law. With the 2026 reform, the owner could now execute an inheritance contract in Athens, with the children’s notarised consent, allocating the apartment to one child and a cash equalisation payment to the other. This structure, unavailable before the reform, offers certainty that a testamentary disposition alone could not guarantee.
The real-estate transfer tax in Greece remains at a flat rate of 3 %, calculated on the higher of the contract price or the objective (tax) value of the property. The buyer is responsible for payment, which must be completed before the notarial deed of transfer is executed. Municipal surcharges of 3 % on the transfer-tax amount also apply, bringing the effective rate to approximately 3.09 %. No changes to the rate or the payer obligation have been enacted for 2026.
The Unified Real Estate Ownership Tax (ENFIA), Greece’s annual property-holding tax, continues to apply to all owners of Greek real estate. For 2026, the government has signalled targeted recalibrations of objective zonal values in areas where market prices have diverged significantly from the assessed values. Early indications suggest that primary-residence owners in lower-value rural and semi-urban zones may benefit from modest ENFIA reductions, while owners in high-demand areas (central Athens, Thessaloniki waterfront and popular island destinations) should anticipate stable or marginally higher assessments. AADE issues final ENFIA notices annually, typically between May and September.
Greece first introduced a 15 % capital-gains tax on real-estate disposals and then immediately suspended it before it could take practical effect. That suspension has been repeatedly extended and, as of the latest legislative cycle, continues through the end of 2026. Sellers of Greek real estate are therefore not currently liable for capital-gains tax on property sales. Industry observers expect the government to revisit the measure in the context of the 2027 budget. Buyers and sellers should confirm the suspension’s status at the time of signing, as any reinstatement would typically take effect from 1 January of the following year.
New residential properties for which a building permit was issued after 1 January 2006 are in principle subject to VAT at 24 % (reduced to 17 % on certain border islands and the Dodecanese). However, a long-running VAT suspension on new-build sales has been extended, with the practical effect that most new-build transactions currently attract the 3 % transfer tax instead. Developers and buyers should confirm the VAT status of each specific project, as the suspension applies at the property level and the developer may have opted into the VAT regime voluntarily.
| Tax | What applies in 2026 | Immediate action for buyer / seller |
|---|---|---|
| Transfer tax | 3 % on taxable value (+ 3 % municipal surcharge on tax) | Buyer: budget for approximately 3.09 % and confirm objective value before signing |
| ENFIA | Annual holding tax; zonal recalibrations underway | Owner: check AADE portal for updated assessment; appeal within 30 days of notice |
| Capital gains tax | 15 % rate enacted but suspended through end of 2026 | Seller: no current liability, but confirm suspension status before closing |
| VAT on new builds | 24 % (17 % on border islands), suspension in effect for most projects | Buyer / developer: verify project-level VAT status; suspension applies per property |
Greece’s Golden Visa programme, which grants a five-year renewable residence permit to non-EU nationals who invest in qualifying real estate, has been one of Europe’s most popular investor-immigration routes. The programme originally required a minimum investment of €250,000. However, the government has progressively tightened the rules, introducing higher thresholds for properties in designated high-demand areas (including central Athens, Thessaloniki, Mykonos and Santorini) and restricting the use of purchased properties for short-term rental. As of 2026, the qualifying thresholds and eligible property categories vary by location, and investors must verify the current requirements for their target area before committing funds.
Not all property types qualify equally under the revised Golden Visa framework. Residential properties remain the primary route, but commercial conversions, for example, converting an office into a residential unit to meet the programme’s requirements, face additional scrutiny. The likely practical effect of recent ministerial decisions is that investors must demonstrate that the property holds a valid residential-use permit at the time of application. Properties in areas where short-term rental licences have been restricted may also affect the investor’s ability to generate rental income from the Golden Visa property.
The rental law Greece 2026 framework introduces several provisions that directly affect landlords, property managers and tenants. Rent indexation, the mechanism by which landlords may increase rent during the term of a lease, is now subject to tighter caps linked to official consumer-price-index data published by the Hellenic Statistical Authority (ELSTAT). Landlords who previously applied ad-hoc increases will need to document the statutory basis for any rent adjustment.
Eviction procedures have also been reformed. While the core summary eviction process for non-payment of rent remains available, new provisions strengthen tenant protections during the notice period and introduce mandatory pre-litigation mediation for certain categories of disputes (particularly those involving primary-residence leases of more than three years). The likely practical effect will be longer resolution timelines for contested evictions.
Lease registration requirements have been reinforced. All residential leases must be registered electronically through the AADE platform (Taxisnet). Failure to register a lease can result in the landlord being denied the ability to enforce the lease terms and may trigger tax penalties, as unregistered rental income is a red flag for audit selection.
One of the most consequential procedural changes under the Greece property law changes 2026 is the shift from multiple paper certificates to a streamlined declaration of responsibility for property transfers. Under the prior regime, sellers were required to obtain and present numerous certificates, non-encumbrance, tax-clearance, forestry-map clearance and urban-planning compliance, from separate agencies. The new framework consolidates several of these requirements into a single notarised declaration by the seller’s lawyer, attesting that the property is free of the stated encumbrances. The Cadastre office and relevant authorities retain the right to verify these declarations post-transfer, and false declarations carry criminal sanctions.
The Hellenic Cadastre (Ethnikó Ktimatológio) continues its phased roll-out across the country. Properties in areas where the cadastre process is complete benefit from a digital title record that is, in principle, more reliable and faster to search. In areas still transitioning, buyers must conduct parallel searches at the old-style land registry (Ypothikofylakeío) and the Cadastre office. The government has set a target of completing cadastral registration nationwide, though delays remain common in island and rural areas. Buyers should factor additional time into their due-diligence schedule for properties in transitional zones.
| Document | Where to obtain it | Why it matters |
|---|---|---|
| Cadastral extract / certificate of registration | Local Cadastre office or ktimatologio.gr | Confirms the property is registered and identifies the legal owner, plot boundaries and any noted encumbrances |
| Non-encumbrance certificate | Land registry (Ypothikofylakeío) or Cadastre | Verifies no mortgages, pre-notations, seizures or other liens are recorded against the property |
| Forestry-map clearance | Local forestry office / online forestry-map portal | Confirms the plot is not classified as forest land, which would prohibit construction or transfer |
| Urban-planning / building-permit compliance | Municipal planning office (Poleodomía) | Verifies the structure is legally built, or identifies any regularisation (táktopíisi) obligations |
| Tax-clearance certificate | AADE / Taxisnet | Confirms the seller has no outstanding tax debts that could give rise to a lien on the property |
The answer depends on the buyer’s profile and objectives. For investors seeking rental yield, the continued capital-gains-tax suspension and the availability of transfer tax (rather than VAT) on most properties reduce upfront costs, but the tightened rental-law compliance and potential restrictions on short-term letting in certain municipalities must be factored into yield projections. For primary-residence buyers, the ENFIA recalibrations may produce modest savings in some zones, and the new inheritance-contract mechanism offers succession certainty that was previously unavailable. Developers benefit from the streamlined cadastre process and declaration-of-responsibility regime, which should shorten pre-contract due-diligence timelines, provided they invest in confirming the cadastral status of each plot early in the project cycle.
| Obligation / item | Private buyer / individual | Developer / corporate |
|---|---|---|
| Transfer tax payment | Buyer responsible, 3 % on the higher of contract price or objective value | Buyer / assignee, same rate applies; ensure corporate-income-tax treatment of the acquisition cost is reviewed |
| VAT on new builds | VAT suspension may apply, confirm project status; if VAT applies, rate is 24 % (17 % on border islands) | VAT invoicing obligations, input-VAT recovery adjustments and quarterly VAT returns, confirm whether project has opted into the VAT regime |
| Land registry / cadastre checks | Verify title, encumbrances and cadastral registration; obtain non-encumbrance certificate | Additional planning and permitting checks required; confirm no building suspensions, forestry overlaps or pending municipal objections |
| ENFIA liability | Annual liability based on property portfolio; primary-residence reductions may apply | Corporate ENFIA applies to all holdings; review classification of properties held for resale vs. long-term investment |
| Inheritance / succession planning | Review wills and consider inheritance contracts under the 2026 reform | Corporate structures may mitigate succession risk, but anti-avoidance rules apply to holding-company transfers |
Before signing any purchase agreement or development contract in Greece in 2026, work through the following checklist with qualified Greek counsel:
The breadth of the Greece property law changes 2026, spanning inheritance, taxation, rental regulation, investor immigration and land-registry modernisation, demands a co-ordinated legal and tax strategy from anyone buying, holding or developing Greek real estate. No single reform can be assessed in isolation: the inheritance-contract mechanism interacts with transfer-tax obligations, ENFIA recalibrations affect holding-cost projections, and Golden Visa rule changes feed directly into investment structuring decisions. The window for proactive compliance planning is now. Engaging experienced Greek property counsel to conduct a comprehensive review of current holdings, and to stress-test any planned acquisition against the new framework, is the single most important step that buyers, owners and developers can take in 2026.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Kimon Papanikolaou at K.PAPANIKOLAOU-L.BOUTSIKARIS & ASSOCIATES LAW FIRM, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
posted 12 minutes ago
posted 36 minutes ago
posted 1 hour ago
posted 1 hour ago
posted 2 hours ago
posted 2 hours ago
posted 3 hours ago
posted 4 hours ago
posted 4 hours ago
posted 4 hours ago
posted 4 hours ago
posted 5 hours ago
No results available
Find the right Legal Expert for your business
Sign up for the latest legal briefings and news within Global Law Experts’ community, as well as a whole host of features, editorial and conference updates direct to your email inbox.
Naturally you can unsubscribe at any time.
Global Law Experts is dedicated to providing exceptional legal services to clients around the world. With a vast network of highly skilled and experienced lawyers, we are committed to delivering innovative and tailored solutions to meet the diverse needs of our clients in various jurisdictions.
Global Law Experts is dedicated to providing exceptional legal services to clients around the world. With a vast network of highly skilled and experienced lawyers, we are committed to delivering innovative and tailored solutions to meet the diverse needs of our clients in various jurisdictions.
Send welcome message