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Between January and March 2026, Greece enacted a series of reforms that fundamentally alter the legal landscape for real estate investment Greece transactions, from sharply higher Golden Visa minimum thresholds and a tiered zone‑classification system to targeted short‑term rental restrictions in high‑pressure tourism districts and a modernised digital title‑transparency portal operated by the Hellenic Cadastre. For high‑net‑worth individuals, family offices and their legal counsel, these changes create immediate compliance obligations on pending and future acquisitions, with direct consequences for residency eligibility, rental‑income projections and transaction structuring. This guide consolidates the key legislative instruments, maps them to practical due‑diligence steps, and provides a compliance playbook designed to protect investment value in the current regulatory environment.
The Greek Golden Visa programme remains one of Europe’s most prominent residency‑by‑investment routes, but the 2026 reforms have introduced a tiered minimum‑investment structure that replaces the former flat threshold. Under the revised framework published in the Government Gazette (FEK), qualifying property acquisitions are now classified into three zone categories, prime, secondary and regional, each carrying a distinct minimum investment amount. Investors should always verify the current threshold applicable to their target property at the date the notarial purchase contract is executed, as zone reclassifications and transitional provisions may alter eligibility during the transaction timeline.
| Zone classification | Indicative areas covered | Minimum qualifying investment (2026) | Key conditions |
|---|---|---|---|
| Prime zones | Athens central & southern suburbs, Thessaloniki centre, Mykonos, Santorini | €800,000 | Single property only; minimum usable area applies; must be residential or mixed‑use |
| Secondary zones | Athens northern suburbs, Piraeus, Crete (selected municipalities), Rhodes, Corfu | €400,000 | Single property; residential or commercial; conversion from commercial permitted if planning consent obtained |
| Regional zones | Mainland Greece (outside Attica & Thessaloniki metro), smaller Aegean islands, Peloponnese, Epirus | €250,000 | Single property; broader qualifying types including agricultural conversions with approved building permits |
Source: Government Gazette (FEK), Golden Visa threshold amendments. Investors should confirm exact zone boundaries and any transitional provisions via the Ministry of Migration & Asylum portal at migration.gov.gr. Thresholds current as of May 2026; verify at contract date.
The single‑property requirement is critical: the acquisition must consist of one property meeting or exceeding the zone threshold. Aggregating multiple lower‑value properties to reach the minimum is no longer permitted under the 2026 rules for new applications. Industry observers expect this requirement to concentrate investor demand on larger apartments and villas, particularly in prime zones where the €800,000 floor eliminates studio and small‑apartment strategies that were previously popular.
Consider a non‑EU couple targeting an apartment in the Athens Riviera (prime zone). Under the 2026 framework, they need a single property valued at or above €800,000 on the notarial deed. If a developer offers a unit at €750,000 with a “furniture package” of €50,000, counsel must confirm whether the furniture component is included in the notarial purchase price or documented separately, only the property value recorded in the deed counts toward the threshold. Alternatively, if that couple redirects to a seafront property in Ierapetra, Crete (secondary zone), the qualifying threshold drops to €400,000, potentially freeing capital for renovation or a second non‑qualifying asset.
The second major pillar of the 2026 reforms directly targets the short‑term rental market. Responding to housing‑affordability pressure in tourism‑saturated areas, the government introduced targeted restrictions through ministerial guidance issued in February 2026, empowering municipalities to impose licensing caps, outright bans or operational quotas on short‑term letting platforms. These short‑term rental restrictions Greece measures vary by district and require investors to perform location‑specific compliance checks before assuming rental‑income projections.
All short‑term rental operators must hold a valid Property Registry Number (Arithmos Mitroou Akiniton, AMA) issued by the Independent Authority for Public Revenue (AADE), and this number must appear on every listing. The 2026 guidance reinforces penalties for non‑compliance, and municipalities in designated high‑pressure zones now have authority to suspend or refuse AMA registrations. Fines for operating without a valid AMA or in a restricted zone can be substantial, and repeated violations may result in platform delisting and criminal referral. Counsel should confirm whether the target municipality has exercised its restriction powers before the client commits to a buy‑to‑let strategy.
For Golden Visa investors, short‑term rental income was a key element of the investment thesis, covering holding costs, mortgage payments or generating yield while the residence permit was maintained. Where short‑term letting is now restricted, the investor must pivot to long‑term leasing, which typically produces lower gross yields but offers greater regulatory certainty. Lenders are also adjusting: early indications suggest that Greek banks underwriting property‑backed finance are discounting projected short‑term rental income in restricted zones, which in turn lowers achievable loan‑to‑value (LTV) ratios. Investors relying on leverage to bridge the higher Golden Visa thresholds should factor this adjustment into their capital planning.
Where short‑term letting is not viable, the alternative is a long‑term lease (typically 3+ years for residential or 12+ years for commercial), which can still generate reliable income and satisfies Golden Visa property‑use requirements. Counsel should structure lease agreements to include break clauses aligned with the five‑year Golden Visa renewal cycle.
The March 2026 enhancements to the Hellenic Cadastre digital portal represent the third major reform affecting real estate investment Greece transactions. While faster digital searches and broader data access benefit buyers, they also raise the professional standard of care expected of conveyancing lawyers and notaries. A thorough due diligence process now follows three phases: pre‑offer, pre‑contract and pre‑completion.
Title verification remains the cornerstone of Greek property due diligence. The upgraded Hellenic Cadastre portal now provides digital access to ownership records, encumbrance registers and geometric data for properties within cadastre‑surveyed areas. Counsel should perform the following checks as a minimum:
Greece’s urban planning reform agenda, coordinated through the Ministry of Environment & Energy (ypen.gov.gr), has introduced stricter enforcement of building‑permit compliance and land‑use zoning. Counsel should verify:
In a market where higher Golden Visa investment thresholds increase the capital at risk, robust contractual protections are essential. The preliminary purchase agreement (prosymfono) should include:
Before completion, counsel must verify that the seller has no outstanding property tax (ENFIA) liabilities, municipal charges (dimotika teli) or utility debts linked to the property. Under Greek law, certain tax and municipal debts can attach to the property and pass to the new owner. The notary will require a tax clearance certificate, but independent verification, particularly for properties held through corporate vehicles, adds an essential layer of protection. Transfer tax (currently 3.09% of the stated consideration or the objective tax value, whichever is higher) and notarial and registration fees should be budgeted at approximately 8–10% of the purchase price in aggregate.
Red flags, pause the transaction if any of the following appear:
Choosing the right acquisition structure is as important as selecting the right property. The 2026 reforms affect each structuring option differently, and counsel must weigh residency eligibility, tax efficiency, inheritance planning and financing access.
Purchasing through a Greek single‑member private company (IKE) or a foreign holding company can offer liability ring‑fencing and simplified succession. However, the 2026 Golden Visa rules require careful verification: industry observers expect that direct personal ownership remains the safest route to Golden Visa eligibility, as corporate ownership structures may face additional scrutiny or outright ineligibility depending on the final implementing guidance from the Ministry of Migration & Asylum. Where Golden Visa is not the primary objective, a Greek IKE can provide tax advantages on rental income (subject to corporate income tax rather than progressive personal rates) and simplified VAT registration for commercial lettings.
Greek banks have re‑entered the property‑lending market, but underwriting standards reflect post‑reform realities. Lenders are applying conservative LTV ratios (typically 50–60% for non‑residents), discounting short‑term rental projections in restricted zones, and requiring full cadastre registration and title insurance where available. Non‑resident borrowers should expect longer processing times and may benefit from working with a Greek mortgage broker alongside their legal counsel to align the financing timeline with the Golden Visa application deadline.
Despite regulatory tightening, Greece continues to attract significant international capital into its property market. Tourism arrivals remain at record levels, infrastructure investment (Athens metro extensions, Thessaloniki metro completion, regional airport upgrades) is supporting value growth, and rental demand, both long‑term and seasonal, remains strong across most regions. Industry observers expect the 2026 reforms to redirect, rather than diminish, foreign investment flows.
| Region | Zone / threshold | Rental yield potential | Short‑term rental risk | Golden Visa suitability |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Athens (southern suburbs / Riviera) | Prime / €800,000 | Moderate (long‑term) | High (caps apply) | High, if capital available |
| Thessaloniki centre | Prime / €800,000 | Moderate–High | Moderate | High, emerging demand |
| Crete (selected municipalities) | Secondary / €400,000 | High (seasonal) | Moderate | Strong, balanced entry cost |
| Cyclades (Mykonos, Santorini) | Prime / €800,000 | Very High (seasonal) | Very High (restrictions) | High capital, high risk |
| Peloponnese / mainland | Regional / €250,000 | Low–Moderate | Low | Accessible entry point |
| Date | Reform / instrument | Practical impact for investors |
|---|---|---|
| January 2026 | Golden Visa threshold amendments & zone classification (FEK publication) | Raises minimum qualifying investment in prime zones to €800,000; introduces tiered zone system; pending purchasers must verify threshold at contract date and may require top‑up or change of target property. |
| February 2026 | Short‑term rental ministerial guidance & municipal zoning powers | Empowers municipalities to impose licensing caps, bans or quotas in high‑pressure tourism districts; operators must hold valid AMA registration; affects rental‑yield projections and Golden Visa income planning. |
| March 2026 | Hellenic Cadastre digital portal upgrade, title registration transparency measures | Faster digital title searches and broader encumbrance data access; stricter formal requirements for registration and disclosure; raises the professional standard of due diligence expected by notaries and lenders. |
Source: Government Gazette (FEK) via et.gr; Ministry of Migration & Asylum guidance via migration.gov.gr; Hellenic Cadastre portal updates via ktimatologio.gr. Timeline accurate as of May 2026; confirm current status of each instrument before transacting.
The 2026 reforms reward preparation and penalise assumption. Whether the objective is residency by investment, portfolio yield or long‑term capital appreciation, every real estate investment Greece transaction now demands a higher level of legal rigour at each stage, from initial zone‑eligibility verification through title and planning due diligence to post‑completion rental compliance. The regulatory direction is clear: Greece welcomes foreign capital but insists on transparency, compliance and sustainable use of its housing stock.
Three actions to take immediately:
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Theodoros N. Spanos at Spanos – Fouskarinis & Associates Law Firm, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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