Our Expert in Jordan
No results available
Yes, foreigners can own property in Jordan, but every acquisition by a non-Jordanian requires prior security approval from the Ministry of Interior before the Department of Lands and Survey will register the transfer. Jordan’s regulatory framework treats foreign property ownership as a permitted activity subject to structured government oversight rather than an outright prohibition, meaning the question for investors is not whether they can buy but how to navigate the approvals efficiently. This guide consolidates the legal basis, the full DLS and MOI approval workflow for 2026, territorial and nationality-based restrictions, retention and resale constraints, and transactional drafting points that counsel and in-house teams need to close a compliant deal.
Before diving into the procedural detail, the following decision points capture the essentials that foreign buyers and their advisers must assess at the outset of any transaction.
The primary statute governing whether foreigners can own property in Jordan is the Law on Leasing and Selling Immovable Assets to Non-Jordanians and Juristic Persons. This legislation establishes the principle that non-Jordanians may acquire, lease and hold real property inside the Hashemite Kingdom provided they satisfy the conditions set by the Council of Ministers and obtain the requisite security clearance. The law places the Minister of Interior as the gatekeeper: no transfer of immovable property to a non-Jordanian individual or entity may be registered by the Department of Lands and Survey without the Minister’s prior written approval.
The foreign ownership requirements in Jordan draw on several complementary legal instruments. Jordan’s investment legislation offers incentives for projects registered with the Jordan Investment Commission, which can in certain cases streamline the approval pathway for commercial and industrial property. The Economic Boycott Law adds an additional layer of exclusion: nationals of boycotted states are barred from ownership regardless of the property type. Finally, regulations governing juristic persons, particularly foreign-registered companies, impose additional conditions on corporate acquisitions, including requirements around beneficial-ownership disclosure and, in some cases, Council of Ministers (Cabinet) approval for large-scale or strategically located assets.
Jordanian law carves out specific geographic zones where foreign ownership faces heightened restrictions or, conversely, an alternative regulatory regime. The Aqaba Special Economic Zone Authority (ASEZA) operates under its own investment and property-registration framework, meaning acquisitions within the ASEZA boundary follow a distinct process and may benefit from different incentive structures. In the Petra region, legislative debate has periodically sought to restrict or ban property sales to certain foreign nationalities, and parliamentary proposals have targeted prohibitions on purchases in heritage-sensitive areas. Properties near Jordan’s international borders are subject to additional security scrutiny under military and border-zone regulations, and approval rates for such locations are substantially lower.
Jordan applies a reciprocity principle: a foreign national’s home country must grant Jordanian citizens equivalent property-ownership rights. Where reciprocity cannot be established, the MOI may decline the security-approval application. Citizens of states that Jordan does not formally recognise are categorically excluded from ownership. Dual nationals should note that the assessment is generally made on the basis of the passport presented in the application, a point that can have significant practical implications for structuring a purchase.
Understanding which legal vehicles are available to foreign buyers is critical when structuring a Jordan property acquisition. The law distinguishes between individual foreign nationals, foreign-registered companies, and Jordanian entities with foreign shareholding, each carrying different approval burdens and practical consequences for retention and resale.
| Entity Type | Typical Ownership Route | Key Approval / Resale Consequence |
|---|---|---|
| Individual foreign national | Direct acquisition subject to MOI/DLS security approval (online application) | Nationality reciprocity checks apply; resale to another non-Jordanian requires fresh MOI/DLS approval |
| Foreign company (non-Jordanian registered) | Often requires a Jordanian subsidiary or joint venture to hold title; approvals vary by sector and asset size | Additional scrutiny; may require Council of Ministers (Cabinet) approval depending on asset type, size and strategic location |
| Jordanian company with foreign shareholders | Purchase through a locally registered entity; shareholders and beneficial owners must be declared | Smoother title registration; disposal may still require consent where the company is classified as foreign-controlled |
Lease arrangements offer an alternative where freehold ownership is impractical or where the buyer’s nationality creates approval risk. Long-term leases (typically up to 99 years) can be registered at the DLS and, depending on the lease structure, may not trigger the same MOI security-approval requirement. However, leasehold positions carry their own risks around renewal, sub-letting restrictions and lender security, counsel should evaluate these trade-offs on a case-by-case basis.
The Department of Lands and Survey in Jordan is the sole authority responsible for registering immovable property transfers. For non-Jordanian purchasers, however, the DLS will not process a registration until the Ministry of Interior has issued a security-approval decision. The practical workflow therefore involves parallel engagement with both institutions. Below is the standard operating procedure that foreign buyers and their counsel should follow in 2026.
The MOI has digitalised the security-approval application process, allowing submissions through an online e-services portal. The following numbered steps reflect the current procedural flow.
Applications that are incomplete or poorly documented are the most common cause of delay. The following checklist reflects the standard documentation requirements.
All foreign-language documents must be accompanied by certified Arabic translations. Notarisations performed outside Jordan should be legalised through the Jordanian embassy or consulate in the issuing country, or authenticated via apostille where Jordan accepts the Hague Convention chain.
One of the most frequently overlooked aspects of foreign property ownership in Jordan is the set of post-acquisition restrictions that apply to disposal and resale. The resale restrictions on Jordan property serve a dual purpose: they prevent speculative flipping by foreign buyers and they ensure continued government oversight over the transfer of immovable assets to non-Jordanian hands.
The law provides that a non-Jordanian who has acquired property with MOI approval may be subject to a mandatory retention period before the property can be resold. The duration and conditions of this retention vary depending on the property type, the purpose declared in the original application (residential use, investment, commercial development), and the location. Agricultural land, in particular, carries stricter retention and use requirements than residential apartments, reflecting longstanding policy concerns about foreign control of arable land.
Any resale by a foreign owner to another non-Jordanian triggers a fresh cycle of MOI security approval for the incoming buyer. A sale to a Jordanian national, by contrast, does not require MOI clearance, but the DLS must still process the transfer, and any encumbrances or conditions noted on the original approval may affect the transaction.
| Property Category | Retention / Lock-In Considerations | Resale Approval Requirement |
|---|---|---|
| Residential apartment | Retention period may apply based on the original approval conditions; typically the shortest lock-in | Resale to non-Jordanian requires fresh MOI approval; resale to Jordanian requires standard DLS registration only |
| Commercial / industrial property | Retention conditions often linked to investment-project commitments registered with the Jordan Investment Commission | Resale subject to MOI approval plus potential review by the relevant investment authority if incentives were granted |
| Agricultural land | Strictest retention requirements; use-condition obligations (active cultivation or development) may be imposed | Resale to non-Jordanian faces heightened scrutiny; Cabinet-level approval may be required in certain cases |
Industry observers expect that the practical effect of these restrictions is to make exit planning a day-one consideration for any foreign buyer. Counsel advising on acquisitions should build disposal-pathway analysis into the initial transaction structuring, rather than treating it as a post-acquisition afterthought.
Because MOI security approval is neither automatic nor guaranteed, every purchase agreement involving a non-Jordanian buyer should incorporate provisions that allocate the risk of refusal or delay. The following clause headings represent the minimum drafting framework for a compliant and commercially balanced transaction.
Early indications suggest that transactions structured with robust approval-conditional clauses and properly funded escrow arrangements proceed more smoothly through the DLS process, as the authorities can verify financial commitment without title-transfer risk to either party.
Foreign buyers in Jordan in 2026 should plan for the following consolidated timeline from initial application to completed title transfer.
| Stage | Estimated Duration | Key Action |
|---|---|---|
| Document preparation and translation | 1–2 weeks | Assemble, translate, notarise and legalise all required documents |
| DLS/MOI application submission | 1–3 days | Submit electronically via the DLS e-services portal |
| MOI security screening | 30–60 days (variable) | Ministry of Interior conducts background, reciprocity and location checks |
| MOI decision communicated to DLS | 3–7 days after decision | DLS receives approval and notifies parties |
| DLS registration and title transfer | 1–2 weeks | Parties attend DLS, pay fees, execute transfer and receive new title deed |
Registration fees at the DLS are calculated as a percentage of the declared property value and are payable upon transfer. Legal costs for counsel advising on the transaction, including document preparation, application management and attendance at the DLS, will vary by firm and complexity but should be budgeted as a separate line item alongside the registration fees, translation costs and any escrow-administration charges.
Navigating the question of whether foreigners can own property in Jordan demands more than a surface-level understanding of the rules, it requires procedural precision, strategic transaction structuring and proactive engagement with both the DLS and MOI workflows. Every acquisition carries approval risk, and the consequences of an incomplete or poorly structured application range from costly delays to outright refusal.
Foreign buyers, their counsel and in-house investment teams should treat the MOI security-approval process as the critical path item in any Jordan real-estate transaction. Begin document preparation early, structure purchase agreements with robust approval-conditional and escrow provisions, and plan exit pathways, including resale restrictions on Jordan property, from the outset. Engaging experienced local counsel who understands the DLS registration mechanics and the MOI decision-making patterns is not optional; it is the single most effective risk-mitigation measure available to non-Jordanian investors in 2026.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Rawan Noubani at RN Law Firm, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
posted 7 minutes ago
posted 11 minutes ago
posted 32 minutes ago
posted 41 minutes ago
posted 56 minutes ago
posted 1 hour ago
posted 2 hours ago
posted 2 hours ago
posted 2 hours ago
posted 2 hours ago
posted 3 hours ago
posted 3 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