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buy property through company vs personally Greece

Buy Property Personally or Through a Company in Greece (2026): Tax, Liability & Golden Visa

By Global Law Experts
– posted 2 days ago

Every foreign investor considering Greek real estate in 2026 faces the same threshold question: should you buy property through a company vs personally in Greece? The answer determines your tax burden, your exposure to personal liability, your eligibility for the Golden Visa residence permit, and your ability to profit from short-term rentals under tightening regulations. With 2025–26 legislative changes to the Golden Visa programme, a revamped short-term-rental registry enforced by AADE, and a corporate income tax rate that remains competitive at 22%, the tradeoffs between personal and corporate ownership have shifted materially.

This guide sets out both options, compares them dimension by dimension with real numbers, and delivers a clear decision framework so you can choose the right structure before you sign.

Option A: Buy Property Personally, Pros, Cons and Who It Suits

Personal ownership means acquiring title in your own name as a natural person. It is the default route for holiday-home buyers, retirees relocating to the islands, and Golden Visa applicants purchasing a single residential property. If simplicity, direct residency eligibility and low ongoing compliance costs are your priorities, personal ownership wins.

  • Simplicity. One tax number (AFM), one notarial deed, one land-registry entry. No articles of association, no annual corporate filings, no audit requirement.
  • Direct Golden Visa qualification. Property held in the buyer’s own name counts straightforwardly toward the minimum investment threshold set by the Ministry of Migration & Asylum.
  • Lower ongoing costs. No company formation fees, no annual accounting or statutory-audit obligations, no dividend-extraction planning.
  • Straightforward rental-income taxation. Rental profits are taxed under the personal income-tax scale (progressive rates from 15% to 44%), with no double-taxation layer on profit distribution.
  • Full personal liability. The buyer’s entire personal estate is exposed to creditor claims, construction disputes or tort liability arising from the property.
  • Higher marginal tax on large rental portfolios. Once annual rental income exceeds €40,000, the effective personal rate can surpass the flat 22% corporate rate.

Typical Process and Timeline

  • Obtain a Greek AFM (tax identification number), typically one to two business days via a local tax office or authorised representative.
  • Instruct a lawyer for title searches in the Ktimatologio (national land registry) and encumbrance checks.
  • Sign the notarial purchase deed and pay the 3% real estate transfer tax (plus a municipal surcharge of approximately 3% on the tax amount, yielding an effective rate of roughly 3.09%) directly to the tax office on the day of signing.
  • Register the deed with the land registry. End-to-end timeline from offer acceptance: four to eight weeks.

Golden Visa Implications for Personal Buyers

Under the programme administered by the Ministry of Migration & Asylum, a non-EU citizen who purchases property in their own name at or above the applicable investment threshold qualifies for a five-year renewable residence permit. The threshold varies by location and property type under Law 5100/2024 and subsequent implementing circulars, with the entry-level tier remaining at €250,000 for eligible areas. Personal ownership is the most direct route to Golden Visa eligibility, no additional corporate-structuring steps are required. For full Greece Golden Visa 2026 eligibility details, see our dedicated analysis.

Option B: Buy Property Through a Company or SPV, Pros, Cons and Who It Suits

Corporate ownership means purchasing through a Greek limited-liability company (IKE or EPE), a Greek société anonyme (AE), or a foreign holding company. This is the preferred structure for portfolio investors assembling multiple rental units, property developers, institutional buyers, and anyone whose lender requires a corporate borrower. When asset isolation and tax efficiency on retained earnings outweigh the compliance overhead, the SPV route is the stronger choice.

  • Limited liability. The company’s assets, not the investor’s personal estate, stand behind obligations arising from the property. Creditors of the company cannot reach the shareholder’s other assets (absent fraud or personal guarantees).
  • 22% flat corporate income tax. Rental income earned inside a Greek company is taxed at the flat 22% CIT rate, which can be significantly lower than the top personal marginal rate of 44%.
  • Deductible expenses. A company can deduct maintenance, management fees, mortgage interest, depreciation and professional costs against rental income, reducing the effective tax base.
  • Easier transfer on exit. Selling shares in an SPV avoids the need for a new notarial conveyance and the buyer’s transfer-tax obligation, potentially reducing transaction costs on disposal.
  • Double taxation on profit extraction. Distributing profits to the shareholder triggers a 5% dividend withholding tax on top of the 22% CIT already paid, pushing the combined effective rate to approximately 25.9%.
  • Compliance costs. Annual accounting, statutory filing with GEMI (the General Electronic Commercial Registry), and, for larger entities, audit obligations add recurring expense.
  • Golden Visa complications. Company-held property does not automatically qualify the individual shareholder for a Golden Visa. Additional structuring and legal advice is required.

Company Formation and Timeline

Forming a Greek IKE (private company) through the one-stop-shop e-YMS electronic service typically takes two to four weeks, including AFM issuance, GEMI registration and tax-office activation. Add another two to four weeks for notarial completion and land-registry filing of the property itself. For a step-by-step walkthrough, see our guide on how to start a business in Greece as a foreigner.

Greek Holding Structure vs Foreign Holding Company

A Greek-domiciled SPV keeps all compliance and tax obligations within a single jurisdiction and avoids transfer-pricing scrutiny on intercompany charges. A foreign holding company (for example, a Cyprus or Luxembourg vehicle) can unlock treaty benefits on dividends and capital gains but introduces cross-border reporting requirements, substance rules and potential anti-avoidance challenges under EU directives. For most single-property or small-portfolio investors, a Greek IKE is simpler and sufficient. Multi-jurisdictional holding structures should only be adopted with bespoke legal and tax advice.

Buy Property Through Company vs Personally in Greece, Side-by-Side Comparison

Dimension Buy Personally Buy Through a Company / SPV
Golden Visa eligibility Direct qualification, property in buyer’s name counts toward threshold Does not automatically qualify the shareholder; additional structuring required
Transfer tax (upfront) 3% of declared value (+ ~0.09% municipal surcharge) Same 3% rate applies to the company as purchaser
Annual property tax (ENFIA) Assessed on the individual; standard ENFIA rates Assessed on the company; same ENFIA base rates
Rental income tax Progressive personal rates: 15%–44% Flat 22% CIT; plus 5% dividend WHT on distribution (≈25.9% combined)
Deductible expenses Limited (insurance, repairs to a cap) Broad (interest, depreciation, management, maintenance)
VAT on new builds 24% VAT applies if builder opts in; no input-VAT recovery Company can recover input VAT if registered for VAT and property used for taxable activity
Liability & asset protection Full personal exposure Limited to company assets (absent guarantees)
Mortgage & financing Easier access for residential mortgages; banks prefer personal borrowers for single units Corporate lending available but higher rates, stricter covenants; preferred for portfolios
STR compliance (short-term rentals) Must register on AADE STR registry; subject to municipal suspension zones Same registration and suspension rules apply; corporate landlords face identical restrictions
Exit / capital gains No separate capital-gains tax on property sales by individuals (income tax may apply on gains in specific scenarios) Share sale avoids transfer tax for buyer; company-level gains taxed at 22% CIT
Compliance cost & timing Minimal: annual tax return only Annual accounts, GEMI filing, potential audit; formation adds 2–6 weeks

Quick takeaway:

  • Personal ownership wins on Golden Visa eligibility, simplicity and lower compliance cost.
  • Company ownership wins on liability protection, tax efficiency for high-rental-income portfolios, and ease of exit via share transfer.
  • STR restrictions apply identically regardless of ownership structure, location matters more than entity type.

Dimension-by-Dimension Analysis: SPV vs Personal Ownership in Greece

Each row of the comparison table above is unpacked below with statutory references, numeric examples and a clear recommendation line.

Tax Implications

Tax is typically the decisive factor when investors choose to buy property through a company vs personally in Greece. The table below models the key cost lines at three representative purchase prices.

Cost item Personal, €250k Company, €250k Personal, €400k Company, €400k Personal, €800k Company, €800k
Transfer tax (3.09%) €7,725 €7,725 €12,360 €12,360 €24,720 €24,720
Notary fees (~1–1.5%) €2,500–3,750 €2,500–3,750 €4,000–6,000 €4,000–6,000 €8,000–12,000 €8,000–12,000
Legal fees (~1–1.5%) €2,500–3,750 €2,500–3,750 €4,000–6,000 €4,000–6,000 €8,000–12,000 €8,000–12,000
Company formation (IKE) N/A €1,500–3,000 N/A €1,500–3,000 N/A €1,500–3,000
Annual accounting & GEMI filing N/A €2,000–5,000/yr N/A €2,000–5,000/yr N/A €3,000–7,000/yr
Tax on €20k rental income €3,000–4,400 (15–22% band) €4,400 CIT (22%) €3,000–4,400 €4,400 €3,000–4,400 €4,400
Tax on €60k rental income €16,200–19,800 (33–44% band) €13,200 CIT (22%) €16,200–19,800 €13,200 €16,200–19,800 €13,200
Dividend WHT (5%) on €60k post-CIT distribution N/A €2,340 N/A €2,340 N/A €2,340

Sources: AADE (transfer tax rate of 3% under Law 1521/1950 as amended, plus ~3% municipal surcharge on the tax); corporate income tax rate of 22% (Law 4799/2021, confirmed by Commenda for 2026); dividend withholding tax of 5%.

At modest rental income (below approximately €25,000 per year), personal ownership is tax-neutral or slightly cheaper because you avoid the annual compliance overhead and the dividend withholding layer. Once rental income crosses approximately €35,000–40,000, the flat 22% corporate rate begins to deliver meaningful savings, even after the 5% dividend withholding, compared with the 33–44% personal marginal rates. For investors who can retain profits inside the company for reinvestment rather than distributing dividends, the advantage widens further.

Liability and Asset Protection

A property held personally exposes the owner’s entire worldwide estate to claims arising from that property, tenant injuries, construction defects, unpaid contractors, environmental liability. A Greek IKE or EPE, by contrast, limits the investor’s exposure to the company’s own assets. Key nuances:

  • Director liability. Greek company law can impose personal liability on directors for specific tax debts and social-security arrears of the company. Passive investors who are not directors avoid this.
  • Related-party rentals. If the company buys a property and rents it to its own shareholder, AADE may scrutinise the rental price as a related-party transaction. Charging below market rent can trigger deemed-income adjustments and penalties.
  • Mortgage enforcement. Banks lending to an SPV take security over the company’s assets and often require a personal guarantee from the shareholder, which partially negates the liability ring-fence.

Choose corporate ownership when the property carries above-average liability risk (commercial lets, hospitality, construction projects). Choose personal ownership when liability exposure is low and the property is a single residential unit for personal use.

Timing and Transferability

Personal purchase from offer to registration: typically four to eight weeks. Adding company formation extends the timeline by two to six weeks. On exit, the distinction is material: selling a personally held property requires a full notarial conveyance, buyer due diligence and fresh transfer-tax payment. Selling shares in an SPV transfers the underlying property without a new conveyance, the buyer avoids the 3.09% transfer tax, which makes the deal more attractive and can justify a higher sale price. For investors who plan to exit within five to ten years, the share-sale route offers a meaningful transaction-cost advantage.

Enforceability and Dispute Resolution

Regardless of ownership structure, the buyer must conduct thorough title searches in the Ktimatologio (where operational) or the local mortgage registry (Ypothikofilakeio). Title encumbrances, easements, forestry designations and building-permit irregularities affect personal and corporate buyers identically. Engaging a Greek property lawyer for pre-contract due diligence is not optional, it is the single most important step in any Greek property transaction. For details on Greece property law changes in 2026, see our regulatory summary.

Regulatory Burden and STR Compliance

Greece’s short-term rental (STR) framework, governed by Article 111 of Law 4446/2016 as amended by Law 5073/2023 and further operational measures under Law 5170/2025, requires every property listed on platforms such as Airbnb to be registered on the AADE Short-Term Rental Registry and to display a valid Property Registry Number (AMA). Industry observers expect enforcement to intensify through 2026, with AADE cross-referencing platform data against registry records.

Critically, certain municipalities have exercised their power to suspend new STR registrations in designated zones. Properties in these suspension areas cannot obtain a new AMA regardless of whether they are held personally or through a company. This restriction applies identically to both ownership structures, the entity type provides no regulatory advantage.

For investors whose business model depends on short-term letting in tourist hotspots, the new legal framework for short-term rentals in Greece should be reviewed before purchase. The practical effect is that location selection and existing AMA status matter more than corporate structure for STR viability.

What Changes in 2026: Golden Visa, STR Rules and Corporate Tax

Three regulatory shifts in 2025–26 directly affect whether to buy property through a company vs personally in Greece:

Golden Visa threshold restructuring. Law 5100/2024 and subsequent implementing circulars introduced tiered investment thresholds based on property location and type. The entry-level threshold of €250,000 remains available for qualifying areas, while prime zones (parts of Athens, Thessaloniki, Mykonos, Santorini and other high-demand municipalities) now require a higher minimum investment. For current tier maps and eligibility criteria, the Ministry of Migration & Asylum publishes updated guidance. Because the Golden Visa programme links eligibility to the individual investor, not to a corporate vehicle, personal ownership remains the cleaner path for applicants whose primary goal is residency. See our full analysis of Greece Golden Visa 2026 changes and eligibility.

Short-term rental registry and municipal suspensions. AADE’s operational rollout of the STR registry under Law 5073/2023, combined with municipal suspension powers activated in several tourist-heavy areas during late 2025 and early 2026, means that acquiring property specifically for Airbnb-style letting now requires pre-purchase verification that the target location is not subject to a registration freeze. Neither personal nor corporate buyers are exempt from these restrictions, but corporate buyers face the additional risk that compliance failures (missing AMA, unlicensed platform listings) can trigger penalties at the entity level and reputational harm to the company’s tax profile.

Corporate tax rate stability. Greece’s corporate income tax rate of 22% has remained unchanged since 2022 and, based on official budget documentation and industry analysis, early indications suggest it will hold steady through 2026. No pending legislation proposes an increase. This rate stability makes the corporate route predictable for multi-year investment planning, a meaningful advantage for portfolio investors modelling long-term returns.

Decision Framework: When to Buy Personally vs Through a Company in Greece

Choose personal ownership when:

  • You are purchasing a single residential property primarily for personal use or as a holiday home.
  • Golden Visa eligibility is a primary objective and you want the simplest qualification path.
  • Expected annual rental income is below €35,000.
  • You want to minimise ongoing compliance costs and avoid annual accounting obligations.
  • You do not need asset-protection ring-fencing (low liability-risk property, no commercial tenants).
  • You plan to hold the property indefinitely with no near-term exit strategy requiring share transfer.

Choose corporate / SPV ownership when:

  • You are assembling a portfolio of two or more rental properties.
  • Expected annual rental income exceeds €40,000, making the 22% flat CIT materially cheaper than personal rates.
  • Asset isolation is critical, you want to shield personal wealth from property-related claims.
  • You plan to exit within five to ten years and want to sell shares rather than convey the property (avoiding buyer transfer tax).
  • Your lender or joint-venture partner requires a corporate borrower or co-ownership vehicle.
  • You are a developer acquiring land or buildings for renovation and resale, and need to recover input VAT.
  • Golden Visa is not a priority, or you have already secured residency through a separate qualifying investment.
If your priority is… Choose
Golden Visa eligibility Personal ownership
Tax efficiency on rental income > €40k/yr Company / SPV
Liability protection Company / SPV
Lowest compliance cost Personal ownership
Easy exit via share sale Company / SPV
VAT recovery on new-build development Company / SPV
Single holiday home, no rental plan Personal ownership

Three real-world scenarios:

  • Scenario 1, Golden Visa buyer, single apartment, €250k, non-restricted area. Choose personal ownership. Direct residency qualification, minimal compliance, low rental income does not justify corporate overhead.
  • Scenario 2, Property developer, five units for renovation and resale, €800k total. Choose SPV (Greek IKE). VAT recovery on construction, deductible renovation costs, share-sale exit avoids buyer transfer tax, and liability is ring-fenced per project.
  • Scenario 3, High-net-worth investor, boutique-hotel portfolio generating €120k/yr rental income. Choose SPV. The 22% CIT saves roughly €20,000+ annually compared with personal marginal rates; retained profits fund further acquisitions without dividend extraction.

When to Engage a Lawyer for This Decision

Some aspects of Greek property acquisition are manageable without counsel. The ownership-structure decision is not one of them. Engage a qualified Greek property lawyer when:

  • Title due diligence is required. Every purchase needs a Ktimatologio or mortgage-registry search to confirm clean title, identify encumbrances, and check forestry or archaeological designations.
  • You are applying for a Golden Visa. The interplay between ownership structure, investment thresholds and programme circulars requires lawyer confirmation that the proposed structure qualifies.
  • You are forming an SPV. Company articles, shareholder agreements, director appointments, GEMI registration and AFM activation require Greek legal oversight.
  • VAT planning is involved. New-build acquisitions where the developer has opted into VAT require careful structuring to ensure input-VAT recovery through a corporate vehicle.
  • You plan to operate short-term rentals. Pre-purchase AMA registry checks, municipal suspension verification and compliance with Law 5073/2023 and Law 5170/2025 are location-specific and change frequently.

Checklist for your first meeting with a property lawyer:

  • Passport / ID and proof of funds.
  • Draft purchase terms or listing details (address, declared value, property type).
  • Intended use: personal residence, long-term rental, short-term rental, development/resale.
  • Golden Visa objective: yes or no, and whether you have other qualifying investments.
  • Exit horizon: how long you expect to hold the property.
  • Financing plan: cash purchase vs mortgage, and lender requirements.

A directory of qualified property lawyers in Greece is available through Global Law Experts.

Need Legal Advice?

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.

Sources

  1. AADE, Real Estate Transfer Tax
  2. Greek Ministry of Migration & Asylum, Golden Visa
  3. Hellenic Republic MFA, Golden Visa Programme
  4. AADE, Article 111, Law 4446/2016 (updated by Law 5073/2023), Short-Term Rentals
  5. GTP, Short-Term Rentals in Greece: New Restrictions Take Effect in 2026
  6. Commenda, Greece Corporate Tax Rates
  7. Stegasi.gov.gr, New Golden Visa Investment Options

FAQs

Should I buy property in Greece personally or through a company?
It depends on your investment size, rental-income expectations and whether you need a Golden Visa. For a single residential unit with modest rental income and a Golden Visa goal, buy personally. For a multi-unit rental portfolio generating above €40,000 annually where liability protection matters, use a company. The decision framework above maps specific priorities to the recommended structure.
Yes. The Golden Visa programme administered by the Ministry of Migration & Asylum links the residence permit to the individual investor. Property held by a company does not automatically qualify the shareholder. Additional structuring, and legal advice, is required to navigate company-held-property scenarios. For most applicants, personal ownership is the safer and faster route to Golden Visa eligibility.
Legally, yes. A Greek company can purchase residential property and lease it to its shareholder. However, the rental must be at arm’s-length (market) rates. AADE treats below-market rent to a related party as a deemed benefit, potentially triggering additional tax and penalties. Director liability for mispriced related-party transactions is a real risk. Take professional advice before structuring owner-occupied use through an SPV.
Yes. The real estate transfer tax of 3% (plus the approximately 0.09% municipal surcharge) applies identically to both natural persons and legal entities. The tax is calculated on the higher of the declared transaction value and the objective (tax) value of the property, as set by AADE.
Yes, but the transfer is treated as a sale for tax purposes. The property must be re-conveyed by notarial deed, transfer tax of 3.09% applies again on the transfer value, and legal and notary fees are incurred a second time. If the property has appreciated, the transfer may also trigger income-tax consequences. Restructuring after purchase is significantly more expensive than choosing the right structure from the outset.
Engage a Greek property lawyer whenever you face any of the following triggers:
how to register for ekap
By Global Law Experts

posted 43 minutes ago

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Buy Property Personally or Through a Company in Greece (2026): Tax, Liability & Golden Visa

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