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Understanding how to register property in Hungary is essential for any buyer, seller or corporate purchaser completing a real‑estate transaction in the country. Every transfer of ownership, mortgage or encumbrance affecting Hungarian land or buildings must be recorded with the Földhivatal (Department of Land Administration) to have legal effect against third parties. Since 15 January 2025, filings are submitted through the electronic E‑ING system introduced under Act C of 2021 on Land Registration, replacing the former paper‑based workflow. This guide sets out the complete land registry procedure Hungary practitioners follow, from pre‑contract due diligence through to final registration, together with the documents, timelines, costs and foreigner‑permit rules that apply in 2026.
Hungary operates a constitutive land‑registry system. That means a change of ownership takes legal effect against third parties only once the Földhivatal has entered it in the property register. The register is public: anyone may request an extract (the tulajdoni lap) showing the current owner, encumbrances, mortgages, easements and any restrictions on the property.
Registration is required for outright sales and purchases, gifts, inheritance transfers, mortgage entries and deletions, easement registrations, and changes to encumbrances or usufruct rights. Both the buyer and the seller have obligations in the process, but in practice it is the parties’ instructed lawyer, or, in certain cases, a notary, who prepares and submits the electronic filing through the E‑ING platform operated by the Földhivatal.
The electronic land registry Hungary framework under Act C of 2021 replaced the previous Act CXLI of 1997. E‑ING went live on 15 January 2025 and is now the mandatory channel for registration applications submitted by legal representatives. Direct paper filing by unrepresented parties remains possible in limited circumstances, but the overwhelming majority of transactional filings are handled electronically by a Hungarian‑registered lawyer.
Who may acquire and register property in Hungary depends on the buyer’s nationality, residency status and corporate form. The table below summarises the eligibility position for each category.
| Buyer category | Right to acquire | Acquisition permit required? |
|---|---|---|
| Hungarian citizen / permanent resident | Unrestricted | No |
| EU / EEA citizen | Generally unrestricted for residential property | No (subject to limited exceptions for agricultural land) |
| Non‑EU / non‑EEA foreign individual | Permitted, subject to permit | Yes, acquisition permit from the competent government office |
| Hungarian‑registered company | Unrestricted (subject to articles of association) | No |
| Foreign‑registered company | Permitted, subject to permit | Yes, acquisition permit required |
Non‑EU and non‑EEA nationals, and companies incorporated outside the EU/EEA, must obtain an acquisition permit (megszerzési engedély) before the transfer can be registered. The application is prepared by the buyer’s Hungarian lawyer and submitted to the competent county government office. Typical processing time is 1–4 months, depending on case complexity and the workload of the issuing authority. Agricultural land is subject to additional restrictions under separate legislation and is generally not available to foreign buyers.
Corporate buyers must also hold a valid Hungarian tax identification number. Foreign companies will need apostilled company documents (certificate of incorporation, articles of association) and a notarised power of attorney authorising the Hungarian lawyer to act on the company’s behalf.
The following numbered steps describe the standard land registry procedure Hungary lawyers follow for a sale‑and‑purchase transaction. Mortgage registrations run in parallel with steps 4–7 and require additional bank documentation.
| Step | Who does it | Typical duration |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Title check and due diligence | Buyer’s lawyer | 1–7 days (online extract immediate; full lawyer review 3–7 days) |
| 2. Contract preparation and negotiation | Buyer, seller, lawyers | 1–2 weeks |
| 3. Acquisition permit application (if required) | Buyer’s lawyer | 1–4 months (30–120 days) |
| 4. Execution of the final sale deed | Parties + lawyer or notary | Same day |
| 5. E‑ING filing of registration application | Authorised lawyer via E‑ING | Electronic submission immediate |
| 6. Land Office review and entry | Földhivatal | 3–30 business days |
| 7. Registration confirmation and updated extract | Buyer’s lawyer / buyer | Available once entry is made |
Order a current tulajdoni lap from the Földhivatal portal for the property identified by its topographical lot number. The extract confirms the registered owner, any mortgages, encumbrances, pre‑emption rights, easements and planning restrictions. Verify the parcel number against the national geoportal or cadastral maps. Where the property forms part of a condominium, also request the condominium’s founding deed and management records. A qualified lawyer should review the extract and flag any discrepancies before the buyer commits to a contract.
The buyer and seller agree commercial terms and instruct their respective lawyers to prepare a sale‑and‑purchase deed. Under Hungarian law, real‑estate purchase contracts must be drawn up or countersigned by a lawyer or executed in notarial deed form to be eligible for land‑registry registration. The contract must contain the parties’ full details, the topographical lot number, the purchase price, payment terms, VAT treatment and any conditions precedent, including the acquisition permit condition for foreign buyers. A deposit (typically 10 % of the purchase price) is usually paid at this stage and held in the lawyer’s escrow account.
Where the buyer is a non‑EU/non‑EEA individual or a foreign‑registered company, the buyer’s Hungarian lawyer submits the acquisition permit application to the competent county government office. The application package typically includes a copy of the signed contract, the buyer’s passport or company documents, a power of attorney and a statement on the intended use of the property. Processing usually takes between 30 and 120 days. The contract should include a condition precedent making completion subject to receipt of the permit. If the permit is refused, the deposit is returned to the buyer under standard contractual arrangements.
Once any conditions precedent are satisfied, including receipt of the acquisition permit where applicable, the parties sign the final deed. The buyer pays the balance of the purchase price, usually by bank transfer into the seller’s account or the lawyer’s escrow account. The lawyer verifies receipt of funds, and the seller delivers any additional documents (keys, utility transfer forms). The executed deed, together with supporting documents, is prepared for electronic submission.
The instructed lawyer submits the registration application through the E‑ING platform. The filing includes a digital copy of the executed deed, proof of identity for both parties, and any supporting documents (acquisition permit, power of attorney, company extracts). The system accepts qualified electronic signatures and submissions made under the lawyer’s registered electronic credentials. Upon successful submission, E‑ING generates an automatic acknowledgement with a reference number and timestamp. Same‑day filing after deed execution is strongly recommended, because registration priority is determined by the time‑stamp of the application.
The Földhivatal examines the application for completeness and legal compliance. If the file is in order, the registrar enters the ownership change in the property register and updates the tulajdoni lap. Standard processing takes 3–30 business days from receipt of a complete application. Complex cases, for example, those involving title disputes, incomplete documentation or concurrent filings, may take longer. If the registrar identifies a deficiency, the applicant receives a notice to correct the filing within a specified deadline.
Once the entry is made, the buyer’s lawyer receives electronic notification. The updated tulajdoni lap, now reflecting the buyer as the registered owner, can be accessed and downloaded through the Földhivatal portal. This completes the registration process.
The table below lists every document typically required to file a property registration application with the Hungarian Land Registry. Exact requirements may vary depending on whether the buyer is an individual, a company or a foreigner requiring an acquisition permit.
| Document | Notes |
|---|---|
| Current tulajdoni lap (land‑registry extract) | Obtained from the Földhivatal portal. Confirms ownership, encumbrances and parcel data. Electronic extract fee applies (see costs table). |
| Sale and purchase deed / final contract | Must be drafted or countersigned by a Hungarian‑registered lawyer, or executed as a notarial deed. Must include topographical lot number, parties’ details, purchase price and VAT treatment. |
| Proof of identity | Passport or Hungarian ID card for individuals. Passport required for foreign buyers; certified Hungarian translation may be needed for supporting documents not in Hungarian. |
| Acquisition permit (if applicable) | Issued by the competent county government office for non‑EU/non‑EEA buyers and foreign companies. |
| Company documents (corporate buyers) | Company extract, articles of association, tax number, certificate of incorporation. Foreign company documents must be apostilled. |
| Power of attorney | Required if a representative files on behalf of a party. Must be notarised or electronically signed with a qualified signature; must specify scope for E‑ING filing. |
| Mortgage documents (if applicable) | Bank mortgage deed, loan agreement and lender confirmation. The bank typically provides separate filing instructions. |
| Proof of payment / transfer tax declaration | Bank transfer receipts for the purchase price. Tax declarations required where local transfer taxes or municipal fees apply. |
| Topographical lot number and cadastral data | Obtained from the geoportal or provided by a surveyor. Required to identify the property in the registry. |
| Certificate of encumbrances / planning restrictions | Issued by the land office or municipal authority. Confirms any limitations that affect the transfer. |
Foreign‑language documents must generally be accompanied by a certified Hungarian translation prepared by an accredited translator. Corporate powers of attorney for E‑ING filing should explicitly authorise electronic submission and specify the lawyer’s name and bar registration number.
The total duration of a Hungarian property transaction varies significantly depending on the buyer’s nationality, whether an acquisition permit is required, and the complexity of the title. The table below sets out indicative timelines for three common scenarios.
| Scenario | Due diligence to deed | Permit processing | Deed to registration | Total estimate |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Domestic buyer (Hungarian or EU citizen) | 2–3 weeks | Not required | 3–30 business days | 3–7 weeks |
| Non‑EU foreign individual | 2–3 weeks | 1–4 months | 3–30 business days | 2–6 months |
| Foreign‑registered company | 3–4 weeks (incl. apostille) | 1–4 months | 3–30 business days | 3–7 months |
Key deadline considerations for the property registration timeline Hungary buyers should note:
The table below summarises the principal costs associated with a Hungarian property registration. All amounts are indicative; buyers and sellers should verify current fees against the Földhivatal’s official schedule before filing.
| Item | Typical amount (HUF) | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Electronic tulajdoni lap (land‑registry extract) | ~4,800 HUF per extract | Payable via SimplePay on the Földhivatal portal. Fee as reported by local practitioner sources. |
| Land registry registration fee | ~6,600 HUF (example rate) | Varies by entry type. Check the official fee schedule on the Földhivatal portal for the applicable rate. |
| Lawyer / notary fees | HUF 150,000 – 1,500,000+ | Depends on transaction complexity, property value and scope of conveyancing services. May be a flat fee or a percentage of the purchase price. |
| Acquisition permit administrative costs | Variable | State administrative fee is modest; the main cost is the lawyer’s fee for preparing and managing the permit application. |
| Certified translations | HUF 5,000 – 50,000 | Depends on document volume. Required for all foreign‑language documents submitted with the registration. |
| Mortgage registration fee | Variable | Charged by the bank and/or the land office. Client pays for both entry and eventual deletion. |
| Property transfer tax | Varies by municipality | Hungary does not levy a single nationwide transfer tax on all purchases. Local municipal taxes (land/building tax) may apply, check with the relevant local authority. |
Online payment for extracts and certain administrative fees is processed through SimplePay on the Földhivatal portal. Lawyer and notary fees should be agreed in writing before the engagement begins.
The most significant procedural change in recent years was the launch of the E‑ING electronic registration system on 15 January 2025, implementing the framework set out in Act C of 2021 on Land Registration. Since that date, registration applications submitted by legal representatives must be filed electronically through E‑ING rather than on paper.
The practical effects for parties transacting in 2026 include the following. All deeds, powers of attorney and supporting documents must be uploaded in accepted digital formats. Lawyers filing on behalf of clients use their registered electronic credentials or qualified electronic signatures. Parties who are not represented by a lawyer may still file in paper form at the competent land office, but this option is rarely used in practice for transactional filings. Industry observers expect further incremental refinements to the E‑ING platform throughout 2026, including expanded online payment options and enhanced tracking functionality for pending applications.
Buyers and sellers should ensure their instructed lawyer is registered for E‑ING access and that all powers of attorney explicitly authorise electronic filing. Foreign parties should prepare apostilled and translated company documents well in advance to avoid delays at the filing stage.
The simplest way to avoid these pitfalls is to engage a Hungarian‑registered lawyer at the earliest stage of the transaction, ideally before the preliminary contract is signed.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Gábor Tuller at Tuller & Partners Law Firm, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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