Our Expert in Bulgaria
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Last updated: 19 June 2026 (reviewed for 2026 practice updates)
If you own property in Bulgaria and are weighing whether to sell vs rent property in Bulgaria in 2026, you are facing a decision shaped by euro adoption, shifting municipal tax practices, and a market that has moved firmly into a more cautious phase. The question cuts across three typical owner profiles, Bulgarian‑resident individuals, non‑resident EU or international owners, and companies (EOODs or foreign entities), each of which faces a different tax and compliance calculus. This article delivers a dimension‑by‑dimension comparison, worked numeric examples for all three profiles, and concrete triggers for when to engage a real estate lawyer before committing to either path.
This article provides general information only and does not constitute legal or tax advice. For advice tailored to your situation, contact a qualified Bulgarian real‑estate lawyer and tax advisor.
Selling converts your Bulgarian property into a one‑off lump sum. The process runs through a notary deed, property registration with the Registry Agency, and settlement of all transfer‑related taxes and fees. For most well‑priced properties in major cities, industry observers expect a closing timeline of 30 to 60 days in the current market; resort and rural properties may take longer.
Sell or rent pros and cons, the sale side:
Key drawbacks:
Seller’s quick‑step checklist:
Holding the property and renting it out generates recurring income while preserving exposure to any future capital appreciation. Owners can pursue long‑term residential leases, typically governed by the Obligations and Contracts Act, or short‑term holiday lets, which carry additional registration and tourist‑tax obligations.
Sell or rent pros and cons, the rental side:
Key drawbacks:
Landlord’s quick‑step checklist:
| Dimension | Sell (Option A) | Rent (Option B) |
|---|---|---|
| Eligibility / Suitability | Owners needing immediate liquidity; owners with attractive market offers; complex title issues best resolved before sale | Owners seeking recurring income; able to manage property or hire management; 5+ year investment horizon |
| Liquidity / Cash | One‑off lump sum net of taxes and closing costs, fastest route to cash | Ongoing monthly/annual cashflow; less liquid, exit still requires a sale |
| Upfront / Transfer costs | Municipal acquisition tax (2–4 %), notary fees (0.4–1.2 % + VAT), registration fee (0.1 %), agent commission (1.5–6 %) | Renovation, furnishing, agency setup fees; no transfer tax while holding, but municipal property tax and waste fees continue |
| Tax event & rate | Capital gains taxed at 10 % PIT (individuals); primary‑residence exemption if held 3+ years; corporate sellers at 10 % CIT on profit | Rental income taxed at 10 % PIT (residents) or 10 % final tax (non‑residents); 10 % CIT for corporate landlords |
| Ongoing costs & compliance | Minimal after sale, one tax‑return filing for the capital gain | Annual municipal property tax (0.01–0.45 % of tax value), waste charge, maintenance, accounting/VAT if professional activity |
| Net cashflow complexity | Simple, one calculation at exit | Moderate to high, vacancy, maintenance reserves, tax filings each year |
| Legal liability & landlord risk | Contractual liability under sale agreement; buyer warranties; earnest‑money disputes | Landlord obligations under Obligations and Contracts Act; eviction proceedings; deposit handling; safety standards |
| Dispute / Enforcement | Conveyancing protections (notary deed, Property Register); standard property‑dispute routes | Landlord‑tenant disputes may take longer; eviction timelines are court‑dependent |
| Typical timeline to exit | 30–90 days (market dependent) | Weeks to months for tenant setup; exit still requires 30–90 day sale process |
| When to hire a lawyer (summary) | Complex title, cross‑border ownership, corporate sellers, pre‑sale tax planning | Lease drafting, eviction risk, VAT / tourist‑rental rules, corporate landlord structures |
Three immediate takeaways:
Do you pay capital gains tax in Bulgaria? Yes, the gain on a property sale is treated as taxable income under the Personal Income Tax Act (PITA). For resident individuals, the taxable base is the positive difference between the sale price and the documented acquisition cost (including documented improvement costs), taxed at the flat 10 % PIT rate. A critical exemption exists: gains from the sale of a property that has been the seller’s primary residence for at least three years before the sale are exempt from tax.
Non‑resident individuals face the same 10 % rate on the gain, applied as a final tax; the National Revenue Agency (NRA) requires a tax return filing by the non‑resident or, in practice, withholding arrangements may be agreed with the buyer or managed through a local representative. Corporate sellers, including Bulgarian EOODs and foreign entities with Bulgarian permanent establishments, include the gain in their corporate‑tax base and pay 10 % corporate income tax (CIT) on the net profit.
How is rental income taxed in Bulgaria? Resident individuals include gross rental income in their annual PIT return, may deduct a flat 10 % statutory expense allowance (no receipts required), and pay 10 % PIT on the remaining taxable base. Non‑resident individuals owe a 10 % final tax on gross rental income, also reduced by the 10 % statutory deduction; this is typically withheld at source by the tenant if the tenant is a legal entity or self‑employed person, or declared by the non‑resident via a tax return. Corporate landlords, whether Bulgarian EOODs or foreign companies with a permanent establishment, pay 10 % CIT on net rental profit after deducting documented operating expenses, depreciation and municipal charges.
What taxes and fees apply on property transfer in Bulgaria? The main cost layers at sale are set out below.
| Cost item | Sell (Option A) | Rent (Option B) |
|---|---|---|
| Capital gains / income tax | 10 % PIT on gain (individuals) or 10 % CIT (companies); primary‑residence exemption may apply | 10 % PIT / final tax on net rental income; 10 % CIT for companies |
| Municipal acquisition (transfer) tax | 2–4 % of the notarial deed value (rate set by each municipality under the Local Taxes and Fees Act) | Not applicable while holding |
| Property Register registration fee | 0.1 % of the notarial deed value | Not applicable |
| Notary fees | Scaled tariff, approximately 0.4–1.2 % of the deed value (+ 20 % VAT on the fee) | Not typically required (lease notarisation is optional) |
| Agent commission | 1.5–6 % (market standard; negotiable) | Typically 50–100 % of one month’s rent as tenant‑finding fee |
| Annual municipal property tax | Not applicable after sale | 0.01–0.45 % of the municipal tax‑assessed value per year (e.g., Sofia ≈ 1.875 ‰) |
| Waste collection fee | Not applicable after sale | Set by municipality; varies by area and property type |
Sources: Local Taxes and Fees Act (Ministry of Finance); PwC Bulgaria tax summaries; RSM Real Estate Tax Factsheet 2026; Investropa, Property Taxes, Fees and Costs in Bulgaria.
Owners who hold and rent remain liable for the annual municipal property tax, set by each municipality within the statutory range of 0.01 % to 0.45 % of the property’s tax‑assessed value under the Local Taxes and Fees Act. In Sofia, the effective rate is approximately 1.875 ‰ (0.1875 %). Waste‑collection charges, building‑maintenance contributions and insurance add to the annual cost base. Short‑term tourist‑rental operators also collect and remit a per‑night tourist tax. These running costs must be netted against gross rental income when modelling break‑even against the sale alternative.
The following worked examples use common assumptions: sale price €150,000; documented acquisition cost €80,000; annual gross rent €6,000; agent commission 3 %; municipal property tax 1.875 ‰ of a tax‑assessed value of €75,000. All figures are indicative, verify with a qualified advisor before relying on them.
| Scenario | Net proceeds if sold | Year‑1 net rental income |
|---|---|---|
| Resident individual (Sofia, non‑primary residence) | Sale price €150,000 less municipal acquisition tax ~€4,500 (3 %), notary + registration ~€1,950, agent ~€4,500, capital gains tax €7,000 (10 % × €70,000 gain) = ≈ €132,050 net | Gross rent €6,000 less 10 % statutory deduction (€600), PIT at 10 % (€540), municipal property tax ~€141, maintenance ~€300 = ≈ €5,019 net |
| Non‑resident individual (EU citizen) | Same sale costs plus final tax 10 % on gain (€7,000); may require local tax representative = ≈ €132,050 net (before representative costs) | Gross rent €6,000 less 10 % statutory deduction, 10 % final tax (€540), municipal property tax ~€141, management fee ~€600 = ≈ €4,719 net |
| Bulgarian EOOD (company owner) | Sale price €150,000 less transfer costs ~€10,950, CIT on gain 10 % × €70,000 = €7,000 = ≈ €132,050 net (before dividend withholding on distribution) | Gross rent €6,000 less documented expenses ~€1,041, CIT 10 % on net profit (€496) = ≈ €4,463 net (before dividend extraction) |
At these assumptions, a resident individual would need roughly 26 years of rental income to match the net sale proceeds, a signal that selling is the stronger financial path unless the owner expects material capital appreciation or values the ongoing income stream for other reasons. Non‑residents and corporate owners face additional layers (representative costs, dividend withholding) that shift the calculus further toward selling for pure financial extraction, but toward renting where the property sits within a broader portfolio or tax‑deferral strategy.
Landlords in Bulgaria operate under the Obligations and Contracts Act and relevant municipal ordinances. Eviction of a non‑paying tenant requires a court order, and proceedings can take several months depending on court workload and the tenant’s procedural defences. Deposit handling is governed by the lease terms, there is no statutory escrow requirement, so clear lease clauses are essential. Short‑term tourist‑rental operators face additional compliance: registration with the local tourism register, collection and remittance of tourist tax, and potential municipal licensing restrictions in resort zones. A lawyer‑drafted lease with guarantee clauses, clear termination procedures, and deposit‑return conditions materially reduces landlord risk.
Bulgaria’s adoption of the euro on 1 January 2026 affects the sell vs rent property Bulgaria 2026 decision in several practical ways:
Action point: Verify the exchange‑rate application, updated tax‑assessment values and any withholding requirements with a qualified Bulgarian real‑estate lawyer before signing a sale contract or new lease in 2026.
| If your priority is… | Choose |
|---|---|
| Immediate cash / liquidity | Sell |
| Stable passive income, 5+ year horizon | Rent |
| Simplicity, minimal ongoing admin | Sell |
| Tax deferral on capital gain (no current need for proceeds) | Rent |
| Exiting Bulgaria permanently (non‑resident, no local ties) | Sell |
| Building a euro‑denominated income stream | Rent |
| Complex title / co‑ownership dispute to resolve | Sell (resolve and exit) |
| Property in high‑demand rental area (Sofia centre, Plovdiv, coast in season) | Rent |
Choose Sell when:
Choose Rent when:
If you remain undecided, commission a three‑year cashflow model from a lawyer or tax advisor comparing net sale proceeds (invested at a conservative rate) against projected net rental income, this exercise typically makes the right path clear within a single working session.
Not every sale or lease requires full legal representation, but the following situations move the decision firmly into territory where professional advice pays for itself:
Typical scope of a legal engagement:
To connect with a vetted Bulgarian real‑estate lawyer, visit the Bulgaria lawyer directory or browse the Real Estate practice area on Global Law Experts.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Benislav Vatev at Bozhikov & Vatev Law Firm, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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