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Last reviewed: 13 July 2026
Understanding how to buy agricultural land in Hungary in 2026 requires navigating a multi‑stage regulatory process that is markedly more complex than a standard residential property purchase. Hungary’s primary farmland statute, 2013. évi CXXII. törvény (Földforgalmi törvény), restricts who may acquire agricultural parcels, imposes ownership caps, and grants statutory pre‑emption rights to local farmers and municipalities. This guide sets out the complete procedure, from pre‑deal due diligence through Land Registry registration, covering eligibility by buyer type, the acquisition permit application, required documents, realistic timelines, costs, and the 2026 administrative enforcement changes that every foreign or corporate buyer must factor into transaction planning.
The acquisition of arable, forestry or other agricultural land classified under the Földforgalmi törvény follows a fixed procedural sequence. At a high level, the steps are:
This procedure applies to every parcel classified as agricultural land, regardless of whether the buyer is a Hungarian citizen, an EU national, a third‑country investor or a corporate entity. The Földforgalmi törvény sets a maximum ownership cap, registered farmers may hold up to 300 hectares, while non‑farmer natural persons face lower thresholds. Legal persons (companies) are subject to additional restrictions and, in most cases, cannot acquire agricultural land ownership at all, though long‑term lease structures remain available.
Before a buyer commits resources to due diligence, the first task is to confirm whether the acquisition is legally permissible. The Földforgalmi törvény divides potential buyers into distinct categories, each subject to different requirements and caps.
Hungarian citizens enjoy the broadest access. An EU or EEA citizen may also acquire agricultural land, provided they can demonstrate relevant agricultural qualifications or practical farming experience and, in certain cases, Hungarian residency. The statute requires that an EU‑national buyer register with the Hungarian Chamber of Agriculture (Nemzeti Agrárgazdasági Kamara) and declare their intended agricultural use of the parcel. Third‑country (non‑EU) nationals face the most restrictive rules: direct ownership of agricultural land is generally prohibited unless a specific exemption applies (for example, inheritance). In practice, non‑EU individuals typically pursue long‑term lease arrangements or structure their acquisition through a Hungarian special‑purpose vehicle (SPV), although SPV ownership itself is heavily restricted, see the corporate eligibility section below.
All natural‑person buyers must satisfy the ownership cap. A registered farmer may hold up to 300 hectares. A non‑farmer Hungarian or EU citizen faces a lower ceiling. Any acquisition that would push total holdings above the applicable cap will be refused by the authority.
The Földforgalmi törvény contains a near‑blanket prohibition on legal persons (including Hungarian‑registered companies) acquiring ownership of agricultural land. This prohibition applies equally to foreign‑incorporated entities. The practical effect is that a foreign investor cannot simply register a Hungarian Kft. (limited liability company) and purchase farmland through it. There are narrow exceptions, for instance, certain registered agricultural cooperatives and church‑affiliated entities may qualify, but these are not available to commercial investors in the ordinary course.
Corporate buyers seeking to exploit Hungarian farmland therefore generally pursue one of two alternative routes: (a) a long‑term land‑use lease (haszonbérleti szerződés), which the Földforgalmi törvény permits for legal persons subject to its own approval procedure and pre‑emption rules; or (b) acquisition by a natural‑person shareholder or beneficial owner who satisfies the eligibility criteria in their own name. Either route carries structuring risk and should be reviewed by Hungarian counsel before any commitment is made.
Regardless of buyer type, the acquisition must not violate public‑interest restrictions. Parcels subject to nature‑conservation designations, water‑management zones or special land‑use orders may carry additional permit requirements from the relevant environmental or municipal authority.
The following numbered steps trace the acquisition from initial due diligence to Land Registry entry. Each step identifies the responsible party, the key documents to attach and the typical duration. The mandatory timeline table below consolidates these figures.
Request a current cadastral extract and title sheet (tulajdoni lap) from the competent district Land Registry (földhivatal). The title sheet confirms the parcel’s classification (arable, vineyard, orchard, forestry, pasture or other agricultural use), any registered encumbrances (mortgages, servitudes, rights of way), and the identity of the current registered owner. Simultaneously, verify the land‑quality class and any zoning overlays with the local municipality. If the parcel includes protected natural areas, request the applicable environmental permits. This step is performed by the buyer’s lawyer, often together with a licensed surveyor if boundary verification is needed. Typical duration: 3–10 business days.
Determine whether the buyer qualifies as a natural person (Hungarian citizen, EU/EEA citizen with agricultural qualifications, or non‑EU national with an applicable exemption) or whether a corporate structure is required. If the buyer is a foreign individual, confirm that Chamber of Agriculture registration and residency requirements can be met before contract signature. If the buyer is a corporate entity, assess whether a long‑term lease is the appropriate route, or whether a natural‑person acquisition with back‑to‑back shareholder arrangements is viable. Document the eligibility decision in a written memorandum, this will form part of the permit application file. Typical duration: 3–7 business days, depending on the complexity of the corporate structure.
Prepare and submit the acquisition‑permit application to the competent County Government Office (megyei kormányhivatal). The application must include the draft conditional sales agreement, the buyer’s eligibility documentation (ID, Chamber registration, agricultural qualifications or experience certificate), the cadastral extract, beneficial ownership declarations (where applicable) and proof of payment of the administrative fee. The application is assessed in two phases: an administrative intake check (completeness of documents, typically 5–10 business days) followed by a substantive review of eligibility and public‑interest compliance (typically 30–60 business days, though this can extend if the authority requests supplementary information).
The local land committee (helyi földbizottság) may also be consulted and issues a non‑binding opinion on the transaction, as required under the Földforgalmi törvény and implementing Government Decree 251/2014 (X. 2. ).
Once the conditional contract is submitted, the seller is obligated to notify pre‑emption right holders, including registered local farmers, co‑owners, neighbouring landowners, the local municipality and the Hungarian state, of the proposed sale. These holders have a statutory window (typically 15–30 calendar days, depending on the category of right holder and the applicable statutory notice provisions under the Földforgalmi törvény) to exercise their right of first refusal by matching the agreed price and terms.
From the buyer’s perspective, this is the highest‑risk phase: if a qualified pre‑emption holder exercises their right, the buyer loses the transaction. Practical mitigation tactics include drafting the conditional contract with robust escrow and deposit‑protection clauses, agreeing a defined deposit amount that is returned in full if pre‑emption is exercised, and ensuring the seller’s notification obligations are fulfilled promptly and in the prescribed form to avoid procedural delays.
The County Government Office issues a written decision approving or refusing the acquisition permit. Typical decision timeframes are 30–60 business days from the close of the pre‑emption notice period. Common grounds for refusal include: the buyer failing to meet eligibility criteria, the acquisition exceeding ownership caps, incomplete documentation or an adverse opinion from the local land committee. If the application is refused, the buyer may appeal to the competent administrative court within the statutory appeal window (typically 15–30 calendar days from notification of the decision). Industry observers expect that, under 2026 enforcement practice, authorities are scrutinising eligibility documentation and intended land‑use declarations more rigorously than in prior years.
Once the acquisition permit is granted (and the pre‑emption period has passed without exercise), the parties proceed to execute the final purchase deed before a Hungarian notary public. The notary verifies the identities of the parties, the validity of the permit and the terms of the sale. Payment of the purchase price, typically via escrow release, occurs at this stage. The notary then submits the executed deed to the competent district Land Registry (földhivatal) for registration. The Land Registry entry typically takes 8–30 business days. Upon registration, the buyer becomes the legal owner.
Post‑registration steps may include notifying CAP (Common Agricultural Policy) authorities if the parcel is enrolled in an EU subsidy programme, and fulfilling any land‑use conditions stated in the acquisition permit.
| Step | Who Does It | Typical Duration |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Pre‑deal due diligence (parcel classification, encumbrances) | Buyer’s lawyer / surveyor / Land Registry office | 3–10 business days |
| 2. Eligibility check & vehicle decision | Buyer + counsel | 3–7 business days |
| 3. Submit acquisition‑permit application to County Government Office (megyei kormányhivatal) | Buyer / counsel | Intake: 5–10 business days; substantive review: 30–60 business days |
| 4. Municipal pre‑emption notice period | Local government / registered pre‑emption holders | 15–30 calendar days |
| 5. Authority decision / possible appeal | County Government Office / Administrative Court | Decision: 30–60 business days; appeal window: 15–30 calendar days |
| 6. Notary deed execution & Land Registry registration | Notary public + Land Registry (földhivatal) | Notary: 1–3 weeks; registration: 8–30 business days |
The following table lists the core documents needed for the acquisition‑permit application and the subsequent notarial deed. All foreign‑language documents must be accompanied by a certified Hungarian translation. Apostille or consular legalisation is required for documents originating outside Hungary unless an applicable bilateral treaty provides otherwise.
| Document | Notes |
|---|---|
| Valid passport or national ID (natural person) | Issued by the buyer’s national authority; certified copy required; translation to Hungarian if not already in Hungarian or English. |
| Hungarian residence permit or proof of residence | Required for certain EU and non‑EU applicants under the eligibility rules; issued by the Hungarian immigration authority. |
| Company register extract (cégkivonat), max. 30 days old | For Hungarian companies: from the Company Registry. For foreign companies: equivalent extract with Hungarian translation and apostille. |
| Beneficial ownership declaration / register extract | Recent certified copy demonstrating the ultimate beneficial owner(s) of the buyer entity. |
| Proof of agricultural qualification or Chamber registration | Hungarian Chamber of Agriculture (NAK) registration certificate, or agricultural diploma / evidence of farming experience. |
| Cadastral extract / Land Registry title sheet (tulajdoni lap) | Obtained from the district Land Registry (földhivatal); shows encumbrances, classification, and current owner. |
| Conditional sales contract (signed by seller) | The draft or executed purchase agreement, which must be conditional on acquisition‑permit issuance. |
| Declaration of intended land use | Buyer’s written statement of how the land will be used (arable farming, forestry, animal husbandry, etc.). |
| Power of attorney (if a representative files) | Notarised POA in Hungarian‑legalised form; translation required if executed abroad. |
| Environmental or land‑use permits (if applicable) | Issued by local or national authority; required if the parcel has protected status. |
| Tax clearance certificate (if required) | Issued by NAV (Hungarian National Tax and Customs Administration) or proof of valid tax‑ID compliance. |
| Proof of payment of application fee | Bank receipt or official payment slip; amounts vary by county, verify with the competent County Government Office. |
Buyers should compile this checklist well in advance of the target application date. Missing or incorrectly translated documents are among the most common causes of procedural delay.
End‑to‑end, the process of buying agricultural land in Hungary typically takes between three and six months from the start of due diligence to Land Registry entry. However, the timeline can extend significantly if the authority requests supplementary information, if a pre‑emption right holder exercises their right (requiring a fresh transaction), or if the buyer appeals a refusal.
The most time‑sensitive phase is the acquisition‑permit review combined with the pre‑emption notice period. These stages run partly in parallel but together account for the bulk of elapsed time. The statutory pre‑emption notice window must expire before the authority can issue its final decision, and the authority’s own review clock (30–60 business days) does not begin until the application passes its completeness check.
A critical practical rule: never sign an unconditional purchase contract before the acquisition permit is granted. The contract must be expressly conditional on permit issuance. Buyers should also include mutual extension clauses that allow the closing date to be pushed back if the permit is delayed, and should place deposits in escrow rather than releasing them directly to the seller. If the permit is refused and no appeal is filed, or if an appeal is unsuccessful, the contract should provide for automatic termination and full deposit return.
For transactions involving appeal proceedings, add an additional 3–6 months for the administrative court process. Early indications suggest that 2026 enforcement practice has lengthened average review times by several weeks, particularly for applications involving non‑resident buyers or complex corporate arrangements.
The costs of acquiring agricultural land in Hungary extend well beyond the purchase price. The table below sets out the principal cost items. All figures are indicative, exact amounts vary by county, transaction value and complexity. Buyers should verify current fee schedules directly with the competent County Government Office and real estate counsel before budgeting.
| Item | Typical Amount / Basis | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Acquisition‑permit administrative fee | Nominal (varies by county) | Payable on application; check the County Government Office fee schedule for the relevant district. |
| Notary fee | Percentage of transaction value or fixed brackets per Hungarian notary fee schedule | Parties typically agree on cost allocation; verify the applicable tariff with the appointed notary. |
| Land Registry registration fee | Fixed statutory fee or sliding scale | Payable upon submission of the deed to the földhivatal; confirm current amount with the Land Registry. |
| Legal fees (lawyer) | €1,000–€10,000+ depending on complexity | Higher for foreign/corporate purchasers and transactions involving pre‑emption risk or appeal proceedings. |
| Transfer tax (property acquisition duty) | Percentage of market value; reduced rates or exemptions may apply for agricultural land | Verify eligibility for reduced rates with NAV; family transfers and certain first‑farm acquisitions may qualify. |
| Agent / broker fee | 2–5% of sale price (market norm) | Customary but negotiable; not required by law. |
| Survey / cadastral verification | €200–€2,000 | Depends on parcel size and complexity; required if boundaries are disputed or unverified. |
| Translation and apostille costs | €100–€1,000+ | All foreign‑language documents must be translated by a certified Hungarian translator. |
VAT on agricultural land sales is uncommon, most transactions between private parties are exempt. However, VAT may apply if the seller is a registered VAT taxpayer selling in the course of business, or if the land has been reclassified for development. Buyers with EU CAP subsidy entitlements should also confirm whether the acquisition triggers any change in their subsidy eligibility under Hungary’s CAP strategic plan.
The 2026 landscape for buying agricultural land in Hungary reflects a notable shift in enforcement intensity rather than wholesale legislative reform. The Hungarian Government, through the Ministry of Agriculture, has confirmed that field inspections (határszemlék) and administrative compliance checks on agricultural land transactions have been intensified in 2026. These inspections verify that parcels are being used for their declared agricultural purpose and that buyers who obtained permits on the basis of farming intentions are in fact cultivating the land.
The likely practical effect for buyers is threefold. First, acquisition‑permit applications are being scrutinised more closely, with authorities requesting additional evidence of genuine agricultural intent (business plans, equipment ownership, supply contracts). Second, the municipal pre‑emption notification process is being monitored more actively, and procedural defects in seller notifications may result in transactions being unwound post‑completion. Third, post‑acquisition inspections mean that buyers who acquire land for speculative or non‑agricultural purposes face a materially higher risk of enforcement action, including potential revocation of the permit and forced sale.
Buyers should factor these 2026 enforcement trends into their timeline planning, allocate additional weeks for document preparation and be prepared for supplementary information requests from the authority. Engaging experienced Hungarian real estate counsel at the earliest stage is the most effective way to mitigate these risks.
Buying agricultural land in Hungary in 2026 is a regulated, multi‑step process governed primarily by the Földforgalmi törvény and its implementing decrees. The procedure demands careful eligibility analysis, rigorous document preparation, realistic timeline planning and, particularly in light of the 2026 enforcement intensification, genuine commitment to agricultural use. Buyers who approach the process methodically, with qualified Hungarian counsel instructed from the outset, can navigate the permit, pre‑emption and registration stages efficiently. Those who attempt to short‑cut the procedure, by signing unconditional contracts, forming shell companies or neglecting pre‑emption obligations, face refusal, enforcement action and financial loss.
The procedural checklist, timeline table and document list in this guide provide a reliable starting framework, but every transaction should be reviewed against current county‑level practice and the buyer’s specific circumstances.
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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