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Contract Breakup in a Property Development Deal: How to Recover Money After a Failed Off‑plan Purchase

By BOTTI/Mendes Advogados
– posted 3 days ago

Off‑plan property purchases in Brazil carry a particular set of risks that become painfully real the moment a deal collapses. Whether a developer has missed its delivery deadline, filed for insolvency, or simply failed to honour contractual commitments, buyers and investors face the same urgent question: how do I recover my money after a contract breakup in a property development deal? At BOTTI/Mendes Advogados, we regularly advise domestic and international clients navigating precisely this scenario, and in my experience the speed and quality of your first response determines how much you ultimately recover.

This guide sets out the legal framework, the practical remedies, and the step‑by‑step actions available under Brazilian law to help buyers, corporate counsel, and in‑house legal teams protect their position and pursue restitution.

1. Key legal concepts for off‑plan purchases in Brazil

Before mapping out recovery routes it is essential to understand the legal building blocks that govern off‑plan transactions in Brazil. Each concept has direct implications for your ability to recover a deposit or claim damages from a developer.

Promise to purchase and the preliminary contract

Most off‑plan deals are documented through a compromisso de compra e venda (promise to purchase and sell) or a contrato preliminar. Under the Brazilian Civil Code, these contracts are binding. Once registered at the competent Real Estate Registry (Cartório de Registro de Imóveis), a promise to purchase creates a real right (direito real) that is enforceable against third parties. This distinction matters because a registered promise gives the buyer stronger standing when seeking specific performance or damages.

Patrimônio de Afetação, ring‑fenced development assets

The Patrimônio de Afetação regime, introduced by Law 10.931/2004, allows a developer to segregate the assets and revenues of a particular real‑estate development from the developer’s general estate. When a development is subject to Patrimônio de Afetação, the land, construction funds, and receivables are ring‑fenced. If the developer becomes insolvent, these assets cannot be seized by the developer’s general creditors, they remain available to satisfy the claims of the buyers in that specific development. Confirming whether a project has adopted Patrimônio de Afetação is therefore one of the first due‑diligence steps any buyer should take.

Lei nº 13.786/2018, the rescission framework

Lei nº 13.786/2018, often called the Lei do Distrato Imobiliário (Real Estate Rescission Law), overhauled the rules governing contract breakups in off‑plan property development deals. It introduced mandatory provisions on retention clauses, penalties for buyer withdrawal, and developer obligations in the event of delay, bringing greater legal certainty to a market that had previously relied on inconsistent court decisions.

Consumer Defence Code, Law 8.078/1990

Brazil’s Consumer Defence Code (Código de Defesa do Consumidor, or CDC, Law 8.078/1990) applies whenever the buyer qualifies as a consumer, broadly, an individual or entity acquiring the property for personal or family use rather than as a commercial venture. The CDC provides powerful protections, including the right to clear and accurate pre‑contractual information, the prohibition of abusive clauses, and the right to claim moral and material damages. Courts have consistently held that developers and brokers are “suppliers” under the CDC, meaning they bear strict liability for defective products and services.

Escrow and bank‑administered payments

While Brazil does not use a formal escrow system identical to common‑law jurisdictions, many larger developments channel buyer payments through bank‑administered accounts. In projects under Patrimônio de Afetação, funds are deposited into a dedicated account tied to the development’s segregated estate. Where no such mechanism exists, payments typically flow directly to the developer, increasing the buyer’s exposure if the developer later defaults.

2. Common reasons an off‑plan sale fails, and immediate steps to take

Understanding why the deal failed is the starting point for choosing the right recovery route. The most common causes I see in practice fall into five categories.

  • Developer delay. The building is not delivered within the contractual deadline (or within the grace period allowed by Lei 13.786/2018).
  • Developer breach. Material changes to the project, reduced unit size, altered specifications, or failure to obtain regulatory approvals, that amount to a breach of contract.
  • Developer insolvency. The developer enters judicial recovery (recuperação judicial) or bankruptcy (falência), halting construction and placing all assets under court supervision.
  • Title or registry defects. Defects in the chain of title, undisclosed encumbrances, or irregularities in zoning or environmental licences that prevent closing.
  • Buyer withdrawal. The buyer decides not to proceed, whether due to changed financial circumstances, dissatisfaction with the project, or force majeure events.

Immediate tactical steps

Regardless of the cause, I advise clients to take the following actions within the first days of a contract breakup in a property development deal to recover the strongest possible position:

  1. Preserve all evidence. Gather signed contracts, amendments, payment receipts, bank transfer confirmations, marketing materials, emails, and WhatsApp messages.
  2. Review the contract. Identify the rescission clause, any retention or penalty provisions, the grace period for delivery, and whether a dispute‑resolution clause mandates arbitration or mediation.
  3. Check the Patrimônio de Afetação status. Verify at the competent Real Estate Registry whether the development is registered under the Patrimônio de Afetação regime.
  4. Issue a formal written notice. Send a notificação extrajudicial (extrajudicial notice) via a Notary Public (Cartório de Títulos e Documentos) to the developer, formally placing it in default and preserving your right to claim interest and penalties.
  5. Consult specialist counsel. Engage a Brazil real estate lawyer with experience in off‑plan disputes before making any further payments or signing additional documentation.

3. Contractual remedies: retention clauses, deposits, and penalties

The contract itself is the primary source of remedies, and of risk. Brazilian off‑plan purchase contracts routinely include clauses that address what happens when the deal falls through, and Lei 13.786/2018 now sets floors and ceilings for many of these provisions.

Retention clauses and liquidated damages

A retention clause (cláusula de retenção) specifies what percentage of the amounts already paid the developer may retain if the buyer withdraws. Under Lei 13.786/2018, the maximum retention permitted depends on whether the development is subject to Patrimônio de Afetação:

  • With Patrimônio de Afetação: the developer may retain up to 50% of the amounts paid by the buyer.
  • Without Patrimônio de Afetação: the developer may retain up to 25% of the amounts paid.

These caps apply when the buyer is the party rescinding the contract. If the developer is in breach, no retention is permissible and the buyer is entitled to a full refund plus statutory interest and monetary correction.

Forfeiture vs restitution: how Brazilian courts approach penalties

Brazilian courts retain the power to reduce contractual penalties they consider excessive, relying on Article 413 of the Civil Code and on the Consumer Defence Code’s prohibition of abusive clauses. In practice, even where a contract stipulates a retention within the Lei 13.786/2018 caps, courts may reduce the retained amount if the forfeiture would result in unjust enrichment for the developer. In my experience, judicial decisions have consistently limited retentions to amounts proportional to the developer’s actual administrative costs and demonstrable losses.

Sample notice of breach, key elements

A formal breach notice should contain:

  • Full identification of the buyer (or investor) and the developer, including CNPJ/CPF numbers.
  • Reference to the contract (date, registry details, unit identification).
  • A clear description of the breach (e.g., “failure to deliver the unit within the contractual deadline, including the grace period”).
  • Citation of the applicable legal basis (Lei 13.786/2018; Consumer Defence Code; specific contract clause).
  • A demand for cure within a stated period (typically 15 to 30 days), failing which the buyer will exercise the right to rescind and claim full restitution.
  • A statement reserving the right to claim moral and material damages, interest, and monetary correction.

Sample rescission notice, key elements

If the developer fails to cure the breach within the notice period, a rescission notice should:

  • Reference the prior breach notice and the developer’s failure to cure.
  • Formally declare the contract rescinded (resolução do contrato).
  • Demand restitution of all amounts paid, plus statutory interest (juros de mora) at the legal rate and monetary correction (typically indexed to the INPC or IGP‑M, as stipulated in the contract).
  • State a deadline for payment of the refund (Lei 13.786/2018 provides specific timelines depending on the circumstance of the rescission).

4. Statutory remedies: Lei 13.786/2018 and the Consumer Defence Code

Lei 13.786/2018 rescission rules in Brazil

Lei 13.786/2018 amended the Land Subdivision Law (Law 6.766/1979) and the Real Estate Incorporation Law (Law 4.591/1964) to create a unified rescission framework for off‑plan purchases. Its key provisions include:

  • Grace period for delivery. The developer is entitled to a contractual grace period of up to 180 days beyond the originally agreed delivery date. If the developer fails to deliver within this extended period, the buyer may rescind and is entitled to a full refund of all amounts paid, including brokerage commission, within 60 days of rescission.
  • Buyer‑initiated rescission. Where the buyer chooses to rescind (without developer breach), the developer may retain up to 25% of the total amounts paid (or up to 50% if the project is under Patrimônio de Afetação). The refund of the remaining balance must be made within 30 days of the issuance of the habite‑se (occupancy certificate) or, in developments under Patrimônio de Afetação, within 30 days of the rescission.
  • Right of regret. The buyer has a seven‑day right of withdrawal (direito de arrependimento) counted from the date of contract execution, provided the purchase was made at a sales stand or outside the developer’s commercial premises. This aligns with Article 49 of the Consumer Defence Code.

Consumer protection for off‑plan buyers in Brazil

The Consumer Defence Code (Law 8.078/1990) provides an additional layer of protection for buyers who qualify as consumers. Particularly relevant provisions include:

  • Article 6, basic consumer rights. The right to adequate information about products and services, protection against misleading advertising, and effective prevention and redress of material and moral damages.
  • Article 39, abusive practices. Prohibits the supplier from demanding disproportionate advantages from the consumer.
  • Article 51, abusive clauses. Declares null and void any contractual clause that places the consumer at an excessive disadvantage or is incompatible with good faith and equity.
  • Strict liability. Under Articles 12 and 14, developers and brokers bear strict (no‑fault) liability for defects in the product or service provided.

The interaction between Lei 13.786/2018 and the CDC is important: courts have held that the retention caps in Lei 13.786/2018 must still be assessed in light of the CDC’s prohibition on abusive clauses. Where a contractual retention, even if within the statutory cap, leads to an outcome that is manifestly unfair to the consumer‑buyer, a court may intervene to reduce the retention or order full restitution. The Brazilian government’s consumer guide for foreign nationals confirms the broad scope of these protections.

5. Recovery routes by scenario, a practical decision matrix

In my practice I find that the most efficient way to advise clients is to map each scenario to the optimal recovery route. The table below provides a starting framework for evaluating how to recover funds after a contract breakup in a property development deal.

Scenario Best recovery route Pros & cons
Developer delay or breach (unit not delivered within the contractual term plus 180‑day grace period) Contractual rescission + claim for full deposit refund and damages (civil court or arbitration) Pros: direct contractual remedy; Lei 13.786/2018 entitles buyer to full refund within 60 days. Cons: litigation timelines can extend to 18–36 months at first instance; may need interim relief to secure assets.
Developer insolvency (recuperação judicial or falência) File creditor claim with insolvency trustee + assert rights under Patrimônio de Afetação (if applicable) Pros: ring‑fenced assets under Patrimônio de Afetação may yield higher recoveries; legal framework for orderly distribution. Cons: recoveries are often partial (estimates range widely depending on the development’s assets); proceedings can last years.
Title or registry defects discovered before closing Seek contract cancellation, damages, or specific performance; involve the Real Estate Registry for remedial transfer Pros: may recover funds and ultimately obtain clear title. Cons: title defects can be complex and time‑consuming to resolve, especially where third‑party rights are involved.
Buyer default (buyer chooses to withdraw without developer breach) Negotiate retention within Lei 13.786/2018 caps; if retention is excessive, challenge in court under CDC Pros: statutory retention caps provide certainty. Cons: buyer will lose at least 25% (or 50% in Patrimônio de Afetação projects) of amounts paid; court challenges take time.

Can sellers back out after a promise to purchase?

A question I am frequently asked is whether the developer or seller can unilaterally back out once a compromisso de compra e venda has been signed. The short answer is no, in Brazilian law, a registered promise to purchase creates enforceable obligations. If the seller attempts to withdraw, the buyer can seek specific performance (execução forçada) through the courts, compelling the transfer of title, or alternatively claim full restitution plus damages. An unregistered promise is still binding between the parties as a contractual obligation, although its enforcement against third parties is limited.

6. Insolvency and developer bankruptcy: claiming investor funds

Developer insolvency is one of the most complex scenarios when trying to recover funds after an off‑plan contract breakup. Brazilian insolvency law (Law 11.101/2005) establishes a creditor hierarchy, and buyers’ claims must compete with tax authorities, secured creditors, and labour claims.

Filing your claim

Once a developer enters recuperação judicial (judicial recovery) or falência (bankruptcy), buyers must file a creditor claim (habilitação de crédito) with the insolvency trustee (administrador judicial) within the statutory deadline published in the official gazette. Missing this deadline does not extinguish the claim, but late filings face procedural hurdles and delays.

The protective role of Patrimônio de Afetação

If the development is registered under the Patrimônio de Afetação regime, its assets are segregated from the developer’s general estate. This means that the land, construction materials, receivables, and any insurance proceeds relating to that specific development are reserved for the benefit of the buyers and the specific obligations of that project. In practice, this is the single most important protection available to off‑plan buyers in the event of developer insolvency. Buyers in a project with Patrimônio de Afetação may even vote to continue construction under a new developer or a buyers’ committee, rather than simply seeking monetary restitution.

Typical timelines and recoveries

In my experience, judicial recovery proceedings in Brazil typically last between two and five years. Bankruptcy liquidations can extend even longer. Where Patrimônio de Afetação applies, recoveries for buyers tend to be significantly higher than for unsecured creditors in the general estate, in some cases, buyers have received their completed units or a substantial proportion of amounts paid. Without Patrimônio de Afetação, recoveries for unsecured creditors in Brazilian bankruptcies are historically low.

7. Disputes with brokers and agents, when the intermediary is at fault

Not every failed off‑plan deal is the developer’s fault. Brokers (corretores de imóveis) and agents may bear liability if they provided misleading information, concealed material facts, or failed to exercise professional diligence.

Broker liability under consumer protection law

Under the Consumer Defence Code, brokers are treated as suppliers of services and are subject to strict liability for defects in the service they provide. If a broker misrepresented the project, for example, by guaranteeing rental yields, overstating the unit’s area, or concealing known legal defects, the buyer can claim material and moral damages directly against the broker. In many cases, courts have imposed joint liability (responsabilidade solidária) on the developer and the broker, meaning the buyer can pursue either or both parties for the full amount of the loss.

Brokerage commission recovery

Lei 13.786/2018 clarifies that when the buyer rescinds due to developer breach, the brokerage commission must be refunded along with all other amounts paid. Where the buyer is the withdrawing party, the commission may be absorbed into the retention amount, but this varies by contract and remains a frequent point of litigation.

8. ADR: mediation, arbitration, and quick enforcement options

Many off‑plan contracts include an arbitration clause, and in recent years arbitration has become increasingly common in Brazilian real estate disputes. For international investors especially, arbitration can offer advantages in terms of neutrality, confidentiality, and the enforceability of awards across borders.

Arbitration

If the contract contains an arbitration clause, Brazilian courts will generally enforce it and decline jurisdiction over the merits of the dispute. Arbitration proceedings in Brazil typically conclude within 12 to 24 months, significantly faster than civil litigation, which can take 18 to 36 months at first instance alone. The Brazilian Arbitration Law (Law 9.307/1996) provides a robust framework, and arbitral awards are directly enforceable as judicial titles.

Emergency and interim measures

Even where arbitration is the chosen forum, Brazilian courts retain jurisdiction to grant emergency interim measures, such as freezing the developer’s bank accounts, blocking the sale of project assets, or compelling the production of documents. These measures can be critical in preserving the buyer’s ability to recover funds from a property development deal that has broken down. Courts typically require the applicant to demonstrate fumus boni iuris (likelihood of success on the merits) and periculum in mora (risk of irreparable harm from delay).

Mediation

Brazil’s Mediation Law (Law 13.140/2015) encourages parties to attempt mediation before or during litigation. While mediation outcomes are not binding unless formalised in an agreement, the process can resolve disputes faster and at lower cost, particularly where the developer is financially viable and willing to negotiate a structured refund or alternative unit exchange.

9. Practical checklist: step‑by‑step to recover your deposit from a developer in Brazil

Based on our experience handling contract breakups across a range of Brazilian development projects, the following checklist provides a structured, time‑sensitive action plan.

  1. Day 1–3: Secure and organise all documentation. Contracts, amendments, payment receipts, bank statements, marketing brochures, correspondence (email, WhatsApp, letters).
  2. Day 1–3: Verify Patrimônio de Afetação status. Request a certified extract (certidão) from the competent Real Estate Registry.
  3. Day 3–5: Review the contract with specialist counsel. Identify rescission clauses, retention caps, dispute‑resolution mechanisms, and applicable grace periods.
  4. Day 5–10: Issue a formal extrajudicial notice. Serve the developer through a Cartório de Títulos e Documentos placing it in default and demanding cure within 15–30 days.
  5. Day 10–15: File a consumer complaint (if applicable). Register a complaint with PROCON (the state consumer protection agency) to create an administrative record and potentially trigger a conciliation hearing.
  6. Day 15–30: Assess and commence the appropriate dispute route. If the contract mandates arbitration, initiate arbitration proceedings. If not, file a civil action. In urgent cases, apply for interim relief (asset freezes, injunctions).
  7. Day 30+: Monitor developer solvency. Track public filings for any signs of judicial recovery or bankruptcy. If insolvency proceedings are initiated, file a creditor claim within the published deadline.
  8. Ongoing: Preserve the right to damages. Document continuing losses (e.g., rent paid for alternative accommodation, lost investment returns, moral damages).
  9. Ongoing: Negotiate in parallel. Even while formal proceedings are under way, maintain open channels for settlement. Structured refund plans or unit substitutions can sometimes yield faster recoveries than full litigation.
  10. Post‑resolution: Enforce the judgment or award. Once a court judgment or arbitral award is obtained, initiate enforcement proceedings (cumprimento de sentença) to attach the developer’s assets and realise payment.

Conclusion, protecting your position after a contract breakup in a property development deal

Recovering money after a failed off‑plan purchase in Brazil is achievable, but it demands prompt action, an accurate understanding of the statutory framework, and the right dispute‑resolution strategy. In my view, the three factors that most influence the outcome are: whether the development benefits from Patrimônio de Afetação, the speed with which the buyer issues a formal default notice, and the quality of the documentary record supporting the claim. Lei 13. 786/2018 has brought welcome clarity to rescission rules and penalty caps, but these protections only work if they are properly invoked.

Whether you are a corporate investor, a foreign buyer, or a local purchaser, I strongly recommend engaging experienced Brazilian real estate counsel at the earliest sign of trouble, the window for interim relief and evidence preservation is narrow, and early legal action can be the difference between a full recovery and a protracted loss.

Need Legal Advice?

For specialist advice on this topic, contact BOTTI/Mendes Advogados at BOTTI/Mendes Advogados.

Sources

  1. Presidency of the Republic (Planalto), Lei nº 13.786/2018
  2. Consumer Defence Code, Law No. 8.078/1990 (Planalto)
  3. Portal Gov.br, Guia do Consumidor Estrangeiro
  4. Oliveira Lawyers, Buying Off‑Plan Property In Brazil: A Guide For Foreign Buyers
  5. BNS Law, Real Estate disputes in Brazil: main conflicts and legislative changes
  6. Chambers, Stuck in an Off‑plan Property Dispute? Here’s How to Solve It

FAQs

What are my immediate steps if a developer fails to deliver an off‑plan property?
Preserve all payment receipts and correspondence, review your contract for the delivery deadline and any 180‑day grace period permitted under Lei 13.786/2018, issue a formal extrajudicial notice through a Notary Public placing the developer in default, and consult a specialist real estate lawyer. These four steps create the documentary foundation for any subsequent claim for rescission and full refund.
Yes. Under Lei 13.786/2018, if the developer fails to deliver the unit within the contractual deadline plus the 180‑day grace period, the buyer is entitled to rescind and receive a full refund of all amounts paid, including any brokerage commission, within 60 days of the rescission. The developer may not apply any retention when it is the breaching party.
Patrimônio de Afetação is a legal regime that segregates the assets and revenues of a specific real‑estate development from the developer’s general estate. If the developer becomes insolvent, the ring‑fenced assets are reserved for the buyers in that project, rather than being distributed among all of the developer’s general creditors. It is one of the most effective protections available to off‑plan buyers in Brazil.
Arbitration proceedings in Brazil typically conclude within 12 to 24 months. Civil litigation at first instance can take 18 to 36 months, with appeals potentially adding further time. Insolvency proceedings are the longest, often lasting two to five years or more. Interim relief (such as asset freezes) can be obtained within days or weeks to protect the buyer’s position while the main proceedings are pending.
Yes. Under Brazil’s Consumer Defence Code (Law 8.078/1990), brokers are treated as service suppliers and are subject to strict liability for defects in the service provided, including misrepresentation. Buyers can claim both material damages (financial losses) and moral damages (compensation for distress) directly against the broker. Courts frequently impose joint liability on the developer and the broker.
Buyers do not automatically receive priority over all other creditors in a developer’s bankruptcy. However, if the development is registered under the Patrimônio de Afetação regime, the project’s assets are segregated and reserved for the benefit of the buyers in that development. Outside of Patrimônio de Afetação, buyers’ claims rank as unsecured credits, below tax, labour, and secured creditor claims, making early legal action and the filing of a timely creditor claim essential.
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Contract Breakup in a Property Development Deal: How to Recover Money After a Failed Off‑plan Purchase

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