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The rules governing VAT real estate Bulgaria transactions changed materially on 1 January 2026, driven by a triple wave of reform: sweeping amendments to the Bulgarian Value Added Tax Act, the country’s formal adoption of the euro, and updated notarial deed and property-registration procedures introduced in mid-January 2026. Whether you are a foreign buyer acquiring a holiday apartment on the Black Sea coast, a developer pre-selling units off-plan in Sofia, or an institutional investor assembling a commercial portfolio, your VAT exposure, invoicing obligations and closing mechanics are all different from what they were twelve months ago. This guide distils the practical compliance steps every market participant needs to follow right now.
Executive summary, five facts you need immediately:
On 30 December 2025, Bulgaria promulgated the Law Amending and Supplementing the Value Added Tax Act, which entered into force on 1 January 2026. The amendments implement structural changes that affect virtually every participant in the property VAT Bulgaria market, from sole-trader landlords to multinational development groups.
The key legislative changes are as follows:
Quick takeaway box:
Bulgaria’s standard VAT rate is 20%, and it applies to a defined set of property VAT Bulgaria transactions. Understanding which deals attract VAT and which qualify for exemption is the single most important compliance determination in any real estate transaction.
The core principle is straightforward: the sale of new buildings and regulated land (land that has been assigned building rights under a detailed urban plan) by a VAT-registered person is generally subject to 20% VAT. The sale or leasing of old buildings, broadly, those that are not “new” within the meaning of the VAT Act, is usually VAT-exempt, though the parties may elect to charge VAT where both are registered.
A building is classified as “new” for VAT purposes if it has not yet been occupied or if fewer than 60 months have elapsed since the issuance of the occupancy permit (Act 16). The sale of such a building, or of regulated land, by a VAT-registered developer or company is a taxable supply at 20%.
Worked example, developer sale: A developer sells a newly completed apartment in Sofia for EUR 200,000 (exclusive of VAT). The VAT-inclusive price is EUR 240,000 (EUR 200,000 + EUR 40,000 VAT at 20%). The developer reports the output VAT in its periodic return and can deduct input VAT on construction costs.
This means developers’ VAT obligations include charging, collecting and remitting VAT on each unit sold, maintaining proper VAT accounting to claim input-tax credits on materials and services, and issuing compliant EUR-denominated invoices from 1 January 2026 onwards.
The resale of a residential property that is more than 60 months past its occupancy permit is generally a vat-exempt real estate supply. No VAT is charged to the buyer, and the seller does not claim input-tax recovery on the sale. However, there is an option for both parties to agree to charge VAT, typically used when the buyer is VAT-registered and wants to recover input tax on a commercial acquisition.
Leasing follows a similar logic. A residential lease to a natural person for housing needs is usually VAT-exempt. A commercial lease, for example, an office, retail unit, or warehouse, is a taxable supply at 20%. The 2026 VAT changes do not alter these underlying classifications, but they do change who must register and how turnover is measured, which has material consequences for landlords managing mixed portfolios.
The revised VAT registration real estate framework in Bulgaria creates new compliance traps for property owners, developers and agents who previously fell below the mandatory registration line. Understanding the mechanics is essential to avoid penalties.
From 1 January 2026, mandatory VAT registration applies when a taxable person’s taxable turnover reaches or exceeds EUR 51,130 within the current calendar year. This replaced the former rolling 12-month calculation. The practical effect is significant: a developer who closed a large transaction in December 2025 would previously have carried that turnover into 2026’s measurement window, but under the new rules the counter resets to zero on 1 January. Conversely, a landlord whose rental income approaches the threshold within a single calendar year must register even if the same income spread over 12 rolling months would have stayed below the old BGN 100,000 limit.
One of the most consequential changes for the property sector is that persons performing vat-exempt real estate supplies can now become subject to mandatory VAT registration when their turnover from such supplies reaches the threshold. Before 2026, only taxable supplies counted towards the registration ceiling. Now, the value of exempt property sales and certain exempt lettings may push a person over the EUR 51,130 line, triggering a registration obligation even though the underlying transactions remain exempt from VAT itself.
What to check, legal compliance checklist:
Bulgaria officially adopted the euro on 1 January 2026. All tax and other public liabilities from that date onward must be paid in EUR. For anyone buying property Bulgaria VAT implications are now intertwined with currency-conversion requirements that did not exist under the lev.
The core rules for euro adoption property Bulgaria compliance are:
Industry observers expect a wave of contract amendments as parties update legacy templates. Every sale-and-purchase agreement executed from 2026 should include:
Worked example, VAT calculation in EUR: A buyer agrees to purchase a new commercial unit for EUR 150,000 (net). VAT at 20% = EUR 30,000. The buyer pays EUR 180,000 in total. The seller’s VAT invoice must state EUR 150,000 as the taxable base, EUR 30,000 as the VAT amount, and EUR 180,000 as the gross amount, all in EUR.
Updated notarial deed copy rules Bulgaria introduced in mid-January 2026 have practical consequences for every property closing. The changes affect how certified copies of notarial deeds are issued, the documentation that must be presented at the Property Registry, and the processing timelines for title registration.
The key practical effects include:
Step-by-step closing checklist:
Different participants face different compliance burdens under the new VAT real estate Bulgaria framework. The following checklists break down the immediate steps by role.
For cross-border investors, the likely practical effect of the 2026 changes is an increased need to coordinate Bulgarian VAT registration with home-country reporting. Industry observers expect greater scrutiny from the National Revenue Agency on non-resident entities that generate rental or disposal income from Bulgarian property.
| Entity Type | When VAT Applies | Key Reporting / Registration Obligations |
|---|---|---|
| Developer / Seller of new buildings | Sale of new buildings and regulated land is taxable at 20% | Must register if turnover ≥ EUR 51,130 (calendar year); issue EUR invoices; submit periodic VAT returns; maintain VAT accounting for input-tax recovery |
| Owner of existing residential property | Sale of used residential property is generally VAT-exempt | No VAT on sale, but check for “opt-in” or mixed supplies; monitor turnover, even exempt supplies may trigger registration |
| Landlord (commercial lease) | Commercial leases are generally taxable at 20% | Treat rental income as taxable supply; mandatory registration and periodic filings required; invoice in EUR from 1 January 2026 |
Tax audits in the Bulgarian property sector tend to focus on a handful of recurring issues. Awareness of these pitfalls is the most cost-effective form of risk management:
Mitigation steps include commissioning a pre-transaction VAT health check, updating all template contracts and invoices for EUR compliance, and establishing a turnover-monitoring system that captures both taxable and exempt supplies on a calendar-year basis.
The 2026 reforms create particular complexity for transactions involving mixed taxable and exempt supplies, developer-built-to-sell projects with phased completions straddling the old and new rules, cross-border supply-of-services chains, and intra-group transfers of development land. In each of these scenarios, the interaction between the new threshold rules, euro-denominated invoicing and updated registration procedures demands specialist legal and tax advice. To discuss your specific situation with a qualified Bulgarian real estate and tax practitioner, visit the Global Law Experts lawyer directory and filter by Bulgaria and Real Estate.
The 2026 reforms to VAT real estate Bulgaria rules represent the most significant overhaul in over a decade. Calendar-year thresholds, the inclusion of exempt supplies in turnover calculations, mandatory EUR invoicing, and updated closing procedures all demand immediate attention from buyers, developers, investors and their advisers. Those who audit their VAT position now, and update contracts, invoicing systems and registration status accordingly, will avoid costly surprises when the National Revenue Agency begins enforcing the new framework in earnest. For a downloadable summary of every action point covered in this guide, request the “VAT and Property Transactions, Bulgaria 2026 Checklist” through the contact form on our site.
Reviewed: 16 May 2026
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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