Most foreign buyers arrive fixated on Buenos Aires, and most of them should be. But every month a few clients ask the better question: what else is there? Argentina is the eighth-largest country on earth. Limiting it to one city is like visiting Italy and never leaving Rome. So here is the honest tour of where else a foreigner can, and should, consider buying.
One rule applies everywhere outside the city, and I am putting it first because it is the only one that can actually stop a deal.
Argentine law restricts foreign ownership of rural land near international borders and large bodies of water. There is also a national cap: foreigners may own no more than roughly 10% of rural land, nationally and per province. Inside a city or town, buying an apartment or a house is unrestricted. Out in the countryside, near a frontier, or fronting a lake, the rules tighten fast.
Translation: a vineyard estate in Mendoza or a lakefront cabin in Bariloche needs a legal check before you fall in love with it. This is exactly the kind of problem I would rather avoid than solve. We run the verification early, every time.
If your fantasy of Argentina involves a glass of Malbec on a terrace facing the Andes, Mendoza is where that fantasy lives. The province is the heart of Argentine wine, and the appeal for buyers splits in two:
Mendoza rewards the buyer who wants a project and a lifestyle, not just an apartment. Go in with eyes open about the land rules.
Bariloche is the other postcard: alpine architecture, chocolate shops, ski season in winter, and the Nahuel Huapi lake glittering below the peaks. It is genuinely one of the most beautiful places I have seen, and I am hard to impress.
It is also exactly where the water-and-border restrictions bite hardest. Lakefront land is precisely the category Argentine law guards most carefully for foreign buyers, and Patagonia sits near international frontiers. A house in the town of Bariloche is one thing. A parcel on the shoreline is another entirely. This is not a deal to do on a handshake with a local seller and a notary you found yesterday. The due diligence here is the whole game.
"Mardel" is where Buenos Aires goes in summer. Argentina's flagship beach city offers something the other two don't: scale and liquidity. It is a real, large, year-round market, not a niche. Prices are gentler than the capital, the rental season is intense (January and February fill the city), and there are no border-land complications because it is a coastal city, not rural frontier land.
For a buyer who wants a beach property that can earn its keep through summer vacation rentals while staying affordable, Mar del Plata is the most overlooked smart play in the country.
| Best for | Foreign-ownership friction | Rental income | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mendoza | Wine lifestyle, vineyards | High on rural/productive land | Moderate, tourism-driven |
| Bariloche | Mountains, lakes, ski | High on lakefront/border land | Strong seasonal |
| Mar del Plata | Beach, affordability, scale | Low (coastal city) | Strong summer season |
Honestly? For most first-time foreign buyers, no, not for the first purchase. Buenos Aires offers the deepest market, the cleanest foreign-buyer path, the strongest rental demand, and the simplest legal picture. It is where I tell people to plant the first flag.
But if Buenos Aires is your second property, or if your dream was never a city in the first place, Argentina beyond the capital is real and it is worth the trip. The catch is always the same: the further you get from the city grid, the more the land laws matter, and the more you need someone who reads them for a living.
If a property outside Buenos Aires is calling you, send it over before you do anything else. The first thing I will check is whether you are even allowed to own it. That one phone call has saved more than a few buyers from a beautiful, impossible mistake.
Max.-
Thirty minutes. Free. In English. We answer everything in this note plus everything not in it.