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Field Note No. 1

Buenos Aires vs Other Latin American Cities for Property Buyers

Buenos Aires vs Other Latin American Cities for Property Buyers

TL;DR: Compared to other Latin American hotspots, Buenos Aires stands out for full foreign ownership rights with no nominee or trust structure, dollar-priced property below its prior peak, a fast all-cash closing (as little as 10 days), and a European-feeling, world-class city. Its trade-off is macro volatility. Mexico City and Medellin offer more macro stability; Buenos Aires offers more value and a cleaner ownership path right now.

Here is the honest comparison for a foreign buyer weighing the region.

How Buenos Aires compares

FactorBuenos AiresMexico CityMedellin
Foreign ownershipFull, in own nameRestricted zone needs a fideicomiso trust near coast/borderFull, in own name
Pricing currencyUS dollarsPesosPesos
Entry price (per m2)~USD 2,450, below 2017 peakHigher, risen sharplyLow, rising fast
Closing speedAs little as 10 days, all-cashSlower, financing commonModerate
Residency to buyNot required (CDI only)Not requiredNot required
Main trade-offMacro volatilityHigher prices, peso pricingSmaller, less liquid market

What Buenos Aires does better

  • Clean ownership. You hold title in your own name with the same rights as a local, no coastal trust structure like Mexico's fideicomiso required for a city apartment.
  • Dollar pricing. Your asset is denominated in US dollars, not a local currency, a structural hedge other markets do not offer.
  • Value below the peak. Prices still sit around 12% under the 2017 to 2019 high, while several rivals have run up hard.
  • Speed. An all-cash dollar market closes faster than markets dependent on local financing.
  • The city itself. Buenos Aires offers world-class architecture, food, and culture with a distinctly European feel, at Latin American prices.

What the rivals do better

  • Mexico City offers a larger, more stable macro economy and proximity to the United States, though prices are higher and the coastal trust requirement adds friction near the water.
  • Medellin offers a very low entry point and a fast-growing expat scene, though the market is smaller and less liquid, and prices are climbing quickly.
  • Both offer more macro predictability than Argentina, which remains the region's most volatile economy even amid reform.

Quick answers

Is Buenos Aires cheaper than Mexico City? Generally yes on a per-square-meter basis for comparable central neighborhoods, and it is priced in dollars.

Is ownership safer in Argentina or Mexico? Argentina lets foreigners hold city property directly in their own name; Mexico requires a bank trust (fideicomiso) in the restricted coastal and border zones. For a city apartment, Argentina's path is simpler.

What is the catch with Buenos Aires? Macro volatility. The asset and ownership are secure, but the broader economy swings. Buy on fundamentals with a medium-to-long horizon.

The bottom line

If you want macro stability above all, Mexico City has an edge. If you want the lowest entry and a fast-growing scene, Medellin is tempting. But if you want full, direct foreign ownership of a dollar-priced asset, in a world-class city, bought below its prior peak, and closed in days rather than months, Buenos Aires is hard to beat in 2026. The price of admission is tolerating Argentina's volatility, which is exactly why you buy a good asset at a good price rather than betting on a forecast.

If you are comparing the region, tell me what matters most to you, stability, value, income, or lifestyle, and I will tell you honestly where Buenos Aires fits. The first call is free.

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