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Field Note No. 47

Buying Off-Plan (En Pozo) Property in Buenos Aires

Buying Off-Plan (En Pozo) Property in Buenos Aires

There is a particular kind of buyer who falls in love with the idea of en pozo: brand-new construction, bought before the building exists, paid in installments, often 25 to 35% cheaper than the finished article next door. The Spanish is literal. Pozo means pit. You are buying from the hole in the ground up.

It can be the best value in the city. It can also be the fastest way for a foreigner to lose money they never had to risk. The difference is almost entirely about how you structure the deal, so let me walk you through it the way I walk a client through it.

Why off-plan is cheaper

Developers sell en pozo to finance construction. Your installments are their capital. In exchange for taking on construction risk and waiting eighteen to thirty months for keys, you pay meaningfully less than market. In a dollar-scarce economy like Argentina's, this developer financing is one of the only forms of leverage available, which is exactly why locals use it as a savings vehicle.

The typical structure is an anticipo (down payment) of 30 to 40%, then monthly installments through construction, then a refuerzo or balance at possession. Many contracts are priced not in flat dollars but indexed to the CAC index (the construction chamber's cost index), which protects the developer from inflation. Read that clause carefully: it means your peso installments can rise.

The real risk, stated plainly

In most of the world, an off-plan deposit sits in escrow. Argentina has no escrow. Your installments usually go straight to the developer. If the developer fails, your protection is the contract and the developer's track record, not an institution holding your funds.

That single fact should reframe the whole decision. You are not buying a finished asset with a clean title. You are extending unsecured credit to a construction company, betting it will deliver. The question is never just "is the apartment good." It is "is this developer good for the money."

How a foreigner buys off-plan safely

This is the part most listings will not tell you. The protection lives in the diligence, not the brochure.

  • Vet the developer, not the render. Built history, delivered buildings you can walk into, no pattern of delays or litigation. A developer on their twelfth tower is a different risk from one on their first.
  • **Insist on a boleto that registers your interest.** A well-drafted boleto de compraventa with the right clauses, ideally with fecha cierta and registration, gives you standing if things go wrong.
  • Understand the indexation clause. If installments track the CAC index, model the worst case before you sign, not after.
  • Tie payments to construction milestones, not just the calendar, wherever the developer will agree to it.
  • Have an escribano review the contract before you transfer a dollar. The notary is your due diligence layer in a country without escrow, and that applies before construction just as it does at closing.

The numbers, roughly

A finished one-bedroom in a good Palermo block might trade around USD 150,000 to 180,000. The same unit en pozo, eighteen months from delivery, might be offered at USD 110,000 to 130,000, on a 35% down payment and installments. The discount is the compensation for your patience and your risk.

Closing costs at possession are lower than on a resale in one sense (you may avoid some intermediary commission) and higher in another: new construction means you pay for two deeds, the unit and the building's bylaws, so budget 5 to 7% for the escribano rather than the 2 to 3% on a used apartment. The full breakdown lives in our note on what it actually costs to buy.

Who off-plan is actually for

Off-plan suits the buyer who has time, a tolerance for construction risk, and the discipline to vet a developer like a lender vets a borrower. It rewards patience with a lower entry price and a brand-new asset. It punishes the buyer who fell for a render and wired money to a name they never checked.

If that sounds like a strong opinion, it is. I have watched both outcomes from close range, and the good one is entirely reproducible. It just requires treating the romance of new construction as the second question, after the boring one about who you are really lending to.

When you want to look at off-plan inventory we actually stand behind, the ones where we know the developer and have read the contract, that conversation starts on a call, in English, with the brochure closed.

Max.-

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