TL;DR: In practice, most foreigners buy property in Argentina in cash, not with a mortgage. UVA (inflation-indexed) mortgages returned in 2024 after nearly two decades, but Argentine banks generally require local income, a credit history, and usually residency, which most non-resident foreigners do not have. If you have local income and residency, a mortgage is possible. If you do not, plan to buy in cash.
A non-resident foreigner with no Argentine income usually cannot get a local mortgage. Argentine property has been an overwhelmingly cash market for two decades, and most foreign purchases are all-cash. This is the normal way to buy here, not a workaround.
For nearly twenty years, mortgage lending in Argentina was effectively dead. In 2024, amid economic stabilization, banks relaunched UVA mortgages, home loans indexed to inflation. This widened the local buyer pool and is a genuine sign of normalization.
The caveat: these loans are aimed at residents with verifiable local income and credit history. They are inflation-indexed, meaning the balance adjusts with inflation. They are not designed for a non-resident foreigner buying a pied-à-terre.
| Buyer profile | Mortgage realistic? |
|---|---|
| Non-resident foreigner, no local income | No, buy in cash |
| Foreigner with residency and local income | Possibly, via UVA loan |
| Argentine resident with local salary | Yes, the target borrower |
Most foreign buyers wire funds in and pay cash at closing, in US dollars. Some use developer financing on off-plan purchases, paying in installments through construction. The closing itself is handled through an escribano (notary), with no lender layer.
Generally no. Without local income, credit history, and usually residency, a non-resident foreigner does not qualify for a local mortgage and buys in cash instead.
Yes. UVA inflation-indexed mortgages relaunched in 2024 after roughly two decades, but they target residents with local income, not non-resident foreign buyers.
In cash, in US dollars, wired in and paid at closing through an escribano. Argentine real estate has been a predominantly all-cash market for years.
Yes, on off-plan (en pozo) purchases. Developers commonly offer installment plans through construction, which functions as a form of financing without a bank mortgage.
Buying in cash sounds daunting until you see how clean the process is without a lender in the way. If you want to walk through funding a Buenos Aires purchase from abroad, that starts on a call.
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