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Field Note No. 36

Do You Need a Lawyer to Buy Property in Argentina?

Do You Need a Lawyer to Buy Property in Argentina?

TL;DR: No, you do not legally need a lawyer to buy property in Argentina. The escribano (a notary public) is mandatory and runs the legal due diligence: verifying clean title, checking for debts and liens, certifying the deed, and registering ownership. Many foreign buyers still hire a lawyer for extra comfort on complex deals, but for a standard purchase the escribano plus a licensed broker is the normal structure.

Who is mandatory: the escribano

Argentina has no escrow. The escribano (notary public) performs the role that escrow companies and title insurers play elsewhere. The escribano verifies the property is free of liens, debts, and disputes through the informes de dominio e inhibición, certifies the deed, withholds applicable taxes, and registers your ownership. This is not optional, and it is the core legal protection in any Argentine purchase. The buyer traditionally chooses the escribano.

Who is optional: the lawyer

A private real estate lawyer is not required by law. The escribano already performs the legal due diligence. A foreign buyer may still choose to add a lawyer for:

  • A complex or high-value transaction.
  • An inheritance, succession, or contested-title situation.
  • Extra independent review of the boleto or contract terms.

For a standard apartment purchase with clean title, most buyers rely on the escribano and a licensed broker, without a separate lawyer.

The normal foreign-buyer team

RoleRequired?What they do
Escribano (notary)YesDue diligence, deed, registration, tax withholding
Licensed brokerPractical necessityFind, vet, negotiate, coordinate
LawyerOptionalExtra review on complex deals

Quick answers

Is a lawyer legally required to buy property in Argentina?

No. A lawyer is not legally required. The escribano (notary) is mandatory and performs the legal due diligence and registration.

What does the escribano do that a lawyer would elsewhere?

The escribano verifies clean title, checks for liens and debts, certifies the deed, withholds taxes, and registers ownership, the functions handled by escrow and title firms in other countries.

When should a foreigner hire a lawyer in Argentina?

For complex deals, inheritances, contested titles, or simply extra peace of mind on a high-value purchase. For a standard clean-title apartment, most buyers do not.

Who chooses the escribano?

The buyer traditionally chooses the escribano, which is why the notary is considered the buyer's protection in the transaction.

The escribano is the reason Argentina works without escrow, explained in our note on how notaries replace escrow. To plan your purchase team, book a call.

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