Buying the apartment is the easy part. Owning it from six thousand miles away, in a country whose banking, tax, and tenancy systems you do not speak, is where most foreign investors quietly start losing money. Not to fraud. To friction. The expensas that went unpaid because no one was watching. The tenant who stopped answering. The peso rent that evaporated because nobody converted it at the right moment.
Good property management is the layer that turns an apartment into an asset. Here is what it actually involves, and what to demand from whoever you trust with the keys.
In a functioning market, management is collecting rent and calling a plumber. In Buenos Aires it is more, because the surrounding system is more demanding.
A foreign owner's real return is decided less by the rent and more by what happens to the rent after it is paid. Pesos lose value; dollars do not. A manager who collects pesos and lets them sit is quietly taxing you through inflation.
The better arrangements set rent in US dollars where the tenant profile allows it (more common in furnished and short-stay lets), or convert peso rent promptly through legitimate financial channels. We handle the inbound and outbound side of this through our own banking relationships, including a remote account a foreign owner can open by power of attorney without flying down. The mechanics are in our note on the remote-account route.
Your management needs depend on the strategy, and so does the yield.
| Strategy | Management intensity | Typical gross yield |
|---|---|---|
| Long-term unfurnished | Lowest | 3 to 5% |
| Furnished / corporate | Medium | 5 to 7% |
| Short-stay / nightly | Highest | 7%+ in the right barrio |
The nightly market pays the most and asks the most: turnovers, cleaning, listings, reviews, the legal three-month rule on temporary rentals. The trade-offs are laid out in our short-term rentals investor guide. Long-term is the opposite trade: less yield, far less to manage, a tenant you barely hear from.
Management fees in Buenos Aires typically run a percentage of collected rent, higher for furnished and short-stay because the work is greater. The number matters less than what it buys. A cheap manager who lets the unit sit empty, or lets pesos rot, costs you far more than the fee you saved. Judge the service on occupancy, on the quality of the tenant, and on whether your money arrives where you can use it.
You can self-manage from abroad. People do. They also tend to discover, around month four, that a WhatsApp group in a language they half-read is not a control system. The apartment is an asset only while someone competent is tending it. The whole reason a foreigner buys here through a firm rather than a listing portal is that the firm is still there the day after closing, when the romance ends and the operations begin.
That is the part of this business we actually care about: not selling you a door, but keeping what is behind it working while you are on the other side of the world. When you want to talk through what your specific apartment should earn and what it would take to run it, that starts on a call.
Max.-
Thirty minutes. Free. In English. We answer everything in this note plus everything not in it.