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Field Note No. 9

Renting an Apartment in Buenos Aires: The Foreigner's Survival Guide

Renting an Apartment in Buenos Aires: The Foreigner's Survival Guide

Renting in Buenos Aires confused enough foreigners that I wrote an entire book about it, Flat Out Confused. The title was not an accident. The system here is not hard once someone explains it, but nobody explains it, so newcomers sign the wrong contract, lose the wrong deposit, and learn the rules the expensive way.

Let me save you the tuition. Here is how renting actually works in Buenos Aires, what type of lease you should be looking for, and the traps that catch foreigners every single time.

First, the three types of lease

Almost everything that goes wrong starts with signing the wrong category of contract. There are three.

1. Long-term residential (LTR)

The Locación Tradicional Residencial. The local standard.

  • Term: 2-year minimum.
  • Currency: flexible since the Milei reform: pesos, dollars, even crypto by agreement.
  • Commission: in the city of Buenos Aires, an individual tenant pays zero broker commission. That is the law.
  • The catch: it requires a garantía (collateral), almost always a third-party Argentine property. For a foreigner with no local financial history, this is the wall most people hit. We address it head-on in the garantia note.
  • Also: units are almost always unfurnished. Bring a screwdriver.

2. Long-term commercial (CLA)

Same mechanics as residential, but for business use. The tenant does pay commission, 5% over the contract, and a garantía is still required. Very few foreigners ever use this. If you are not opening a storefront, skip it.

3. Short-term furnished / vacation rentals

This is what most foreigners actually use, and for good reason.

  • Furnished and all-inclusive: the owner usually covers utilities, internet, taxes, and HOA.
  • No garantia wall: these contracts do not demand third-party Argentine collateral.
  • Term: legal max of 3 months as a vacation rental, extendable to 23 months if a "specific reason" is stated in the agreement.
  • The catch: contracts can renew with a price increase around the 4-month mark, so read the renewal clause before you fall in love with the place.
  • Commission: CUCICBA recommends 10 to 20% over the contract. MGNI charges 5 to 10%. We say that out loud because the spread is real money.

What you actually pay each month

Rent is only the headline. A tenant in Buenos Aires typically also covers:

CostNotes
Expensas (building HOA)Super's salary, admin, common areas
WaterFixed by square footage in the city, not by use
ElectricityBy consumption
GasBy consumption
Home insuranceMany owners require a fire/flood policy
Phone / TV / InternetOften already installed

City tax (ABL) is normally the owner's, not yours. And remember: what the law says and what the contract says can differ. Everything above is negotiable. Read before you sign, ad referendum of nothing.

The traps that catch foreigners

After years of cleaning up rental messes, the same four mistakes repeat:

  1. Going without a licensed professional. The single most common and most expensive error. There is no one to catch a bad clause for you.
  2. Not documenting the unit on check-in. Photograph every scratch, stain, and crack the day you move in. Some owners treat the security deposit like a treasure they get to keep, and your move-in photos are the only thing standing between them and it.
  3. Handling a landlord dispute in a language you do not fully control. Register and tone do not translate cleanly. A sentence that is firm in English can read as aggression in Spanish. Get a translator for any real dispute.
  4. Burning goodwill over repairs. Even when the owner is clearly responsible, patience moves faster than confrontation here. More flies with honey.

So which lease should a foreigner choose?

If you are here for weeks or a few months, take a short-term furnished rental. No garantia, no furniture shopping, utilities handled. Pay the commission and move on with your life.

If you are settling for a year or more and you can solve the garantia (through a seguro de caución insurance voucher, or with help), a long-term residential lease gives you a far better monthly rate and, in the city, zero commission. That is the local's deal, and it is worth reaching for.

A note on the politics

The 2025 Milei reform rolled back the prior rental law and restored a market-driven framework. Landlords and tenants now negotiate duration, currency, and price adjustments freely. For a tenant who knows what they are doing, the market is more flexible than it has been in years. For one who doesn't, that freedom is just more rope. The difference is having someone in your corner who has read a few thousand of these contracts.

When you are ready to look, tell me your timeline and your budget and I will tell you which lease category fits and what it should really cost. The first conversation is free.

Max.-

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Max.-

Questions about your specific situation?

Thirty minutes. Free. In English. We answer everything in this note plus everything not in it.