Step-by-Step Property Purchase Guide Philippines
Complete purchase process: (1) Obtain Philippine TIN — required for all property purchases, (2) Open a Philippine bank account (BDO, BPI recommend for foreign buyers), (3) Engage a licensed PRC broker and attorney, (4) Identify target properties and verify foreign quota availability, (5) Submit Letter of Intent with earnest money (₱50,000-₱200,000), (6) Conduct title due diligence with Registry of Deeds, (7) Review and sign Deed of Absolute Sale (notarized), (8) Pay all applicable taxes within 30 days of sale, (9) Present documents to Registry of Deeds for title transfer, (10) Receive new Transfer Certificate of Title in your name.
RFO vs Pre-Selling: Complete Decision Guide
Choose pre-selling if: you can wait 2-5 years for completion, you want 15-30% lower entry price, you trust a Tier-1 developer, and you're focused on capital appreciation. Choose RFO if: you need the unit immediately (for living or rental income), you want zero construction risk, you can verify physical condition before purchase, and you're willing to pay a 20-30% premium. For pure investment, pre-selling from Tier-1 developers (Ayala Land, Megaworld) in established supply-constrained areas consistently outperforms on total return.
Hidden Costs First-Time Buyers Miss
Frequently overlooked purchase costs: (1) Move-in deposit to condominium corporation (1-3 months association dues = ₱15,000-₱75,000), (2) Building renovation bond (₱10,000-₱50,000 refundable), (3) Water and electric meter installation fees (₱5,000-₱15,000), (4) Utility connection deposits (₱5,000-₱15,000), (5) Initial furnishing and setup for rental unit (₱300,000-₱2M for quality furnishing), (6) Fire insurance (required, typically ₱3,000-₱8,000/year), (7) Annual broker/property manager setup fee. Total unexpected costs: typically ₱100,000-₱500,000 above the headline purchase price.