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Hungary’s real estate lawyers are guiding investors, lenders and corporate buyers through the most consequential rule changes the market has seen in a decade. Procedural amendments now permit earlier mortgage registration on new‑build and off‑plan apartments, fundamentally altering lender priority rankings. Municipalities have gained sweeping new powers to restrict property acquisition and use through local decrees, while foreign‑buyer permit requirements continue to shape transaction timelines for non‑EEA purchasers. This transactional guide breaks down every change, provides practitioner checklists and sample contract language, and maps the due‑diligence steps that buyers and lenders must complete before exchange. Last updated 7 May 2026.
Three legislative and policy shifts now define the operating environment for real estate lawyers advising on Hungarian transactions. Decision makers should treat each as a compliance trigger that requires updated contract language and revised due‑diligence protocols before any deal closes.
| Change | Effective date | Primary impact |
|---|---|---|
| Early mortgage registration (new apartments) | 2026 (phased implementation) | Lender priority on off‑plan units; revised escrow structures |
| Municipal restriction decrees | 1 July 2025 (enabling law); local decrees ongoing | Acquisition limits, short‑term rental bans, residency conditions |
| Otthon Start recalibration | Post‑April 2026 | Eligibility and rate changes for subsidised mortgages |
| Foreign‑buyer permit enforcement | Ongoing | Longer processing; earlier applications recommended |
The 2026 procedural amendments to mortgage registration on new apartments represent the single most important structural change for lenders operating in Hungary’s residential market. Under the previous framework, mortgage registration on an off‑plan or pre‑construction unit was typically delayed until the building was completed and the final deed issued, leaving lenders exposed during the construction period. The new rules allow registration at an earlier stage, provided specific documentary triggers are satisfied at the Land Registry.
The key distinction is between three transaction types, each with different registration windows. The comparison table below summarises the shift.
| Transaction type | Typical registration timing (pre‑2026) | Expected registration timing (post‑2026 change) |
|---|---|---|
| Completed residential unit (existing) | Mortgage registered after sale and final deed | No change, registration at normal Land Registry filing; priority based on filing date |
| New‑build (completed but not yet delivered) | Mortgage possible after delivery and deed | Faster registration permitted earlier in construction lifecycle; new procedure allows earlier filing subject to conditions |
| Off‑plan / pre‑construction unit | Mortgage registration often delayed until completion or special security arrangements | Early mortgage registration allowed subject to statutory evidence and developer obligations, lenders must satisfy documentary triggers to secure priority |
For off‑plan units, the critical timing trigger is the point at which the lender can present the Land Registry with evidence of (a) a valid construction permit, (b) a registered preliminary sale contract countersigned by the developer, and (c) an escrow arrangement or bank guarantee covering the buyer’s advance payments. Industry observers expect that lenders who file promptly once these conditions are met will secure first‑priority ranking ahead of subsequent encumbrances.
Lenders should update their internal workflows to capture the new registration opportunity. The following action steps reflect emerging best practice among real estate lawyers advising Hungarian banks and international funds:
The following sample clauses, drafted in English for illustrative purposes, should be adapted to Hungarian governing law and reviewed by local counsel before execution.
Sample clause 1, Early mortgage registration undertaking (developer):
“The Developer undertakes to provide the Lender, within [10] business days of the issuance of the construction permit, with all documents reasonably required by the competent Land Registry to enable the registration of the Lender’s mortgage over the Unit, including a certified copy of the construction permit and a countersigned preliminary sale contract in registrable form.”
Sample clause 2, Escrow release tied to construction milestones:
“Funds held in the Escrow Account shall be released to the Developer in tranches corresponding to verified construction milestones, as certified by the Independent Engineer. No release shall occur unless the Lender’s mortgage has been registered at the Land Registry or the Lender has confirmed in writing that registration is in progress.”
Sample clause 3, Priority protection and intervening encumbrance remedy:
“If any encumbrance is registered against the Unit that ranks in priority ahead of the Lender’s mortgage due to the Developer’s failure to provide timely documentation, the Developer shall indemnify the Lender for all losses arising therefrom and shall use best endeavours to procure the removal or subordination of such encumbrance within [30] days.”
Sample clause 4, Conditional registration trigger:
“The Buyer authorises the Lender to file for mortgage registration at the Land Registry upon satisfaction of the following conditions: (a) the construction permit is final and non‑appealable; (b) the escrow account has been funded with not less than [amount]; and (c) the Developer has countersigned the preliminary sale contract.”
These clauses address the core risk that lenders face during the construction phase: the gap between commitment and registrable security. Real estate lawyers advising either side of the transaction should negotiate the documentary trigger deadlines, indemnity caps and escrow release mechanics carefully.
Hungary’s 2025 legislation empowering municipalities to pass local decrees restricting property acquisition and use has introduced a new layer of due‑diligence complexity. According to CMS, the law grants municipalities powers to restrict residency and property deals to protect local identity, particularly in areas facing demographic pressure or tourism saturation. For buyers and their real estate lawyers, this means that no transaction should proceed without a municipal decree screening.
Under the enabling legislation, municipalities may adopt decrees that:
The absence of a centralised registry of municipal decrees means that buyers must query the relevant municipality directly. The following sample questions should be included in any written request to the municipal clerk (jegyző):
A restrictive municipal decree discovered after exchange but before completion may constitute a material adverse change justifying renegotiation or termination under Hungarian civil law. Buyers should insist on a contractual condition precedent requiring a clean municipal decree certificate before the deposit becomes non‑refundable.
| Restriction type | Example municipalities (illustrative) | Buyer response |
|---|---|---|
| Non‑resident acquisition restriction | Lake Balaton resort towns, select Budapest outer districts | Verify eligibility; obtain pre‑clearance letter from municipality |
| Short‑term rental cap or ban | Budapest inner districts (District V, VII); Hévíz | Recalculate yield; confirm zoning category; check grandfathering provisions |
| Land‑use conversion restriction | Rural municipalities in protected agricultural zones | Confirm classification at Land Registry; obtain planning authority opinion |
| Mandatory residency registration | Smaller towns implementing population retention measures | Assess compliance feasibility; negotiate contractual exit right if residency cannot be established |
Non‑EEA buyers require a permit to acquire property in Hungary. EU and EEA citizens generally enjoy the same acquisition rights as Hungarian nationals and do not need a separate permit for residential property. Real estate lawyers handling cross‑border transactions must build permit‑application timelines into the deal structure from the outset, as delays can jeopardise exchange deadlines and financing conditions.
The following checklist reflects the standard documentation package required for a non‑EEA foreign buyer permit application:
Processing times vary by county office. Early indications suggest that in Budapest and popular investment regions, processing currently takes between 30 and 90 days. Buyers should submit applications as early as possible, ideally before signing the preliminary contract, to avoid deal‑breaking delays.
Hungarian banks typically require evidence that the foreign‑buyer permit has been granted (or is at an advanced stage) before releasing mortgage funds. Lenders should include a permit condition precedent in their facility agreements and build buffer periods into drawdown schedules. If the permit is refused, the facility agreement should provide for automatic termination and return of any advance security.
Hungary’s subsidised mortgage landscape has shifted following adjustments to the Otthon Start programme. Lenders and buyers alike need to understand the revised eligibility criteria, and real estate lawyers must ensure that financing conditions in sale contracts reflect the current programme terms rather than outdated assumptions.
The Otthon Start programme offers preferential interest rates, reported as low as 3% in some configurations, to eligible first‑time homeowners. Post‑April 2026 recalibrations have adjusted income thresholds, property value caps and the definition of “first‑time buyer” in ways that narrow eligibility for some purchasers while expanding it for others. Buyers should confirm current eligibility criteria directly with participating banks or through the official government housing programme portal.
Banks in Hungary lend to foreign nationals, but underwriting standards are stricter than for domestic borrowers. According to market sources, foreigners can expect mortgage rates of approximately 6.5% to 7.5% in 2026, compared to lower rates available under subsidised domestic programmes. Practical requirements typically include:
For pre‑construction lending, lender protections pre‑construction should include:
The following property due‑diligence checklist for Hungary should be completed before exchange. It consolidates every screening requirement discussed in this guide into a single action list for real estate lawyers, in‑house counsel and transaction managers.
Sample email to the Land Office and municipal clerk:
“Dear Sir/Madam, We act on behalf of [Buyer] in connection with the proposed acquisition of the property registered under lot number [helyrajzi szám] in [Municipality]. We kindly request: (1) a current Land Registry extract; (2) confirmation of any encumbrances, restrictions or pending proceedings; and (3) confirmation of whether any municipal decree adopted under the 2025 local identity protection legislation applies to the property or its zone. Please advise on any applicable fees and expected processing times. Yours faithfully, [Firm/Counsel].”
The table below maps the principal transaction risks to recommended contractual remedies. Real estate lawyers acting for buyers, sellers or lenders should use this as a starting point for negotiation.
| Risk | Severity | Contractual remedy |
|---|---|---|
| Mortgage registration delay (off‑plan) | High | Developer indemnity; deposit held in escrow until registration confirmed; long‑stop termination right |
| Municipal restrictive decree discovered post‑exchange | High | Condition precedent requiring clean municipal certificate; buyer termination right; full deposit refund |
| Foreign buyer permit refusal | Medium | Permit condition precedent; automatic contract termination and deposit return upon refusal |
| Otthon Start eligibility loss | Medium | Financing condition clause; extended completion deadline; alternative financing fallback |
| Developer insolvency during construction | High | Completion bond; lender step‑in rights; escrowed funds; parent‑company guarantee |
| Title defect or undisclosed encumbrance | High | Seller warranty and indemnity; title insurance (where available); escrow holdback |
Key negotiation points by party:
Hungary’s 2026 rule changes demand immediate updates to transaction templates, due‑diligence protocols and financing structures. Every real estate lawyer, lender and corporate buyer operating in this market should prioritise the following steps:
The stakes are material: a missed registration window, an undiscovered municipal ban or a refused buyer permit can each collapse a transaction or expose a lender to unrecoverable loss. Acting now, with the right legal framework, is the most effective protection available.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Gábor Tuller at Tuller & Partners Law Firm, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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