If you're pooling money with others for a real estate project in Argentina, the first thing you need is a notary who knows the territory — and the second is to understand what that notary is actually doing. This is where that understanding begins.
Real estate investment pools in Argentina involve specific legal instruments. This training explains each one in plain language.
What it is, what it isn't, and what rights it actually confers. Most investors don't know that a boleto is not a title — and that distinction matters enormously in a collective scheme.
How a fideicomiso inmobiliario is structured, who the parties are, what the fiduciario actually controls, and how your participation is protected — or not — depending on the contract's terms.
Before executing an escritura, a notary carries out a structured verification process. Understanding what they check — and why — helps you ask better questions and understand delays.
These two certificates are the backbone of Argentine property due diligence. We explain what each one reveals, who issues them, and what happens when they show unexpected results.
You were told two weeks. It's been three months. This section explains the real procedural timeline — AFIP certificates, Rentas, municipal clearances — and why none of it is optional.
When multiple people pool capital for a single property project, the legal architecture is more complex. We map the relationships between investors, developers, and the notary's role in the chain.
In Argentina's real estate market, the notarial process is dense, technical, and often poorly explained to the people most affected by it — the investors themselves. Promoters present timelines. Lawyers use jargon. And the notary, who is often the most important actor in the entire transaction, is rarely introduced until the final stage.
This training exists to close that gap. Not to replace professional advice — but to make sure you can follow the conversation, ask informed questions, and understand what is happening with your money.
See What We CoverThis is the actual sequence of a property transaction in Argentina. Each stage has its own documents, actors, and potential delays.
The preliminary agreement is signed. This is not a title transfer — it's a binding promise. The notary may or may not be involved at this stage, but the document's terms will shape everything that follows.
The notary orders certificates of dominio (title status) and inhibición (seller's legal capacity to sell). These take time, and their results can pause or modify the process entirely.
AFIP certificates, Rentas provinciales, ABL or equivalent municipal clearances — all must be obtained and verified. Each has its own processing time and validity window. This is where most delays accumulate.
The escritura is executed before the notary and signed by all parties. Then it goes to the Registro de la Propiedad for inscription. Only after registration is the title transfer legally complete.
Each module focuses on a specific aspect of the Argentine notarial process as it applies to collective real estate investment.