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Complete Guide to Buying Property in Turkey in 2026

23 March 2026
Real Estate·Read 4 min.
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What is really happening in the market as of March 2026

The market is no longer “wild” — it has become selective. Price growth in nominal terms remained noticeable in 2024–2025, but in real terms (adjusted for inflation and currency fluctuations) the increase has become more moderate.

In coastal locations, nominal annual growth in 2025 was, by many estimates, in the high percentage range (sometimes 15–30% in lira), but this does not mean guaranteed real profit in euros or dollars. Cash remains the buyer’s main advantage; demand from financially capable foreign buyers is stable but cautious — less emotion, more due diligence.

Key trends in brief:
Profitability and liquidity depend on micro-location (district, building, management company matter more than simply “a city by the sea”);
Investors have become more attentive to short-term rental conditions and licensing; the short-term rental law (100-day rule) has been in force since 2024 and requires proper permits; non-compliance may result in significant fines;
Istanbul is a separate league: high liquidity, but also high entry threshold. Antalya / Alanya are “working” markets for foreigners. Mersin is an option for patient investors; Bodrum represents the premium segment.

How the purchase process works in practice

Formally, the process is simple: foreigners have access to the same purchase rights (with some land-related exceptions), but this “simplicity” is only superficial. Here is the real sequence:

Define your goal: living, renting, residence permit, or citizenship. The answer determines the location, project type, and document package.

Property selection: attractive photos are not a guarantee. Common pitfalls include outdated listings, building эксплуатаtion issues, and usage restrictions.

Title deed (tapu) verification: not superficially, but thoroughly — cadastral data, encumbrances, land status, construction permits.

Contract and payment: deposits/advance payments should be made through transparent channels (bank transfers, official receipts).

Registration at the Land Registry (tapu sicil): this is the formal completion of the transaction — ownership is transferred именно there.

Important: until registration, you are not formally the owner — promises and contracts may look convincing, but legal registration is what matters. (Yes, it sounds obvious, but this is exactly where many mistakes happen.)

Documents and costs — what is often overlooked

The document package for a foreign buyer is standard: passport (translation/notarization), Turkish tax number, sometimes certificates/photos.

For banking operations, a Turkish bank account is required — it simplifies payments and documentation.

Taxes and mandatory payments (must be planned in advance):
Tapu Harcı (title deed transfer tax) — around 4% of the transaction price (formally split between buyer and seller, but in practice чаще paid by the buyer).
Notary, translator, valuation — additional several hundred to several thousand euros depending on the deal amount. We recommend budgeting +5–7% on top of the purchase price for associated costs. (Not “maybe”, but upfront.)

On valuation (eksper / valuation report):
For standard transactions, a valuation report is often required for mortgages or citizenship applications; regulations are уточняются, and for some procedures it is mandatory. If you plan financing or investor status — include valuation from the start.

Short-term rental rules — what matters now

Law No. 7464 (effective January 1, 2024) formalized requirements for short-term rentals (i.e., tourist rentals under 100 days).

Practice in 2024–2026 shows increased control: licensing, fire safety requirements, guest registration, and tax reporting. This cannot be ignored — fines and listing blocks are реально applied.

If your plan was “buy and rent on Airbnb without complications” — it’s time to rethink the model.

Where to buy — concise and to the point
(This is not a recommendation, but a reflection of market realities)

Alanya — a comfortable zone for foreigners: clear rental demand, convenience, relatively understandable infrastructure.

Antalya — a city with year-round demand; areas like Lara, Konyaaltı, etc. remain top in liquidity.

Mersin — more affordable, but requires patience: infrastructure is still developing, but entry cost is lower.

Bodrum — premium segment; beautiful and expensive; for those not looking for compromises.

Istanbul — a separate league; high entry cost, high liquidity, but requires deep local analysis.

Mistakes that still cost money

Trust in “acquaintances” and grey schemes without official verification.
Underestimation of additional costs (lawyers, taxes, licenses).
Ignoring new rental regulations.
Buying “for rental” without confirmed demand and without a management company.

In short: do not buy blindly. And yes — rushing almost always turns out expensive.

Why this path is easier with Qoople

We speak directly: we check documents, calculate profitability, assist with licensing and operations (preparation, design, reporting).

The transaction is only the beginning; your goal is not just ownership, but having the property work as an asset. (This requires systems and attention — not magic.)

Conclusion — a few honest tips

Approach the purchase as an investment: goal + plan + financial buffer (+5–7%).
Verify the tapu, clarify land status and permitted use (especially if you plan to rent out).
Take into account the new short-term rental regime and include compliance costs.
If your goal is rental income, plan not only the purchase, but also management (licenses, service, taxes).