Property Transfer Tax in Montenegro 2025: What International Buyers Need to Know






Property Transfer Tax in Montenegro 2025 | A Clear Guide for International Buyers


Montenegro · Real Estate 2025

Property Transfer Tax in Montenegro 2025: A Clear Guide for International Buyers

Buying property on the Adriatic coast is more approachable than most people assume. Here is a simple, up-to-date walkthrough of how transfer tax works in Montenegro today — with real numbers, plain language, and everything you need to plan with confidence.

The big picture

Montenegro continues to be one of Europe’s most welcoming property markets — competitive prices, beautiful coastline, EU-candidate status, and one of the most predictable tax systems in the region. The headline rates are low by European standards, the paperwork is straightforward, and once you understand the basic logic, the whole process becomes very manageable.

A small but important update: since 1 January 2024, transfer tax on resale properties moved from a single 3% rate to a gentle progressive scale of 3% – 6%. For most everyday buyers, the effective rate stays close to the old level. Higher-value transactions see a moderate increase, which is still very favourable compared to most EU countries.


Two kinds of purchase, two kinds of tax

The first thing to understand is whether you are buying a new build (first sale from the developer) or a resale. This single distinction determines which tax applies.

What you’re buying Tax that applies How it’s usually handled
New build — first sale from developer 21% VAT Typically included in the advertised price
Resale — second or later owner 3% – 6% transfer tax Paid by the buyer after signing

You pay one or the other, never both. Your contract will make this clear — and it is always worth confirming in writing before signing.


How the progressive transfer tax actually works

The tax is calculated on the property’s market value, applied in brackets — the same logic as income tax in many countries. Only the portion of the price that falls into each band is taxed at that band’s rate.

Value bracket Rate on that slice
Up to €150,000 3%
€150,001 – €500,000 5%
Above €500,000 6%

Let’s see it in real numbers

A €100,000 apartment

  • Everything sits in the first bracket
  • Transfer tax = 3% × €100,000 = €3,000
A €250,000 apartment

  • First €150,000 at 3% = €4,500
  • Remaining €100,000 at 5% = €5,000
  • Total: €9,500 — an effective rate of just 3.8%
A €520,000 house

  • First €150,000 at 3% = €4,500
  • Next €350,000 at 5% = €17,500
  • Top €20,000 at 6% = €1,200
  • Total: €23,200 — an effective rate of 4.5%
A €1,000,000 villa

  • First €150,000 at 3% = €4,500
  • Next €350,000 at 5% = €17,500
  • Top €500,000 at 6% = €30,000
  • Total: €52,000 — an effective rate of 5.2%

Notice that even at the top bracket the effective rate stays well under the 6% headline. That is why Montenegro remains attractive compared to many Western European markets, where combined stamp duty and notary costs can easily exceed 10%.

A simple planning rule: for most resale properties, budget around 4–5% of the purchase price for all one-off costs combined — transfer tax, notary, legal fees, and registration. For new builds, VAT is already inside the developer’s price, so your additional costs are significantly smaller.


When the tax doesn’t apply at all

Several situations are fully exempt from transfer tax — worth knowing if you are planning an inheritance, family transfer, or new-build purchase:

  • Transfers between spouses
  • Transfers between parents and children
  • Inheritance by first-order heirs
  • The first sale of a newly built unit (VAT applies instead, usually inside the price)

The full picture: costs across the ownership lifecycle

Transfer tax is just one piece. Here is how Montenegro’s property tax system looks from purchase to sale — and why it remains so investor-friendly.

When you buy

  • Transfer tax 3–6% (resale) or VAT 21% (new build, in price)
  • Notary fees — set by official tariff, typically a few hundred euros
  • Legal fees — usually around 1% of purchase price
  • Agency fee — customarily paid by the seller, clearly disclosed in the contract

While you own

  • Annual property tax: 0.25% – 1% of market value, set by each municipality. Even on the coast, this stays very modest by European standards.

If you rent it out

  • Rental income tax: 15% flat
  • Generous deductions: 30% for long-term leases, up to 50–70% for registered short-term tourist rentals
  • VAT registration becomes relevant once annual turnover passes €30,000

When you sell

  • Capital gains tax: 15% on the net profit (sale price minus what you paid and any documented improvements)
  • Full exemption if the property was your primary residence
  • Full exemption for transfers between spouses, parents, and children

Personal ownership vs. company ownership

Many international buyers choose to hold Montenegrin property through a local d.o.o. (limited liability company). Each route has its advantages:

Consideration Personal ownership Company ownership
Transfer tax on purchase Yes (3–6%) Yes (3–6%) — unless acquired via share deal
Sale via share deal Not applicable No transfer tax, no VAT — only capital gains on shares
Rental income 15% personal 9–15% corporate (progressive)
Inheritance planning Straightforward with local will Flexible via share transfers

Which route suits you best depends on your goals — pure holiday use, rental income, long-term investment, or residency planning. The key is to decide before you sign, because restructuring later is more costly than choosing well from the start.


A welcome new law: stronger protection for buyers

Good news for international clients: Montenegro’s new Law on Brokerage in the Sale and Lease of Real Estate (Official Gazette 89/2025, effective 13 August 2025) brings the agency sector in line with modern European standards.

In practice, this means when you work with a licensed Montenegrin broker, you now benefit from:

  • Professional certification — every agency must employ at least one agent with a formal qualification
  • Mandatory insurance covering professional liability up to €60,000 per year
  • Written contracts with clear fee disclosure and defined responsibilities
  • Protected client deposits held on dedicated accounts, separate from the agency’s own funds
  • Transparent listings with verified property details and registration numbers

For you as a buyer or seller, it is simply a more reliable framework — one that makes it easier to work with confidence, whether you are here in person or handling a transaction remotely.


Your simple pre-purchase checklist

  1. Confirm whether the property is a new build (VAT) or resale (transfer tax)
  2. Review the cadastral extract to verify clean title
  3. Plan around 4–5% of the purchase price for all one-off costs on resales
  4. Decide on ownership structure — personal or corporate — before signing
  5. Work with a licensed broker and an experienced local lawyer
  6. Keep records of improvements and fees for future capital gains calculations

Quick reference — 2025 rates

Tax Rate
Transfer tax — up to €150,000 3%
Transfer tax — €150,001 to €500,000 5% on that portion
Transfer tax — above €500,000 6% on that portion
VAT on new builds (first transfer) 21%
Annual property tax 0.25% – 1% (municipal)
Rental income tax 15% (with deductions)
Capital gains tax 15%
Corporate income tax 9% – 15% (progressive)

Final thought

Montenegro’s property tax regime remains one of the simplest and most investor-friendly in Europe. The 2024 update made the system slightly more refined, and the 2025 brokerage reform made it safer and more transparent. Together, they have turned Montenegro into an even more credible destination for international buyers — whether you are looking for a coastal home, a rental investment, or a long-term family base.

Thinking about buying in Montenegro?
I help international clients plan their purchase from day one — structure, numbers, paperwork, and trusted local partners. Happy to walk you through it in English, with full clarity from the first conversation.

This article is intended as a general introduction and does not replace individual legal or tax advice. Rates and rules are accurate as of publication and may change. For any specific transaction, always consult a licensed Montenegrin lawyer and tax advisor.


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