- If you are planning to buy a property to retire, check out whether the UK state pension is payable in full in the country you’re moving to. Sometimes it isn't.
- Having property in a country does not mean you will necessarily qualify for residency or domicile in that country. Residency and domicile depend on other things, such as length of time in the country and where you earn your living.
- If you are buying off-plan (i.e. from a property company’s prospectus for a house that has not yet been built) then make sure that insurance and indemnity clauses are included in case the worst happens and the firm goes bust.
- All reputable international property companies will be members of the Federation of International Property Developers (FODPAC).
- All countries – even those within the EU single market – will have slightly different regulations for foreign property purchases. Don’t assume that because the country is in the EU it will be like back home.
- Make sure that the property you are buying has ‘clear title’ – meaning that the vendor is actually in a position to sell. Some properties in Northern Cyprus, for example, are in dispute following the Turkish Cypriot takeover and some Greek families in the south of the island have made claims on properties in the north.
- Read newspapers – English-language ones, or local ones if you can – in the country you’re moving to. There is nothing like local knowledge to get a feel for the place.
If you’re planning to rent the property out, factor in the off-season.
Reprinted with permission from Investment International - - the longest running monthly magazine for the international investor (established in 1985)