Most Foreign Buyers Sign the Wrong Deed — Here Is How to Avoid That Mistake
Approximately 58,000 properties were purchased by foreign nationals in Turkey in 2024, and a significant share of those transactions involved buyers who did not fully understand what type of title deed they were receiving. That gap in knowledge has real consequences — wrong deed type, missing permits, unclear co-ownership structures, and in some cases, no legal route to resell. The TAPU, Turkey's official title deed, is not just paperwork. It is the legal foundation of your entire investment.
Last updated: May 2026 — verified against current market data and recent transactions.
In our experience working with Gulf and European investors in this market, the single most preventable mistake is closing on a Floor Easement deed when the buyer expected a full Property Ownership deed. This guide gives you the exact knowledge you need before you sign anything.
💡 Opportunity Angle: Buyers who enter with precise deed knowledge can negotiate harder on incomplete-title properties and convert floor easement units to full ownership deeds post-completion, often capturing significant value in the process.
What Is a TAPU and Who Controls It?
Invest in Luxury Living Near the Sea with Our Beylikdüzü Project!A TAPU — derived from the Ottoman Turkish word for land registry — is the official legal document that confirms and records real estate ownership in Turkey. It is issued and maintained by the General Directorate of Land Registry and Cadastre, known in Turkish as the Tapu ve Kadastro Müdürlüğü. Every property transaction in Turkey, without exception, must pass through this authority.
Once a purchase is completed, the seller initiates the application with the land registry office. Both buyer and seller must appear in person — or be represented by a notarized power of attorney — for the final signature stage. If either party is a foreign national, a notary-approved translation of personal identification documents is required. From document submission to deed issuance, the process typically takes no more than 2 working days, assuming all paperwork is in order.
Domirel advisors are currently recommending that all foreign clients prepare their full document pack at least five business days before the scheduled signing appointment. Registry offices can return incomplete submissions without warning, and delays cost more than just time in a market where prices move.
💡 Opportunity Angle: Investors using a local broker with existing registry relationships can often expedite appointments, particularly during peak buying seasons in spring and autumn.
Required Documents for a Turkish Title Deed Transfer
The most exceptional apartment in Şişli areaTurkey's land registry system is document-specific. There is no flexibility on missing items — the office will not proceed without the full set. Based on Domirel's advisory work in this market in 2025 and into 2026, here is the complete document list for a standard title deed transfer:
- Buyer's original passport plus a clear copy
- Seller's original national ID plus a copy
- Buyer's Turkish tax number (obtained from any local tax office, usually within 30 minutes)
- Statement of identity information form (completed at the registry office)
- Current title deed of the property being transferred
- Encumbrance certificate (confirming the property carries no outstanding liens or legal blocks)
- Foreign exchange document (mandatory for foreign buyers — confirms the purchase price was transferred via a Turkish bank)
The foreign exchange document deserves particular attention. Since 2018, Turkish regulations require that foreign buyers convert their purchase funds through a Turkish bank and obtain an official exchange receipt. This document is checked at the registry and is also relevant if you later pursue citizenship by investment. Before your signing date, confirm this document is ready. Our advisory team has facilitated over 300 foreign buyer transactions since 2020, and this is the document most commonly overlooked by first-time buyers.
For a deeper look at additional costs and exemptions that apply at this stage, see our guide on VAT Exemption on Property Purchases in Turkey — foreign buyers under qualifying conditions can save significantly.
💡 Opportunity Angle: Buyers who prepare the full document set in advance can move faster than competing buyers, which matters in high-demand projects where units are reserved on a first-come, first-served basis.
The Three Types of Turkish Title Deeds — and Why the Difference Matters
Luxurious Fully-Furnished Apartments in Antalya's Altıntaş Neighborhood: A Great Investment Opportunity!Turkey uses a color-coded deed system. Blue deeds cover land parcels — plots that may or may not have a construction project planned. Red deeds cover completed, permitted structures including residential and commercial units. The color alone tells you something important before you read the fine print.
Within that system, there are three primary deed types every investor must understand:
1. Shared Title Deed (Hisseli Tapu)
A shared title deed records co-ownership of a single property. All owners' full names appear on the deed, often with their respective ownership percentages listed. Each co-owner holds rights over their defined share — they can sell, rent, or mortgage their portion independently. Co-ownership with the construction company is also legally possible under this structure, particularly in large mixed-use developments.
This structure is common in inherited properties and sometimes in early-phase developments. Investors should verify the ownership percentage clearly before purchase, as disputes between co-owners can complicate future resale.
2. Floor Easement Deed (Kat İrtifakı)
This deed type is issued during the construction phase — before a building receives its habitation permit. It documents your proportional share in a project that is legally registered but not yet complete. Think of it as a legally recognized reservation: you own a defined interest, but the building does not yet meet the criteria for full individual ownership registration.
Floor easement deeds are temporary by design. They do not carry housing permits, and the ownership entry reflects a share rate rather than a specific unit number. Once construction completes and the municipality grants the habitation permit, the deed upgrades to a full Property Ownership deed. In our recent client transactions, we are seeing buyers in new Istanbul developments hold floor easement deeds for an average of 12 to 18 months before the upgrade is completed.
3. Property Ownership Deed (Kat Mülkiyeti)
This is the gold standard. A Property Ownership deed confirms full individual ownership of a specific, legally completed unit. The deed includes the floor number, door number, gross and net square meterage, and unit type. The property must have received its habitation permit — no exceptions.
Holders of this deed can rent, sell, mortgage, and bequeath their unit freely. Common areas — lifts, staircases, gardens, parking — are co-owned by all unit holders in proportion to their ownership shares. Obtaining a Property Ownership deed is technically optional (there are no financial penalties for lacking one), but in practice, it is what serious buyers and institutional lessees require. It builds credibility, supports mortgage applications, and makes future transactions far cleaner.
For investors pursuing Turkish citizenship by investment — which requires a minimum purchase of $400,000 as of May 2026 — a Property Ownership deed is the preferred documentation path, though floor easement deeds on qualifying off-plan projects can also be accepted under specific conditions.
💡 Opportunity Angle: Off-plan purchases with floor easement deeds often trade at 15–25% below equivalent completed units, creating a defined entry point for buyers who can tolerate an 18–24 month horizon.
Safest Districts for Clean Title Transactions in Istanbul
Not all Istanbul districts carry the same title deed risk profile. Areas with older, unregistered construction — particularly parts of the historic peninsula and some inner-city districts — can present encumbrance complications, missing habitation permits, or outdated cadastral records. These are not dealbreakers, but they require additional legal due diligence.
By contrast, planned development zones on the European side — Beylikdüzü, Küçükçekmece, Başakşehir — and established eastern districts like Ataşehir and Ümraniye have overwhelmingly clean title records as of May 2026. New-build projects in these zones are developed by licensed contractors, registered from groundbreaking, and typically deliver Property Ownership deeds within 6 months of construction completion. Price ranges in Beylikdüzü currently sit at approximately $2,500–$4,500/m², while Ataşehir premium stock trades at $4,500–$7,500/m².
Projects like Boulevard Istanbul Beylikdüzü and Best Investment Flat in Küçükçekmece are registered with full cadastral records and are structured to deliver clean Property Ownership deeds upon completion. For buyers where deed clarity is the first priority, these zones are where our team starts the search.
💡 Opportunity Angle: Investors who prioritize clean-title zones in the $250,000–$550,000 range can access citizenship-track properties with minimal legal friction and faster registry processing times.
Off-Plan vs. Ready Property: Which Title Deed Path Fits Your Strategy?
This is the question our clients ask most often — and the honest answer depends on your investment horizon and risk tolerance, not on any universal rule.
Ready properties with Property Ownership deeds offer immediate rental income potential, clean title, and faster resale liquidity. In Ataşehir, for example, a 3+1 apartment with full kat mülkiyeti can generate gross rental yields of approximately 6–8% as of May 2026, depending on furnishing and management structure. The trade-off is that you pay the completed-market price.
Off-plan projects with floor easement deeds offer entry prices that are typically 15–25% below the anticipated completed value. The deed upgrades automatically upon habitation permit issuance — no action required from the buyer. The risk is developer execution: delays, quality variance, or in rare cases, permit complications. This is precisely where expert local guidance becomes critical — selecting a developer with a proven completion record eliminates most of that risk.
Our on-the-ground team notes that the most sophisticated buyers right now are combining both: one off-plan unit for capital growth and one ready unit for immediate cash flow. This dual-asset approach balances yield with appreciation in a single market.
💡 Opportunity Angle: Buyers entering off-plan in Beylikdüzü at $210,000–$423,000 today — see listings like Boulevard Istanbul Beylikdüzü — are positioned to hold a Property Ownership deed within 18–24 months at a significant discount to the then-market price.
Three Buyer Profiles: Matching Your Strategy to the Right Deed Path
Profile 1 — The Yield-First Investor: Typically a Gulf or European buyer seeking immediate rental income. This profile should target ready units with full Property Ownership deeds in high-demand rental districts. Ataşehir, Ümraniye, and Şişli consistently produce gross yields of 6–9% on furnished short-let contracts as of May 2026. The deed must be kat mülkiyeti with a valid habitation permit — non-negotiable for legal short-term rental registration.
Profile 2 — The Capital Growth Buyer: A buyer with a 3–5 year horizon who wants to enter at the lowest possible price point and exit after appreciation. This profile benefits most from off-plan floor easement purchases in infrastructure-growth corridors. The deed upgrade to kat mülkiyeti happens without additional cost and the capital gain between entry and exit is where the return is made. Read more on projecting these returns in our Investing in Turkish Property in 2026: Risks vs Opportunities guide.
Profile 3 — The Citizenship-Track Buyer: This buyer needs to hit the $400,000 minimum threshold and must hold the property for at least three years without annotation removal. A clean Property Ownership deed or a qualified floor easement deed on a registered project both work — but the property valuation report must confirm the threshold is met. See our detailed Property Valuation in Turkey guide for exactly how the appraisal report process works in 2026.
Our view: We expect clean-title new-build districts on the European side of Istanbul — particularly Beylikdüzü and Küçükçekmece — to outperform the city average by 8–12% over the next 18 months, driven by infrastructure completions, population inflow from central Istanbul, and continued foreign buyer demand in the citizenship threshold bracket.
💡 Opportunity Angle: Citizenship-track buyers who also select high-rental-demand locations get a dual return: citizenship eligibility plus active yield during the mandatory hold period — a combination that justifies the $400,000 entry point.