Real Estate Law
We provide legal assistance and representation in real estate transactions, contract drafting, document review, land registration, property disputes, and related land book procedures.
In real estate matters, risks often arise before contracts are signed: missing documents, unnoticed encumbrances, unclear boundaries, or contractual clauses that do not reflect the actual situation or do not protect the party's interests. A careful review significantly reduces risk exposure and helps structure the transaction properly, in many cases preventing future disputes.
What Legal Assistance Covers
- pre-contract legal due diligence and risk identification;
- review/drafting of contracts and key clauses;
- support in property, possession, and partition disputes;
- assistance with land registry and documentation regularization.
Assistance can be useful before signing, during negotiation, or after a dispute has already emerged regarding ownership, possession, or registration.
Useful Documents for the First Discussion
- title deeds, purchase contracts, and ownership history;
- recent registry extracts and cadastral documents;
- permits, technical papers, or correspondence relevant to the property;
- any notices or records relating to co-ownership or ongoing disputes.
Frequently Asked Questions
1. Which documents are useful before signing a real estate contract?
Property deeds, relevant registry excerpts, ownership history, and technical/legal documents clarifying the property status.
2. How long does legal due diligence take?
Duration varies depending on complexity and the volume of available documents.
3. Can proper contract drafting prevent disputes?
Yes. Well-structured clauses reduce conflict risk and support enforcement if obligations are breached.
4. Can acquisition risks be assessed before the contract is signed?
Yes. Pre-signing review is often the most efficient stage to identify title, registry, possession, or documentation issues before they become harder to correct.
The information above is general and does not represent legal advice for a specific case.