A common concern among foreign buyers is whether someone else could later claim ownership of their property. When a property is properly titled, transferred through a registered deed of sale, and recorded in the Title Registry, the risk of future claims is extremely low.
The Dominican legal system prioritizes registered rights. Ownership that appears in the Title Registry prevails over unregistered claims. This means that informal agreements, verbal arrangements, or private contracts that are not registered generally do not override registered ownership.
Most ownership disputes arise when buyers acquire property without title, rely on inheritance situations that were never resolved, or purchase property through informal or defective transactions. In those cases, the problem is not that claims are common, but that ownership was never properly perfected.
Once a buyer completes the legal transfer process and is issued a Title Certificate in their name, their ownership is enforceable against third parties and protected by law. This underscores why legal structure and registration are essential, particularly for foreign buyers unfamiliar with local practices.



