Below is a detailed legal-style article on your topic, written for the Philippine context and focused on buyers who default on a pre-selling condominium and want to avail of their Maceda Law rights.
I. Introduction
Buying a pre-selling condominium in the Philippines usually means paying the price in installments over several years while the project is still under construction. But life happens—job loss, business downturns, health expenses—and some buyers eventually default on payments.
When this happens, many developers quickly point to forfeiture clauses and tell buyers they “lose everything.” That is often misleading or incomplete.
For residential real estate bought on installment, the buyer may be protected by Republic Act No. 6552, commonly known as the Maceda Law or the “Realty Installment Buyer Protection Act.” This law grants specific grace periods and, in many cases, a cash refund (cash surrender value) even after default.
This article explains, in a structured way:
- What Maceda Law is and when it applies
- How it works specifically for pre-selling condominiums
- What rights a buyer has after default
- How to actually invoke or enforce those rights against the developer
- Practical issues, limitations, and common misconceptions
II. Overview of the Maceda Law (RA 6552)
A. Purpose of the Law
RA 6552 was enacted to protect buyers of real property on installment from harsh forfeiture provisions. Before it, developers could cancel contracts and forfeit all payments upon default, no matter how long the buyer had been paying.
The law recognizes that:
- Installment buyers often pay for years before defaulting.
- It would be unjust to allow developers to keep all those payments and resell the property.
Thus, the law grants:
- Grace periods to pay unpaid installments without extra interest; and
- A cash surrender value (refund) if the contract is canceled after substantial payments.
B. Coverage
Generally, Maceda Law applies to:
Sale or financing of real estate on installment
Involving residential properties, including:
- Residential lots
- House-and-lot packages
- Condominium units (residential use)
It does not usually apply to:
- Commercial or industrial properties
- Properties bought not on installment (e.g., spot cash)
For pre-selling condominiums, the law can apply if:
- There is a Contract to Sell or similar agreement for a residential condo; and
- Purchase price is payable in installments (e.g., 24-60 months “equity” or downpayment)
C. Key Threshold: At Least 2 Years of Installments
Maceda Law distinguishes buyers who have paid:
- Less than 2 years of installments; and
- At least 2 years of installments.
Your rights after default are stronger once you cross the 2-year threshold.
III. Default in a Pre-Selling Condominium Context
A. What Counts as Default?
You are usually considered in default when:
- You fail to pay an installment on the due date, and
- The contract or developer’s policy defines such non-payment as default (often after a short tolerance period).
Pre-selling condo contracts often say:
- Missing 1–3 monthly payments constitutes default.
- The developer may then consider the contract canceled or suspended, subject to notice requirements.
B. Forms of Payment Covered
Payments typically covered in computing rights under Maceda Law include:
- Monthly equity/downpayment installments
- Other installment payments tied to the purchase price
Not usually included:
- Penalties, surcharges, or interest
- Taxes, association dues, or unrelated fees
The “total installments actually paid” is what matters for calculating grace periods and cash surrender value.
IV. Rights Under Maceda Law After Default
The following assumes you have already defaulted on a pre-selling condo.
A. If You Have Paid Less Than 2 Years of Installments
Rights:
60-day grace period
- You are entitled to a grace period of at least 60 days from the date the installment became due.
- Within this 60 days, you can pay all unpaid installments due as of that point without additional interest (though your contract may still impose penalties; this part can be contentious).
Requirement of proper cancellation notice
- If you still fail to pay within the 60-day grace period, the seller cannot simply “consider it canceled” verbally.
- The seller must issue a notarial notice of cancellation (or demand for rescission) and properly serve it on you.
- Only 30 days after you receive this notarial notice can the cancellation be considered effective.
No guaranteed cash refund (for < 2 years)
- For buyers with less than 2 years of installments, Maceda Law does not require the developer to refund any portion of what you have paid.
- However, some developers offer ex-gratia refunds or internal company policies for partial refund or transfer of payments to another unit. This is contractual, not mandated by Maceda Law.
In practice, if you’re under 2 years:
- Your leverage under Maceda Law is mostly about time and proper procedure (grace period and formal cancellation), not refund.
B. If You Have Paid At Least 2 Years of Installments
Once you have paid an amount equivalent to two full years of installments, your rights expand substantially.
1. Grace Period to Pay Without Additional Interest
You now have a grace period of one month for every year of installments paid, but not less than 60 days.
Examples:
- If you have paid 2 years of installments → 2 months grace period
- If you have paid 3 years → 3 months
- If you have paid 5 years → 5 months, and so on
During this grace period:
- You may pay all unpaid installments due (as of that time) without additional interest.
- The developer cannot cancel the contract during the grace period as long as you cure the default by paying the due amounts.
2. Cash Surrender Value (Refund) Upon Cancellation
If you still cannot continue and the contract is canceled, you are entitled to a cash surrender value of your total payments, as follows:
- At least 50% of total installments actually paid, plus
- An additional 5% per year beyond the 5th year of installments,
- Capped at 90% of total payments.
Breakdown example:
- Paid 2–5 years: 50% of total installments paid.
- Paid 6 years: 55%
- Paid 7 years: 60%
- … up to a maximum of 90%.
Important points:
- This is calculated on all installments actually paid, not just the latest ones.
- The remaining 10% (or more, if below the cap) may be retained by the seller as compensation for use of the money, administrative costs, etc.
3. Timing and Manner of Refund
Under Maceda Law:
The cash surrender value must be paid by the seller to the buyer within 30 days from the date of cancellation of the contract.
Cancellation must still follow the proper process:
- Buyer is given the proper grace period (as above).
- Seller issues a notarial notice of cancellation or demand for rescission.
- Only after 30 days from buyer’s receipt of such notarial notice can cancellation take effect.
- Within 30 days from cancellation, the seller must deliver the cash surrender value.
Until then, the contract is not cleanly canceled in the strict sense.
V. Special Issues for Pre-Selling Condominiums
Pre-selling condos raise some nuances:
A. Contract to Sell vs. Deed of Absolute Sale
In a typical pre-selling setup:
- The buyer signs a Reservation Agreement and then a Contract to Sell.
- The title remains with the developer until the buyer pays the full purchase price (via equity + bank loan/in-house financing).
Maceda Law can apply even if:
- The arrangement is through a Contract to Sell, because it is still a sale on installment of real estate.
B. “Equity” vs. “Loan Amortization”
Often, the buyer:
- Pays “equity” (e.g., 20–30% of price) in monthly installments during pre-selling.
- After unit completion, a bank or in-house financing covers the balance.
Issues:
- The installment “equity” payments to the developer are typically considered installment payments under Maceda Law.
- If a bank loan has been taken out and the title is already transferred and mortgaged, later defaults may be governed by mortgage and foreclosure rules, not Maceda Law.
For your scenario (“after defaulting on a pre-selling condo”), we’re usually talking about default during the equity/downpayment phase or before full turnover and bank financing.
C. Project Delays and Buyer’s Default
Complications arise if:
- The developer delays completion;
- You default partly because of that delay or dissatisfaction.
Maceda Law primarily addresses buyer default, not developer delay, but:
- Separate laws (e.g., subdivision and condominium buyer protection regulations) may give you additional remedies (complaints, refunds, interest, etc.) against the developer’s non-compliance.
- You might end up using both Maceda Law and other legal bases depending on facts.
VI. How to Actually Avail of Your Maceda Law Rights
This section is practical: steps a buyer would typically take after defaulting on a pre-selling condo.
Step 1: Determine How Much You Have Actually Paid and For How Long
Gather:
- Contract to Sell
- Official Receipts (ORs) or Statements of Account
- Payment schedule or amortization table
Compute:
- Total installments actually paid (excluding penalties and unrelated fees).
- Total years you have effectively been paying (convert months to years, typically counting from the first installment due date).
This determines:
- Whether you fall under less than 2 years or at least 2 years;
- How many months of grace period you’re entitled to;
- Your approximate cash surrender value if you can’t continue.
Step 2: Check Your Default Status and Notices Received
Identify:
- When you first missed payments.
- Whether you received reminder letters or demand letters.
- Whether any letter is a notarial notice of cancellation (this must be notarized and formally served).
Key questions:
- Have you been given your grace period under the law?
- Has the developer already issued a notarial notice of cancellation?
- If yes, when did you receive it (date matters)?
Step 3: Decide Your Goal
You must be clear on what you want:
To continue with the purchase?
- Then your priority is to use your grace period to pay the unpaid installments and revive the contract.
To give up the unit but recover part of your money?
- Then your priority is to invoke your right to cash surrender value (if you qualify) and secure a refund after proper cancellation.
Step 4: Communicate with the Developer in Writing
Draft a formal letter addressed to the developer, stating:
Your full name, unit details, project name
Your payment history and your computation (e.g., you’ve paid “x years” of installments, total “₱y”)
The provisions of RA 6552 you are invoking:
If you want to continue:
- State that you are availing of your grace period to pay unpaid installments without additional interest as provided by Maceda Law and request a computation of the amount needed to cure the default.
If you want a refund:
- State that you have paid at least 2 years of installments and you are availing of your right under RA 6552 to cash surrender value, equivalent to 50% plus applicable additional 5% per year after the 5th year (if applicable), based on total installments actually paid.
Request a written response within a reasonable period and ask for schedule and mode of payment for the refund if cancellation is going through.
Send this:
- Through a trackable method (registered mail with return card, courier with proof of delivery, or personal service with acknowledgment receipt).
- Keep copies of everything.
Step 5: If Developer Refuses or Ignores You
Common developer responses:
- Claim that Maceda Law “does not apply” to pre-selling or to your contract.
- Offer only a small fraction of what the law requires.
- Insist that your entire payment is forfeited.
If that happens:
Consult a Philippine lawyer experienced in real estate and Maceda Law.
Consider:
- Sending a final demand letter through your lawyer, citing legal provisions and jurisprudence.
- Filing a complaint with the appropriate housing adjudication body or court (depending on jurisdiction and current regulations).
Reliefs you may seek:
- Recognition of your Maceda Law rights
- Payment of proper cash surrender value
- Possibly damages, attorney’s fees, and/or interest (depending on facts and applicable law).
VII. Interplay with Contract Clauses and Other Laws
A. Forfeiture Clauses
Most pre-selling contracts include provisions like:
“If the Buyer defaults, all payments made shall be forfeited in favor of the Seller.”
Under Maceda Law:
- Such clauses cannot override the minimum protections granted by the statute.
- Even if you signed such a clause, the developer must still grant the grace period and, where applicable, cash surrender value.
Contract provisions that are less favorable than the law are generally void to that extent.
B. Waivers Signed by the Buyer
Sometimes, the buyer may have signed documents waiving rights under RA 6552. Generally:
- Statutory rights designed for public protection (like those in Maceda Law) are not easily waived by boilerplate clauses.
- Courts often look with suspicion at waivers that deprive consumers of fundamental legal protections.
However, the effect of any particular waiver is ultimately a legal question that may need a court or adjudicatory body to resolve.
C. Overlap with Other Protective Laws
Separate from Maceda Law:
Condominium buyers may also be protected by other statutes and regulations that govern:
- Misrepresentation or incomplete disclosure
- Failure of the developer to complete or deliver projects on time
- Defective or substandard construction
These may provide additional remedies (rescission, refund, damages), sometimes independently of whether you defaulted.
VIII. Practical Tips for Buyers in Default
Act early. The longer you wait, the more installments and penalties may pile up, and the more difficult it may be to negotiate.
Organize your documents. Keep copies of contracts, receipts, statements, and all correspondence. These are crucial for proving payments and dates.
Be clear and firm when invoking Maceda Law. Use the name of the law (RA 6552) and state clearly what right you are asserting: grace period or cash surrender value.
Avoid purely verbal negotiations. Always follow up with written communication so you have a record.
Seek legal advice before signing any “settlement” or cancellation agreement. Developers may offer quick “settlements” that are less than what the law would grant you. Understand what you are giving up.
Consider the cost–benefit of continuing vs. canceling. If your financial situation has changed drastically, forcing yourself to push through might lead to bigger losses later. Sometimes, taking the statutory refund is the more realistic option.
IX. Limitations and Common Misconceptions
“Maceda Law gives a refund to everyone.” Not true. Buyers with less than 2 years of installments are not guaranteed a refund under the law.
“Maceda Law applies even after bank loan takes over.” Not always. Once the purchase is fully paid to the developer and the transaction shifts to a mortgage with a bank, the situation usually falls under foreclosure law, not Maceda Law.
“Developers can cancel without notarial notice.” The law requires notarial notice and a 30-day waiting period after the grace period.
“All my payments will be returned.” No. Even with long payment periods, the law caps the refund at 90% of total installments actually paid.
X. Conclusion
For buyers who default on pre-selling condominium installments in the Philippines, the Maceda Law is a powerful protective tool—especially if they have been paying for at least two years. It offers:
- Grace periods to cure default and continue with the purchase; and
- Cash surrender value (refunds) that prevent total forfeiture of years of hard-earned payments.
To effectively avail of these rights, a buyer should:
- Carefully compute how long and how much has been paid;
- Understand whether they fall under the < 2 years or ≥ 2 years category;
- Assert their rights in writing to the developer; and
- Seek legal assistance if the developer refuses to honor what the law provides.
While each case is fact-specific and may involve other laws beyond RA 6552, knowing the structure and mechanics of Maceda Law gives a defaulting pre-selling condo buyer a strong starting position to protect their financial interests.