No. A licensed real estate broker is not automatically required just because you are buying property in the Philippines. A buyer may purchase directly from the registered owner, from a developer, or through a duly authorized representative, as long as the sale itself complies with Philippine property, tax, registration, and foreign-ownership rules. What the law regulates is different: if someone acts as a real estate broker for compensation, commission, or other valuable consideration, that person must be properly licensed and registered under Philippine law.
The Short Answer: You Can Buy Property Without Hiring a Broker
A real estate broker is not one of the legal elements of a valid sale of land or condominium in the Philippines.
Under the Civil Code, a sale exists when one party agrees to transfer ownership and deliver a determinate thing, and the other party agrees to pay a certain price. For real property, the important legal requirements are the seller’s authority to sell, the buyer’s legal capacity to buy, a proper written and notarized deed for registration, payment of taxes, and registration with the Registry of Deeds. The Civil Code’s definition of sale does not require a broker. (Lawphil)
So, in practical terms:
| Situation | Is a licensed broker required? | Practical note |
|---|---|---|
| Buyer deals directly with the registered owner | No | Make sure the title, taxes, identity, marital status, and authority to sell are checked. |
| Buyer buys from a developer’s in-house sales team | The developer’s real estate practice must comply with licensing rules | For subdivision or condominium projects, also check the DHSUD License to Sell. |
| A person negotiates, advertises, lists, or closes the sale for commission | Yes, that person must be a licensed broker, or an accredited salesperson working under one | This is where Republic Act No. 9646 becomes important. |
| A relative or friend helps the owner sell under a Special Power of Attorney and receives no commission | Usually no broker license is required | The authority must be in writing if the sale involves land. |
| A lawyer drafts or reviews the deed and performs legal work | No broker license is required for legal services | A lawyer is not a substitute for a broker’s marketing role, and a broker is not a substitute for legal due diligence. |
The Law: What RA 9646 Actually Requires
The main law is Republic Act No. 9646, the Real Estate Service Act of the Philippines, approved in 2009. It regulates the practice of real estate service in the Philippines and created the Professional Regulatory Board of Real Estate Service under the Professional Regulation Commission (PRC). (Lawphil)
RA 9646 defines a real estate broker as a duly registered and licensed natural person who, for a professional fee, commission, or other valuable consideration, acts as an agent in a real estate transaction to offer, advertise, solicit, list, promote, mediate, negotiate, or effect the meeting of minds on the sale, purchase, exchange, mortgage, lease, joint venture, or similar real estate transaction. (Lawphil)
That definition matters because it focuses on the activity and the compensation. If a person is merely buying property for himself or herself, that person is not “practicing real estate service.” But if someone is arranging deals for others and expects commission, that person is entering regulated territory.
Who Is Exempt From the Broker Licensing Requirement?
RA 9646 does not apply to everyone who touches a property transaction. Section 28 expressly exempts certain persons, including:
- Owners directly dealing with their own property, except real estate developers;
- Receivers, trustees, or assignees in bankruptcy or insolvency proceedings;
- Persons acting under a court order;
- Duly constituted attorneys-in-fact for sale, mortgage, lease, exchange, or similar contracts of real estate, without compensation or remuneration;
- Public officers performing official duties, except government assessors and appraisers. (Lawphil)
This is why an owner may personally sell his own house and lot without hiring a broker. It is also why a family member with a proper written authority may help complete the transaction without being treated as a broker, provided that person is not being paid a commission or acting as a real estate practitioner.
What Happens if an Unlicensed Person Acts as a Broker?
RA 9646 prohibits a person from practicing or offering to practice real estate service, using a title or sign suggesting qualification, or advertising as qualified to practice the profession unless properly registered, licensed, and issued the required professional identification card or permit. (Lawphil)
The law also imposes penalties. A violation of RA 9646 may result in a fine of not less than ₱100,000, imprisonment of not less than two years, or both. If the violation is committed by an unlicensed real estate service practitioner, the penalty is doubled. (Lawphil)
For buyers, the practical risk is not only the criminal or regulatory issue against the unlicensed “agent.” The bigger everyday risks are:
- paying reservation money to someone with no authority to receive it;
- relying on false promises about title transfer, foreign ownership, or project completion;
- losing time because documents are incomplete;
- discovering unpaid real property taxes, mortgages, adverse claims, or estate problems too late;
- being pressured to sign a deed before BIR, Registry of Deeds, or condominium requirements are clear.
Are Real Estate Salespersons the Same as Brokers?
No. A real estate salesperson is not the same as a licensed real estate broker.
Under RA 9646, real estate salespersons are accredited by the Board and must be under the direct supervision and accountability of a licensed real estate broker. They cannot, by themselves, be signatories to a written agreement involving a real estate transaction unless the supervising broker is also a signatory. They also cannot demand commission from the buyer, seller, or other person except from the licensed broker who directly supervises them. (Lawphil)
This is a common issue in Philippine property transactions. Many buyers meet a “property agent” online, on Facebook Marketplace, through a referral group, or at a project booth. Before paying anything, ask:
- Is this person a licensed broker or an accredited salesperson?
- If a salesperson, who is the supervising licensed broker?
- Can they show a PRC license, accreditation, and authority to sell?
- Is the broker also signing the relevant brokerage or authority documents?
You can check professional licenses through the PRC Online Verification system, which allows verification by name or license number. (Professional Regulation Commission)
Does the Absence of a Broker Make the Sale Invalid?
Usually, no. The sale is not invalid merely because no licensed broker was involved.
For a private sale of real property, the validity of the sale depends on ordinary contract and property law rules: consent, object, price, seller’s ownership or authority, buyer’s capacity, proper form for enforceability and registration, and compliance with special laws.
The Civil Code says contracts involving the creation, transmission, modification, or extinguishment of real rights over immovable property must appear in a public document. It also requires agreements for the sale of real property or an interest in real property to be in writing for enforceability under the Statute of Frauds. (Lawphil)
The Supreme Court has explained that an oral sale of real property is generally not void solely because it is oral, but it may be unenforceable unless there is sufficient written evidence or the contract has been partly or fully executed. In Heirs of Soledad Alido v. Campano, the Court discussed the rule that the Statute of Frauds is mainly evidentiary and generally applies to executory contracts, not fully or partly executed ones. (Supreme Court E-Library)
For an ordinary buyer, however, the safe and practical rule is simple: do not rely on oral promises when buying real estate. Put the agreement in writing, use a properly notarized Deed of Absolute Sale or Contract to Sell, and make sure the document can pass BIR and Registry of Deeds requirements.
When a Broker Is Helpful Even if Not Legally Required
Even if you are not required to hire a licensed broker, a competent licensed broker can be useful when:
- you are comparing market prices in an unfamiliar city or province;
- the property is tenanted, mortgaged, inherited, or under negotiation with several heirs;
- you are buying from abroad and need someone to coordinate viewings and documents;
- the seller is hard to deal with or unfamiliar with title transfer steps;
- you are buying a condominium unit and must check foreign ownership limits, association dues, parking rights, and turnover status;
- you want documentation of the broker’s accountability and professional registration.
But remember: a broker’s role is not the same as a lawyer’s role. A broker can assist in marketing, negotiation, coordination, and transaction documentation, but legal due diligence—such as reviewing ownership, authority, estate issues, marital consent, restrictions on title, and foreign ownership limitations—often requires legal analysis.
Step-by-Step Guide When Buying Property Without a Broker
1. Confirm that the buyer is legally allowed to buy
For Filipino citizens, buying land, a house and lot, or a condominium is generally allowed, subject to ordinary restrictions.
For foreigners, the rule is stricter. The 1987 Constitution provides that, except in cases of hereditary succession, private lands may be transferred only to individuals, corporations, or associations qualified to acquire or hold lands of the public domain. It also provides that a natural-born Filipino who lost Philippine citizenship may acquire private land, subject to legal limits. (Lawphil)
In plain English:
- A foreigner generally cannot own private land in the Philippines.
- A foreigner may generally buy a condominium unit if the project structure and foreign ownership ceiling comply with the Condominium Act.
- A foreigner married to a Filipino does not automatically become qualified to own land; the land is usually registered in the Filipino spouse’s name.
- A former natural-born Filipino may buy limited private land under special laws.
For condominiums, Republic Act No. 4726, the Condominium Act, allows condominium ownership structures where the unit is tied to common areas or membership in a condominium corporation. If the common areas are held by a condominium corporation, a unit transfer is invalid if it causes alien interest in the corporation to exceed legal limits. (Lawphil)
2. Verify the seller’s ownership and authority
Ask for clear copies of:
- Owner’s duplicate Transfer Certificate of Title (TCT), Original Certificate of Title (OCT), or Condominium Certificate of Title (CCT);
- Certified True Copy of title from the Registry of Deeds or through LRA channels;
- Latest tax declaration for land and improvements;
- Real Property Tax clearance from the city or municipal treasurer;
- Valid government IDs of the seller;
- Marriage certificate or proof of civil status, when relevant;
- Special Power of Attorney, board resolution, secretary’s certificate, or court authority, if the seller is represented by another person.
If the sale is through an agent, the Civil Code requires the agent’s authority to sell land or any interest in land to be in writing; otherwise, the sale is void. (Lawphil)
3. Check marital consent and estate issues
A frequent bottleneck in Philippine title transfers is the seller’s marital status.
If the property is community or conjugal property, the written consent of the other spouse or court authority may be required. The Family Code provides rules on joint administration and restrictions on disposition or encumbrance of community or conjugal property without proper consent or authority. (Lawphil)
Also be careful when the registered owner is already deceased. A buyer should not rely on an heir’s statement that “kami na ang may-ari” unless the estate has been properly settled and the heirs have authority to sell. Depending on the facts, this may require estate tax settlement, extrajudicial settlement, publication, court proceedings, or annotation with the Registry of Deeds.
4. Use the right contract
Common documents include:
| Document | When used | Key risk |
|---|---|---|
| Reservation Agreement | Early commitment, often with developers or brokers | May be one-sided; check refund rules and authority to receive money. |
| Contract to Sell | Installment sale where title transfers after full payment | Buyer usually does not become owner yet; default rules matter. |
| Deed of Absolute Sale | Full payment and immediate transfer | Taxes and title transfer deadlines usually start from notarization. |
| Special Power of Attorney | Seller or buyer is represented by another person | For land sales, authority must be written and specific. |
| Deed of Assignment | Often used for rights before title issuance | Needs careful review, especially for developer units or assumed loans. |
A notarized deed is important because the Registry of Deeds will require a registrable instrument. Under the Civil Code, execution of a public instrument may also be equivalent to delivery of the thing sold, unless the deed shows a different intent. (Lawphil)
5. Pay taxes and secure BIR eCAR
After notarization, the parties usually process the tax payments and secure the Electronic Certificate Authorizing Registration (eCAR) from the BIR Revenue District Office where the property is located.
For a typical sale of a capital asset by an individual seller, common national taxes include:
| Tax or fee | Usual basis | Usual responsible party by practice |
|---|---|---|
| Capital Gains Tax | Generally based on the higher of selling price or fair market value/zone value, depending on applicable tax rules | Seller, unless parties agree otherwise |
| Documentary Stamp Tax | On the deed or instrument of sale | Often buyer or seller depending on contract; parties may agree |
| BIR certification and processing fees | BIR requirements | As agreed |
| Local transfer tax | City or municipal treasurer | Often buyer |
| Registry of Deeds registration fees | Registry of Deeds | Often buyer |
| Notarial fee | Notary public | As agreed |
BIR materials state that the capital gains tax return for sale, exchange, or disposition of real property is filed and paid within thirty days following the sale, exchange, or disposition. (Bir Cdn) Documentary Stamp Tax returns are generally filed within five days after the close of the month when the taxable document was made, signed, issued, accepted, or transferred. (Bureau of Internal Revenue)
6. Register the transfer with the Registry of Deeds
The Land Registration Authority lists basic registration requirements such as the original deed or instrument, certified copy of the latest tax declaration, and the owner’s copy of the certificate of title for titled property. For issuance of title transactions, requirements include the BIR Certificate Authorizing Registration, real property tax clearance, and proof of payment of transfer tax. (Land Registration Authority)
In real-world practice, the Registry of Deeds may also require supporting documents depending on the transaction, such as:
- valid IDs and tax identification numbers;
- certificate of no improvement, if applicable;
- tax declarations for land and building;
- condominium corporation or property management clearance;
- DAR clearance for agricultural land covered by agrarian reform rules;
- court orders or estate settlement documents;
- corporate secretary’s certificate or board resolution;
- consularized or apostilled documents if executed abroad.
Documents executed abroad must be handled carefully. The Philippines became a party to the Apostille Convention on May 14, 2019, but whether apostille or consular legalization is needed depends on where the document was executed and whether the relevant countries are covered by the Apostille system without objection. (apostille.gov.ph)
Buying From a Developer: Broker Rules Are Not the Only Issue
When buying a subdivision lot, house-and-lot package, or condominium from a developer, the broker question is only one part of the due diligence.
You should also verify that the project has the required registration and License to Sell from the Department of Human Settlements and Urban Development (DHSUD), especially for subdivision and condominium projects. DHSUD guidance explains that subdivision and condominium projects are required to be registered and licensed before sale. (DHSUD)
RA 9646 also regulates corporate real estate practice. Partnerships or corporations engaged in real estate service must have properly licensed persons authorized to act for them, and divisions or departments engaged in marketing or selling real estate development projects in the regular course of business must be headed by full-time registered and licensed real estate brokers. (Lawphil)
This matters because many buyers assume that a mall booth, glossy brochure, or online advertisement means everything is compliant. It does not. Always check the project name, developer name, exact unit or lot number, license to sell, approved plans, turnover date, refund provisions, and who is authorized to receive payments.
Common Pitfalls When Buying Without a Licensed Broker
Paying money to the wrong person
Never pay reservation fees, earnest money, or down payment to a random “agent” personal account unless the authority is clear. Payments should match the contract. For developers, pay only through official payment channels.
Believing that a photocopy of title is enough
A photocopy may be outdated. Get a recent Certified True Copy from the Registry of Deeds or use official LRA channels. Check annotations for mortgages, adverse claims, notices of levy, lis pendens, restrictions, or prior transactions.
Ignoring tax declarations and real property taxes
A title proves registered ownership, but tax declarations and real property tax clearances are still needed for transfer. Unpaid real property taxes can delay registration.
Buying inherited property before estate settlement
If the registered owner is deceased, the heirs cannot simply sign as if the title is already in their names. Estate settlement, estate tax, publication, and proper authority may be needed.
Forgetting spousal consent
If the seller is married, do not assume one signature is enough. Property relations and the date of marriage matter. Missing spousal consent can create serious title and litigation risk.
Assuming foreigners can own land through a Filipino nominee
A “nominee” arrangement where a Filipino appears on title but the foreigner is the real owner is highly risky. The Constitution restricts foreign ownership of private land, and courts will not casually enforce arrangements designed to evade nationality restrictions.
Treating the broker as the final legal authority
A good broker can help identify issues, but the buyer should still review the title, documents, taxes, authority, and legal restrictions. The safest transactions usually separate the roles: broker for brokerage, lawyer for legal review, notary for notarization, BIR for tax clearance, and Registry of Deeds for registration.
Practical Checklist Before You Sign or Pay
Before signing a Contract to Sell or Deed of Absolute Sale, ask for:
- Certified True Copy of title;
- Owner’s duplicate title for inspection;
- Latest tax declaration;
- Real Property Tax clearance;
- Government IDs of all sellers;
- Marriage certificate or proof of civil status;
- Written spousal consent, if required;
- Special Power of Attorney, if someone signs for the owner;
- If SPA was executed abroad, proper apostille or consular authentication as applicable;
- Authority to Sell, if a broker or agent is involved;
- PRC license details of the broker and accreditation details of the salesperson;
- Condominium corporation clearance, if buying a condo resale;
- DHSUD License to Sell, if buying from a developer;
- BIR zonal value or tax computation;
- Draft deed or contract for review before notarization.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is a licensed broker mandatory when buying a house and lot in the Philippines?
No. You may buy a house and lot directly from the registered owner without a broker. What matters is that the seller has ownership and authority, the buyer is legally allowed to buy, the deed is properly prepared and notarized, taxes are paid, and the transfer is registered.
Can the owner sell property without a broker?
Yes. RA 9646 exempts owners who directly perform real estate acts with respect to their own property, except real estate developers. An owner selling his own home, lot, or condo does not need to become a licensed broker just to sell that property. (Lawphil)
Can an unlicensed agent receive commission?
A person who negotiates, markets, lists, or closes real estate transactions for compensation may be engaging in regulated real estate service. If the person is not licensed or properly accredited under RA 9646, there may be regulatory and legal consequences. A real estate salesperson also cannot demand compensation from anyone other than the supervising licensed broker. (Lawphil)
Is a real estate salesperson enough, or do I need a broker?
A salesperson may assist, but must be accredited and under the direct supervision of a licensed real estate broker. For written agreements involving a real estate transaction, the salesperson cannot sign alone unless the supervising broker is also a signatory. (Lawphil)
How do I verify if a broker is licensed in the Philippines?
Use the PRC Online Verification system and search by name or license number. Ask for the broker’s PRC Professional Identification Card, license number, and validity. For a salesperson, ask for accreditation details and the name and license number of the supervising broker. (Professional Regulation Commission)
Does a foreigner need a licensed broker to buy a condominium in the Philippines?
The broker requirement is not the main issue. A foreigner may generally buy a condominium unit only if the project structure and foreign ownership limits comply with the Condominium Act. The buyer should verify the project’s foreign ownership allocation, the CCT, the master deed, condominium corporation documents, and any developer or management requirements. (Lawphil)
Can a foreigner buy land if a Filipino broker arranges it?
No. A licensed broker cannot cure a foreign ownership problem. The 1987 Constitution generally prohibits transfer of private land to foreigners except in cases such as hereditary succession. A broker’s involvement does not make a prohibited land sale valid. (Lawphil)
Is a notarized Deed of Sale enough to transfer ownership?
Not by itself. A notarized deed is important, but the buyer must still process BIR taxes and eCAR, pay local transfer tax, and register the deed with the Registry of Deeds so that a new title can be issued. The LRA lists the deed, tax declaration, owner’s copy of title, BIR CAR, real property tax clearance, and transfer tax proof among key registration requirements. (Land Registration Authority)
Who pays the broker’s commission in the Philippines?
It depends on the agreement. In many resale transactions, the seller pays the broker because the broker was engaged to sell the property. But the parties may agree otherwise. The commission arrangement should be in writing, and the person receiving commission should be a licensed broker or properly accredited salesperson under a licensed broker.
Should I hire a lawyer if there is already a licensed broker?
For high-value, inherited, mortgaged, agricultural, foreign-buyer, corporate-seller, or disputed properties, legal review is often wise. A broker helps with the transaction and market side; a lawyer checks legal authority, contract risks, ownership issues, restrictions, and remedies if something goes wrong.
Key Takeaways
- A licensed broker is not required just to buy property in the Philippines.
- A buyer may deal directly with the registered owner, but must still complete title, tax, notarization, and registration requirements.
- Under RA 9646, a person who brokers, advertises, negotiates, or closes real estate deals for compensation must be properly licensed, unless an exemption applies.
- Owners may sell their own property without a broker, but real estate developers and paid intermediaries are treated differently.
- Real estate salespersons must be accredited and supervised by a licensed broker; they cannot independently sign transaction agreements or demand commission from buyers or sellers.
- The absence of a broker usually does not invalidate the sale, but an unlicensed intermediary creates practical risks.
- Foreign buyers must separately comply with constitutional land ownership restrictions and condominium ownership limits.
- The safest purchase is document-driven: verify title, seller identity, authority to sell, taxes, spousal consent, BIR eCAR, and Registry of Deeds requirements before releasing major payments.