Ask ten agents, and you’ll hear ten versions. Some swear the buyer covers everything. Others say it depends on the developer. A few will admit they’ve seen sellers foot the bill just to close a deal fast. The truth? It’s messy. That’s exactly where we’re diving in.
Understanding the Deed of Sale: What It Actually Is
A deed of sale isn’t just paperwork. It’s the legal transfer of ownership from seller to buyer. No deed, no title in your name. Simple as that. But here’s what people don’t think about enough: the deed itself is one piece in a much larger puzzle.
It comes after the Reservation Agreement and the Contract to Sell. It is signed once full payment is made—especially in cash transactions. For bank-financed deals, it’s executed only after the loan is released and the property is free of liens.
The legal weight of the deed
Under Philippine law, the deed must be notarized. That notary fee? Part of the cost. And while the document proves ownership, it doesn’t stand alone. It needs to be annotated with the Registry of Deeds. Which means—yep—more fees. The buyer usually handles those. But again, not carved in stone.
When the deed doesn’t mean full control
Here’s a twist. Even with the deed in hand, you might not have full control. Condominiums under mortgage? The bank holds the title until the loan is paid. So the deed exists. But real ownership? Delayed. That changes everything for buyers who think signing = freedom.
Who Traditionally Covers the Costs?
In most residential transactions, the buyer pays for the deed of sale. This includes notary fees, documentary stamp tax (DST), and registration costs. We’re talking anywhere from 3% to 6% of the property’s selling price. For a 3-million-peso condo in Quezon City? That’s 90,000 to 180,000 pesos in buyer-side costs alone.
And that’s before transfer tax, which varies by city. Manila charges up to 0.75%. Makati? 0.5%. These are local government taxes, separate from national fees. The buyer covers those too—usually.
But because real estate here operates as much on negotiation as law, strong buyers can push back. Especially in buyer’s markets. I am convinced that in slow economic periods, you’ll see more sellers absorbing costs just to move inventory. We saw it in 2020. We’re seeing echoes of it now in 2024.
Notary fees and legal processing
The notary fee depends on the property value. For a 2-million-peso house, expect around 3,000 to 5,000 pesos. Not huge—but added to a stack of other fees, it stings. The notary prepares the deed, witnesses signatures, and files the DST with the BIR. This step is mandatory. No shortcuts.
Documentary stamp tax: 1.5% you can’t skip
The DST is 1.5% of the property’s zonal value or selling price, whichever is higher. A property valued at 4 million pesos? That’s 60,000 pesos in DST alone. This tax funds the national government. It is non-negotiable. And it is always recorded under the buyer’s responsibility—on paper.
When Sellers Step In: Exceptions to the Rule
Developers often pay for the deed of sale. Especially in pre-selling condo units. Why? Marketing. They want fast turnover. They bundle the cost into the price and tell buyers “we’ll handle the paperwork.” It’s a sales tactic. But it works.
Bigger players like Ayala Land or Megaworld do this regularly. For them, absorbing 50,000 pesos in fees per unit is cheaper than losing a sale over paperwork anxiety. And honestly, it’s unclear whether smaller developers will keep up as financing tightens in 2025.
But individual sellers? Rarely. Unless the market is drowning in inventory. I find this overrated—the idea that private sellers will bend. They won’t. Not unless they’ve had the property listed for 18 months and the roof leaks.
Incentives in a sluggish market
In Cebu, some sellers in the IT Park area have started offering “free transfer” deals. Translation: they cover the deed costs. It’s not generosity. It’s survival. Vacancy rates hit 12% last quarter. That’s high. So yes—when supply drowns demand, the burden shifts.
Gift deeds are different
If the transfer is a gift—say, from parent to child—the donor (seller) often pays. Not because the law says so. Because it’s a gift. But gift deeds still trigger donor’s tax (6% of the property’s value). And that’s on the giver. Which explains why some families opt for nominal sales instead.
Cash vs. Bank Financing: How Payment Method Changes the Game
Cash buyers get the deed faster. No waiting for bank approval. But they also bear the full weight of costs upfront. There’s no lender absorbing fees. You pay. Period.
Bank-financed deals? The process drags. And the bank controls the timeline. But some institutions, like BDO or UnionBank, include deed preparation in their processing. Not the fees—but the legwork. Which saves the buyer hassle, if not pesos.
And because the bank requires a clean title, they often coordinate with the developer’s legal team. This streamlines things. But expect delays. A typical bank release takes 30 to 45 days post-document submission. You can’t rush it. Unless you bribe someone. (Don’t.)
Developer-handled transfers in pre-selling units
When you buy pre-selling, you don’t get the deed immediately. You get a Contract to Sell. Years later, after full payment and project turnover, the developer processes the deed. They usually consolidate the fees and bill the buyer later. But the timing? Entirely in their hands.
Resale properties and direct negotiations
Resale condos? Total free-for-all. The buyer typically pays. But you can negotiate. Especially if the seller needs cash fast. A 5% discount in exchange for covering deed costs? That’s a real trade-off. And it happens more than brokers admit.
Cash vs. Financing: Who Pays More in the End?
Cash buyers pay less in interest. Obvious. But they pay more in upfront fees. Financing buyers spread costs over time. But they end up paying 8% to 12% in interest over 15 to 20 years. A 3-million-peso loan at 9% over 15 years? That’s over 2 million in interest. Insane.
And that’s not counting insurance, service fees, and hidden charges. So while the deed cost might be identical, the total burden isn’t. Financing feels lighter. But it’s heavier in the long run. That said, not everyone has 3 million lying around. We’re far from it.
Cash: full control, immediate deed
You pay everything. But you own it now. No bank lien. No monthly stress. And the deed is processed in weeks, not months. For the risk-averse, this is peace of mind. But it demands liquidity. Are you ready to lock up half your net worth in one asset?
Financing: slower transfer, shared responsibility
The bank doesn’t pay for the deed. But it does require it. So indirectly, they enforce the process. You still pay. But the lender manages part of the risk. They verify titles. They run background checks. It’s a safety net. Except that you’re paying for the net—and the rope.
Frequently Asked Questions
People ask the same things, over and over. Let’s clear the air.
Does the buyer always pay for the deed of sale?
No. Not always. Tradition says yes. Reality says “it depends.” In resale homes, yes—usually. In developer sales? Often no. Negotiation matters. Power matters. Market conditions matter. Don’t assume.
Can I negotiate who pays the deed costs?
You can. And you should. Real estate is not fixed pricing. Even in subdivisions with “standard terms,” you can push. Offer a faster closing. Waive contingencies. Trade flexibility for fee absorption. That changes everything.
What happens if the deed isn’t transferred?
You’re in danger. No deed? No legal ownership. You might be living there. Paying taxes. But legally? It’s still the seller’s. Disputes happen. Evictions follow. Get it in writing. Get it notarized. Get it registered.
The Bottom Line
The buyer usually pays for the deed of sale in the Philippines. But that’s a starting point, not a rule. Developers, market slumps, and smart negotiation can flip the script. The problem is, most buyers don’t know they can ask. They sign what’s given. And that’s exactly where they lose.
Take control. Ask early. Demand transparency. Because once the money changes hands, your leverage evaporates. I recommend this: treat every fee as negotiable until proven otherwise. Even the notary’s coffee allowance (okay, maybe not that). But you get the point.
Experts disagree on how much power individual buyers really have. Some say the system is rigged. Others say information is the real currency. Data is still lacking. But anecdotal evidence—from Quezon City to Davao—shows that informed buyers save 15% to 30% on closing costs.
So who pays? The one who blinks first. Don’t be that person.