Property

by Editor

Sri Lanka’s real estate market is in selective recovery in 2025–2026, with renewed investor confidence among both local and overseas buyers. Colombo’s Port City and luxury condominium market continue to attract international interest, while suburban areas such as Athurugiriya, Homagama, and Piliyandala are showing strong relative appreciation. Galle luxury villas have seen consistent demand from foreign buyers and long-stay tourists. For the diaspora, property in Sri Lanka is often both an emotional and financial investment, and the rules for buying differ significantly depending on your citizenship status.

What Foreigners Can Buy

  • Condominium apartments: Freehold ownership permitted; full payment must be made upfront via an Inward Investment Account (IIA) at a local bank
  • Long-term leasehold land: Up to 99 years (the 15% lease tax was abolished in January 2017)
  • Via a Sri Lankan Private Limited Company: Can acquire freehold land if foreign shareholding does not exceed 49%
  • Dual citizens and Non-Resident Sri Lankans (NRSLs): Can purchase property without the same restrictions as foreign nationals, a significant advantage for diaspora buyers

What Foreigners Cannot Do

  • Directly purchase freehold land in their personal name
  • Obtain a mortgage from local banks (NRSLs and dual citizens may qualify:  check with individual banks)

Investor Visa Through Property

  • USD 100,000 investment in an apartment = 5-year renewable residence visa
  • USD 200,000 investment = 10-year renewable residence visa
  • Investment must be deposited in an Inward Investment Account (IIA) at a local bank

Popular Property Markets by Region

Region Character Buyer Profile
Colombo Luxury condos, branded residences, Port City Colombo Investors, professionals, returnees
Galle / South Colonial charm, coastal villas, boutique lifestyle Expats, retirees, holiday-home buyers
Kandy / Hill Country Cooler climate, cultural setting, tea estate properties Retirees, lifestyle buyers
Trincomalee / East Coast Emerging coastal market, leisure real estate Early-stage investors, tourism developers
Jaffna / North Rebuilding market, land and residential Diaspora returnees, long-term investors
Western Province suburbs Highest relative appreciation predicted in 2026 Local and diaspora buyers

Common pitfalls:

  • Not engaging a qualified Sri Lankan lawyer to verify title deeds before purchase
  • Assuming leasehold and freehold carry the same rights — they do not
  • Failing to use an Irrevocable Instrument of Agreement (IIA) for the transaction, which can invalidate the purchase

Key Resources & Links

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