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Office in Providencia, Provincia de Santiago de Chile€ 2,710 month2Presented by Legacy Business Partners -
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luxury guide
337 luxury properties are listed in Chile today, and international buyers have noticed. This country runs the full length of South America's Pacific coast, covering desert, metropolitan capital, wine country, volcanic lake districts, and Patagonian wilderness within a single national border. That geographic range is precisely what makes Chile different. Zapallar and Viña del Mar draw buyers looking for ocean-front living north of Santiago; Puerto Varas and the Chilean Lake District appeal to those after nature and silence; and San Pedro de Atacama delivers something genuinely rare: contemporary luxury architecture inside a landscape that looks like another planet. The legal framework for foreign ownership is the most transparent in Latin America. That is not a small thing.
Prices for luxury real estate in Chile range from €247,253 to €4,395,604,396, with an average market value of €14,255,514. Floor areas run between 9 and 276800 sqm. What drives the difference? Location, as always, but in Chile location means something specific: ocean frontage in Zapallar, altitude and view in the Santiago hills, or the sheer scale of land in Patagonia. Compare this to Buenos Aires or Bogotá and Chile's premium is clear, but it reflects a fundamentally more stable market. Foreign capital flows freely in and out with no restriction, and the peso's link to a commodity-driven but structurally sound economy gives the market a floor that other regional destinations cannot match.
Santiago's Vitacura is where the country's most sought-after urban addresses are concentrated: foreign embassies, private clubs, and a residential market that moves fast. Las Condes sits just below in prestige but draws a larger international community, with international schools, financial district proximity, and a well-developed service infrastructure. Outside the capital, the picture shifts. Zapallar is a coastal enclave that has been the retreat of Chile's upper class for generations, and European buyers have been arriving steadily for the past decade. Puerto Varas, on the shores of Lago Llanquihue with Osorno volcano as its backdrop, is the most undervalued market in the country right now. Ma the area is gaining attention quickly. And in the far north, San Pedro de Atacama offers an entirely different proposition: small, architect-designed properties in a desert landscape with no real equivalent anywhere in the world.
Chile has the clearest legal framework for foreign property ownership in Latin America: no purchase restrictions, full capital repatriation rights, and contract protections on par with European standards. The average market value of €14,255,514 remains competitive against comparable destinations in the region, and international demand is growing faster than quality supply.
Santiago delivers a fully developed metropolitan infrastructure: international schools, top-tier private hospitals, a growing restaurant scene, and a financial district that operates on global hours. Outside the city, the quality of life shifts entirely toward space, nature, and a pace that urban markets simply cannot offer.
No other country on the continent concentrates this range of landscapes, from the Atacama desert to Patagonian fjords, within a single legal and fiscal framework. An investor can own a coastal residence, a wine estate, and a mountain retreat in Chile, all under the same property law and with the same ownership protections.