Buy your home in Venezuela from wherever you are
Millions of Venezuelans live abroad and many want to invest or prepare their return. This guide explains how a remote purchase works and how Yolisto makes it safer.
How to buy remotely, step by step
Define and search
Use Yolisto's AI search in your language and time zone. Filter by city, USD budget and property type. The Venezuelan market prices everything in dollars.
Verify with the agency
Contact agencies published on the portal, request extra photos and videos, and ask for a review of the property title before moving forward.
Grant a power of attorney
To sign without traveling, buyers grant a special power of attorney to a trusted relative or lawyer, executed at a Venezuelan consulate or notarized and apostilled in your country of residence.
Agree on a safe payment
Purchases in Venezuela are normally paid in full. Agree with your lawyer on the payment mechanism and document the disbursement in the negotiation and final deed.
Register the property
Your attorney-in-fact signs the final purchase deed before the corresponding Real Estate Registry. The property is then in your name.
Frequently asked questions
Can I buy without traveling to Venezuela?+
Yes. The usual route is a special power of attorney granted at a Venezuelan consulate, or notarized with an apostille, so a representative signs for you in Venezuela.
What currency are purchases in?+
The Venezuelan market operates de facto in dollars: most transactions are negotiated and closed in USD, paid in full.
Is mortgage financing available?+
Long-term mortgage credit is practically nonexistent today, so purchases are cash transactions. When financing returns, Yolisto will be the first place you see it.
How do I protect myself from fraud?+
Always work with an identifiable agency, demand the property title and its chain, and hire your own lawyer for review. On Yolisto, agencies have a public profile with their full inventory.
What will Yolisto do for the diaspora?+
We are building the remote purchase package: verified video tours, agencies with a verification badge, and allied legal support end to end.
This guide is general information about the process and does not constitute legal advice. Procedures vary by country of residence and registry. Always consult a lawyer.