If you are intending your Greek property to be a "buy to let", please read the following info. gathered from a specialist in EOT last week. We have been told that a massive number of extra staff are now employed to chase up property owners who don't have a licence.
Tourist Licence Changes
If a property is to be let the owner must acquire a Tourist Licence (EOT). Some tragic recent events have resulted in a serious hardening of the rigour with which the law with respect to EOT health and safety requirements is applied.
Originally the need to obtain EOT sub-licences (proof of maid’s health, lifeguard licence, Pool Cleaning Certificate, First Aid Certificate etc) did not discriminate between different types of leased property. This blanket treatment resulted in many owners leasing their properties without obtaining an EOT. Recognising that leasing a simple house is different from running a hotel, a change has been made to the law to make the application more relevant to the type of building involved. The EOT is now divided into categories, (category names are unknown but assume 1, 2 and 3 for simplicity):
1. Hotel
2. A ‘Multi House Property’, i.e. a piece of land on which permission from a single planning application has been granted to build more than one house.
3. A ‘Single House Property’, i.e. one for which planning permission has only been granted for the erection of a single dwelling.
Forget category 1 (unless you are planning to build an hotel).
Category 3 applicants will find the application process lengthy (many months at least) but achievable despite Greece’s love affair with bureaucracy. It can be made much less demanding (but more expensive) if the applicant uses a specialist to undertake the process. Prior to being granted an EOT the owner will, amongst other things, have to prove that the house meets all building regulations. The house will also be inspected by the Fire Dept. If necessary the owner will be expected to install fire extinguishers, fire hoses, emergency exit signs and so on in the house.
It looks as if Category 2 will present an extra layer of difficulty because it is treated as if it is a hotel for EOT purposes. For example, imagine that a property developer buys a piece of land and under a single planning application is granted permission to build a number of houses on it. He then splits the land and sells each house and its plot to individual owners. This is very common practice. However, the new law assumes that if a piece of land has permission to build more than one house on it and an application for a tourist licence is made for any of the houses then the requirement of the applicant is to lease all of the houses covered by the single planning application. Even though each house is owned by different people each EOT application will have to cover, in addition to all the requirements of a Category 3 dwelling, the sub-licences touched on in the second paragraph.
Since the fines for letting property without the necessary EOT are swingeing, it is worth starting the ball rolling as soon as possible.
On the subject of letting, it is our experience that the profit to be made, after all local expenses have been deducted, is relatively small. It would not, for example, cover many mortgage repayments. We use a UK holiday firm, it is possible that more profit could be made by letting privately, but the income would not be guaranteed.