Renovate, rent, or sell an inherited Greek property.
The decision framework for diaspora heirs. The financial, family, emotional and operational variables that determine which path makes sense, four common heir archetypes and what tends to work for each, and the questions worth answering before you commit either way.
Of all the decisions diaspora property heirs face, this is the one that gets put off longest. The inherited apartment sits empty for two, three, sometimes seven years while siblings exchange occasional emails and nobody quite commits. Eventually a forcing function appears — a major repair bill, a building meeting requiring an owner decision, a sibling needing the capital — and the decision happens by pressure rather than by plan.
This article is a framework for making the decision deliberately. There's no universal right answer; what makes sense for a Greek-Australian family with three Greek-Australian children who haven't been to Greece in 20 years is different from what makes sense for a Greek-Canadian family with one child considering eventual return. But the variables are knowable, and walking through them produces clarity.
The four paths
The decision space simplifies to four practical paths:
- Sell. Convert to cash, distribute among heirs, close the Greek property chapter
- Hold empty under maintenance. Keep the property essentially as inherited, with monthly home-watch service to prevent deterioration, accept the ongoing carrying cost in exchange for optionality and family continuity
- Rent long-term. Convert to a residential rental, generate income, professional management, treat as a long-term asset
- Renovate and either keep for personal use, rent short-term, or sell at renovated price
Each has different upfront investment, ongoing cost, expected return, emotional weight, and operational complexity. None is universally right.
The variables that determine the right answer
Financial variables
- Property's current market value — what would it sell for as-is in 2026?
- Renovation gap — how much would it cost to bring to STR-ready or long-term-rental-ready standard?
- Post-renovation value — what would it be worth renovated?
- Realistic rental yield in current condition vs renovated — both gross and net of taxes/management
- Ongoing carrying cost as-is (ENFIA, building dues, utilities, insurance, home watch)
- Outstanding tax/inheritance/legal costs that must be settled either way
- Heirs' financial situations — does any heir need their share now, or can the family afford the patient option?
Family variables
- Number and location of heirs
- Alignment on path — do all heirs want the same thing? If not, can disagreement be navigated?
- Future generation potential interest — do younger family members have realistic prospects of using the property?
- Family-meeting capacity — does the family have the relationships and communication channels to manage a multi-decade ongoing property holding?
Emotional variables
- What the property meant to the deceased parent — strong association with the family home of childhood? Recent investment? Reluctant ownership?
- What the property means to the heirs — childhood summers? Visited rarely? Never visited?
- Cultural continuity preferences — does maintaining a Greek property feel important for family identity?
Operational variables
- How far you live from the property and how often you realistically visit
- Your relationship with Greek bureaucracy — capable of engaging, or already exhausted
- Time horizon for the decision — months, years, or open-ended?
- Tolerance for property-management complexity from abroad
Four common archetypes and what tends to work
Archetype 1: Multi-sibling family, distant Greek connection, family-fallout risk
Profile: three or more siblings spread across Australia/USA/Canada. None have been to Greece in 10+ years. Parents passed; nobody has strong individual connection to the property. Some financial pressure on at least one sibling for their share.
Usually wins: Sell. The combination of distant connection, financial pressure, and multi-sibling coordination complexity makes long-term joint ownership a recipe for slow family friction. Selling promptly produces clean cash distribution and removes ongoing decision-making burden.
Common mistake: dragging the decision for years out of inertia. The property quietly deteriorates and the eventual sale realises less than the proper-timed sale would have.
Archetype 2: One or two heirs, one of whom plans eventual return to Greece
Profile: parents owned an Athens apartment. Two children, one in Australia, one considering eventual relocation to Greece in retirement (10-15 years out). Strong childhood connection. Family aligned on path.
Usually wins: Renovate, then hold with home-watch service. The relocating child eventually moves into the renovated property; the Australian child either accepts a different family asset as their share, or receives a partial cash buyout from the relocator. The renovation happens once, properly, with proper supervision.
Path B: rent long-term for 8-10 years, generating income while waiting for the relocation date, then transition to occupied use. Slightly more financially efficient; slightly more operationally complex.
Archetype 3: Affluent multi-property family, one Greek property among several
Profile: parents owned Greek apartment alongside US/Australian/UK property portfolio. Heirs have financial flexibility. No pressure to liquidate.
Usually wins: Renovate and STR rent or renovate and use for family vacations. The renovation cost is comfortable to absorb; the property becomes a maintained family asset that generates income while delivering personal use value. STR income covers all carrying costs and contributes incrementally to family cash flow.
Common mistake: under-renovating. The "we'll just freshen it up" budget of €20,000 produces a property that under-performs for both rental and personal use. Either do it properly (€60,000-€100,000+) or don't pretend.
Archetype 4: Single heir, strong personal connection, modest finances
Profile: only child, parents' Athens apartment is the major asset of the estate. Heir has emotional attachment but limited renovation capital.
Usually wins: Rent long-term as-is. The property generates modest income, the heir retains ownership and emotional connection, the building stays maintained because tenants notice problems. Renovation happens in years 5-7 funded partly from accumulated rental income. Heir can revisit "should I sell" decision in year 10 from a better-informed position.
The "hold empty" option in this archetype is usually a mistake — the carrying cost without rental offset compounds the heir's financial position negatively. Either rent or sell; don't carry empty.
The "hold empty" trap
The default-by-inertia path for many diaspora heirs is to hold the property empty under casual family-friend oversight for years. This is usually the worst-on-average option:
- The carrying cost (ENFIA, dues, utilities, insurance, basic maintenance) runs €3,000-€8,000/year with zero offsetting income
- The property quietly deteriorates because nobody is actually responsible for proactive maintenance
- Pest problems, damp, building issues accumulate
- The eventual sale price (because eventually a forcing function appears) is lower than the timely sale would have been
- Family relationships strain from the implicit "what are we going to do with this" question never quite resolving
If you're genuinely holding empty deliberately as part of a planned strategy (renovation planned for 18 months from now, sibling planning to relocate in 5 years), that's a different conversation. If you're holding empty because nobody got around to deciding, that's the trap.
The active alternatives — even at modest scale — outperform passive holding. Even a long-term rental at €600/month covers the carrying cost and prevents deterioration.
The decision-process recommendation
For diaspora families approaching this decision:
- Within 12 months of the inheritance, have a structured family meeting (video call works) with all heirs to discuss the four paths and their general preferences. Document the conversation
- Within 18 months, have the property formally appraised in current condition and (separately) appraised at renovated standard. Greek property professionals do both
- Within 24 months, model the financial picture under each path with realistic numbers (renovation cost, rental yield, ongoing carrying cost, eventual sale price)
- Within 30 months, make and document the decision. Even "we're going to hold for 5 more years and revisit" is a decision and should be deliberate
- Within 36 months, implement the decided path
The reason for the timeline: most families that don't reach a decision in the first three years end up making it by accident in the next ten — and the accidental decision is usually worse than the deliberate one would have been.
How home watch fits
For diaspora families working through this decision, our typical involvement:
- Pre-decision property assessment — current condition, renovation requirements, what's working and what's not
- Operational cost picture — what does "hold empty under proper service" actually cost annually for this specific property?
- Rental-market briefing — what does long-term and STR rental actually achieve here in 2026?
- Renovation scoping — engineer involvement, contractor estimates, realistic time and budget for renovation
- During the inter-decision period (typically 1-3 years), monthly home watch keeps the property properly maintained so it's still in good shape when the decision happens
- Post-decision implementation — handling sale preparation, renovation oversight, tenant find-and-manage, or pure home-watch depending on path chosen
For our members, the decision conversation is one of the most useful 60-minute calls in the relationship. We don't make the decision for you; we provide the operational data that lets you make the right one for your family.
Companion reading: first 7 days in Greece for inherited-property heirs, renovation handbook, selling Greek property, long-term landlord obligations.
That's exactly the period where structured operational data clarifies the right path. Worth a conversation. Talk to us →