How Most Foreign Buyers Pay
In practice Montenegro is a cash market: the large majority of foreign purchases are completed without a mortgage. Local financing for non-residents is possible but limited, so the safe approach is to plan your budget on a cash basis and treat any bank loan as a bonus, not a given.
The three routes foreign buyers use, in rough order of how common they are:
1. Cash purchase — by far the most common for foreign buyers
2. Home equity from abroad — refinancing property in your home country to fund the purchase outright
3. Montenegrin bank mortgage — possible for some, but the hardest path for non-residents
Releasing Equity from Abroad
Many buyers refinance against existing property in the UK, Germany, or elsewhere and bring the funds in as cash. This:
- Avoids Montenegrin lending requirements entirely
- Typically offers lower interest rates than a local loan
- Enables faster completion
Montenegrin Bank Mortgages (If You Qualify)
A handful of Montenegrin banks will lend to foreigners, but expect stricter terms than residents get — not every bank offers it, approval is slower, and you will need more documentation. Confirm it with the bank early; do not rely on it.
Banks that have lent to foreign buyers:
- Erste Bank Montenegro — generally the most foreigner-friendly
- CKB (Crnogorska Komercijalna Banka)
- Addiko Bank
- Hipotekarna Banka
Typical terms when a non-resident does qualify:
- Maximum LTV: 50–70% (lower than for residents — expect a large deposit)
- Interest rate: 4–7% EUR
- Term: up to 20–25 years
- Requirement: Montenegrin bank account + proof of income
Documentation you will be asked for:
- Valid passport
- Proof of income (3–6 months bank statements + employment/business docs)
- Property valuation (arranged by the bank)
- Preliminary purchase contract
- Proof of own funds for the deposit
Developer Finance
Some developers (particularly in Porto Montenegro and Lustica Bay) offer staged payment plans:
- 30% on contract
- 30% during construction
- 40% on completion
This effectively provides short-term financing without a bank, though it is tied to a specific development.
Bottom Line
Budget as if you are paying cash. If a Montenegrin mortgage or developer plan comes through, treat it as a useful extra — but do not make your purchase depend on financing that may not be approved.