How to verify if a developer is legitimate

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Before paying any reservation fee, verify the developer is legitimate, financially stable, and has a track record of delivery. The verification checklist:

1. License to Sell (LTS) verification. Every legitimate pre-selling project must have a current LTS from DHSUD. Ask the developer for a copy and verify directly with DHSUD. Selling without an LTS is a criminal violation of PD 957.

2. PRC license of agents and brokers. Anyone soliciting or selling Philippine real estate must be a PRC-licensed real estate broker, salesperson, or consultant under RA 9646. Ask for the PRC ID and DHSUD accreditation, and verify on the PRC website.

3. SEC registration. The developer must be a duly registered corporation. Search the SEC iView portal for the company's registration status and corporate filings.

4. Track record of completed projects. Ask for a list of all projects the developer has launched. Visit (or virtually inspect) at least 2–3 completed projects. Check:

  • Did they deliver on time?
  • Did the finished units match the marketing materials?
  • Are the buildings well-maintained today?
  • Are unit owners satisfied? (Search owner Facebook groups)

5. Financial stability. For larger purchases, look at:

  • Publicly available financial statements (SEC filings)
  • Backing parent company (if subsidiary) and its track record
  • News mentions — bankruptcy filings, lawsuits, criminal cases against officers

6. DHSUD complaint history. Search the DHSUD website and Google for “[developer name] complaint” or “[project name] DHSUD.” Pattern of complaints is a strong negative signal.

7. Online community sentiment. Check Facebook groups dedicated to:

  • The specific project (often called “[Project Name] Owners” or similar)
  • The developer (e.g., “Ayala Land Buyers,” “DMCI Owners”)
  • Philippine real estate buyer communities

Real owners share unfiltered experiences. Patterns matter more than individual complaints.

8. Physical office and showroom. A legitimate developer has a real office, real showroom, and trained staff. Be very cautious of “developers” who only meet at coffee shops or pop-up events without a permanent presence.

Red flag patterns: Brand-new developer with no completed projects asking for high reservation fees; developer that won't show their LTS; pressure tactics to reserve immediately; promises of returns or guaranteed appreciation; cash-only payment requirements.

What to check before signing a Contract to Sell

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The Contract to Sell (CTS) is the legally binding document that defines your rights, obligations, and remedies. Before signing, verify these items:

1. Property identification. The CTS must clearly identify:

  • Project name, building, floor, unit number
  • Floor area in square meters (gross and net if applicable)
  • Specific parking slot numbers (if included)
  • Reference to the Master Deed and Declaration of Restrictions

2. Total Contract Price (TCP). Check that the TCP matches the computation sheet you were given. Verify:

  • Base price per square meter
  • Add-ons (parking, balcony, premium, view loadings)
  • Miscellaneous fees and association membership
  • VAT (if applicable; check VAT-exempt threshold)
  • Whether utilities deposit / Meralco connection / water connection are included

3. Payment schedule. The CTS should specify:

  • Reservation fee (and that it credits to TCP)
  • Down payment / equity schedule with specific monthly amounts and due dates
  • Balloon payments or milestone payments
  • Balance financing options at turnover
  • Penalty rate for late payments

4. Turnover specifications. Get the technical specifications attached to the CTS:

  • What's included: tiles, kitchen counter, range hood, aircon, water heater, etc.
  • Brand and model of major fixtures
  • Whether the unit is “bare,” “semi-furnished,” or “fully fitted”
  • Specific finish materials

5. Default and cancellation provisions. The CTS must reflect the Maceda Law:

  • 60-day grace period if you've paid less than 2 years
  • Cash Surrender Value formula if you've paid 2+ years
  • Right to assign or sell rights to another buyer
  • Notice requirements before cancellation (notarial act)

Any clause that waives or reduces these rights is void under Maceda Law.

6. Title transfer commitment. The CTS should commit to:

  • Delivery of clean title in your name within a specified period after full payment
  • Developer's responsibility for the master title and individual title issuance
  • Specific timeline (PD 957 requires reasonable time)

7. Force majeure and delay clauses. Read these carefully:

  • What counts as force majeure?
  • What's the consequence if turnover is delayed?
  • Are you entitled to a refund or penalty for excessive delays?

Strong recommendation: Pay a Philippine lawyer ₱3,000–₱10,000 to review the CTS before you sign. A 2-hour legal review can save you years of regret. Ask your broker to recommend independent counsel (not the developer's lawyer).

Red flags in pre-selling contracts

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Some clauses are designed to limit your rights or shift risk to you. These are the most common red flags in Philippine pre-selling Contracts to Sell:

1. Maceda Law waiver clauses. Any clause that says you waive your right to grace periods, cash surrender value, or assignment of rights is void by law (Section 7 of RA 6552). The presence of such a clause suggests the developer is testing buyer awareness.

2. Vague or absent turnover date. The CTS must specify a target turnover or a clear formula for determining it. “Estimated turnover subject to construction progress” with no fixed date is a red flag — you have no enforceable timeline.

3. Open-ended specification changes. Watch for clauses like “the developer reserves the right to substitute materials of equal or greater value at its sole discretion.” This allows downgrades. Specifications should be locked or require buyer consent for material changes.

4. Limited or no recourse for delays. If the contract caps the developer's liability for delays at minimal amounts (e.g., ₱1,000/day after 12 months), you have no real remedy for serious delays. PD 957 provides stronger remedies, but contract clauses can attempt to limit them.

5. Mandatory third-party services. Clauses requiring you to use a specific lawyer, title transfer service, or property manager — often controlled by the developer — can extract additional fees.

6. Excessive penalty interest on late payments. Standard is 1–2% per month. Anything above 3% per month is predatory.

7. Forfeiture of all payments on default. Some contracts state “all payments are forfeited as liquidated damages” on cancellation. This is unenforceable beyond Maceda Law limits, but indicates aggressive developer posture.

8. Auto-amendment provisions. Clauses allowing the developer to amend the CTS “upon notice to the buyer” without buyer consent should be removed.

9. Mortgage of the property without disclosure. PD 957 requires the developer to disclose any mortgage on the property and to release the mortgage on each unit upon full payment. Vague mortgage clauses are a red flag.

10. Unclear assignment of rights provisions. If the CTS doesn't explicitly allow assignment, or imposes unreasonable restrictions or fees, your exit options are limited.

11. Arbitration in a distant venue. Some contracts require disputes to be resolved through arbitration in a specific city far from the property — designed to make litigation impractical for the buyer.

12. Unspecified miscellaneous fees. The CTS should itemize every fee. “Other fees as may be determined by the developer” is a blank check.

What to do: Ask the developer to remove or revise these clauses. A reputable developer will negotiate; a problematic one will refuse. The refusal itself is information.

How to check if a property has a clean title

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A “clean title” means the property has clear, undisputed ownership free of liens, encumbrances, or other claims. For resale (RFO) properties, title verification is essential.

1. Get a Certified True Copy of the Title. Request from the seller, then verify directly with the Registry of Deeds (RD) where the property is registered. The CTC must be recent (within the last 30 days).

2. Check the title's annotations. The back of the title (or its dorsal page) lists all encumbrances. Look for:

  • Mortgages — bank mortgages, real estate mortgages, deed of mortgage
  • Liens — tax liens, judgment liens
  • Lis pendens — pending court cases involving the property
  • Notice of adverse claim — someone is asserting a competing ownership claim
  • Right-of-way easements — especially for land or house-and-lot
  • Tax declaration of improvements — should match the structures on the property

A clean title typically has zero or minimal annotations — or only annotations for items that will be cancelled at closing (e.g., a mortgage being paid off with sale proceeds).

3. Verify the seller's identity. The seller must match the registered owner on the title exactly. If there's a discrepancy, ask:

  • Is the seller signing through a Special Power of Attorney? (verify SPA validity)
  • Has there been a name change (marriage, court order)?
  • Is the property part of conjugal property requiring spouse signature?
  • Is this an estate sale requiring extrajudicial settlement and BIR clearance?

4. Real Property Tax (RPT) verification. Get a current Real Property Tax Clearance from the LGU Treasurer. Unpaid RPT is a lien on the property and must be settled before transfer.

5. Check for zoning compliance. Verify the property's zoning classification at the LGU. A residential use on commercial-zoned land (or vice versa) creates legal exposure.

6. For condominiums, verify with the Condominium Corporation.

  • Is the seller's HOA / condo dues account current?
  • Are there pending special assessments?
  • Are there any condominium corporation liens?

7. Hire a lawyer or title researcher for higher-value properties. A full title trace (going back 20–30 years) can uncover historical defects that modern annotations don't show. For properties above ₱5M, this is worth the investment (typically ₱10,000–₱30,000).

Red flags: Reconstituted titles (sometimes fraudulent), titles with multiple recent transfers in short succession (can indicate flipping or fraud), titles with handwritten annotations or unclear stamps, sellers who refuse to provide a CTC.

Questions to ask your broker before buying

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A good broker should welcome these questions. A broker who deflects, gives vague answers, or pressures you to skip them is a red flag.

About the broker themselves:

  • What's your PRC license number and DHSUD accreditation?
  • How long have you been in real estate?
  • How many transactions have you closed in the past 12 months?
  • Are you exclusive to this developer, or developer-agnostic?
  • Will you represent me in negotiations, or are you the developer's agent?

About the developer:

  • How many projects has the developer completed? Can I visit one?
  • What's their on-time delivery rate?
  • Have they had any DHSUD complaints? Lawsuits?
  • What's their parent company / corporate structure?
  • Can I see their License to Sell for this project?

About the project:

  • What's the projected turnover date? What contractual remedy do I have if it's delayed?
  • What's the construction progress today? Can I see verifiable photos?
  • Is this project mortgaged to a bank? If yes, how is the mortgage released on my unit?
  • Who's the construction contractor? Their track record?
  • How many units are sold so far in this tower / phase?

About my specific unit:

  • Can I see the actual floor plan, not just marketing renders?
  • What are the unit's orientation, view, and floor exposure?
  • What are the surrounding units (corner, end-unit, neighbors)?
  • Will any planned future construction obstruct my view?
  • What's the gross vs. net floor area?

About price and payment:

  • What's the total contract price including all fees?
  • Are there miscellaneous fees beyond the listed price?
  • What's the payment schedule? Reservation, equity, balance?
  • What financing options will be available at turnover?
  • Are there milestone price increases I can lock in by reserving now?

About my exit options:

  • What if I can't continue paying? (Maceda Law specifics)
  • What are the assignment / pre-selling resale rules?
  • What's the developer's assignment fee?
  • How long does title transfer take after full payment?

The single most diagnostic question: “What's the worst-case scenario, and what's my recourse?” A broker who says “there is no worst-case” is selling, not advising. A broker who walks you through realistic risks is genuinely representing you.

How to file a complaint against a developer (DHSUD)

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If a developer has materially violated PD 957, the Maceda Law, or your CTS, you can file a formal complaint with DHSUD (the regulator that succeeded HLURB in 2019).

Common grounds for a DHSUD complaint:

  • Project delays beyond contractual turnover date
  • Failure to deliver promised amenities (pool, gym, gardens, security)
  • Construction defects not corrected after written notice
  • Refusal to issue title after full payment
  • Unauthorized changes to the unit, project, or master plan
  • Improper cancellation of CTS (without notarial notice or in violation of Maceda)
  • Refund disputes
  • Mortgage non-disclosure or inability to release mortgage on your unit
  • Selling without a valid License to Sell

Step-by-step filing process:

  1. Send a written demand letter first. By registered mail or email with read receipt, formally notify the developer of the violation and demand specific action within a reasonable timeframe (typically 15–30 days). Many disputes resolve at this stage. The demand letter also strengthens your DHSUD case.
  2. Gather complete documentation.
    • Contract to Sell and any addenda
    • Reservation Agreement and Buyer Information Sheet
    • Official receipts for all payments
    • All written and email correspondence
    • Marketing brochures and computation sheets
    • Photos / video evidence of defects or construction status
    • Your demand letter and the developer's response (or non-response)
  3. Prepare a Verified Complaint. A formal pleading stating the facts, the violations of law, and the relief you're seeking (refund, specific performance, damages, etc.). A lawyer can draft this for ₱10,000–₱30,000.
  4. File at the DHSUD Regional Office with jurisdiction over where the project is located (not where you live).
  5. Pay the filing fee. Varies by case value, typically a few hundred to a few thousand pesos.
  6. Attend mandatory mediation. Most cases are first sent to mediation. Many settle here.
  7. If mediation fails, the case proceeds to Adjudication. The DHSUD Adjudication Board hears evidence from both sides and issues a decision.
  8. Appeals. Decisions can be appealed within DHSUD, then to the Office of the President, then to the Court of Appeals.

Realistic timelines: Mediation: 1–3 months. Adjudication: 6–18 months. Full appeals process: 2–5 years. Most cases settle in mediation or early adjudication once the developer realizes the buyer is serious.

Legal counsel. You can represent yourself in DHSUD proceedings, but for cases involving significant amounts (₱500,000+), a lawyer is strongly recommended. Attorney's fees typically run 10–20% of the recovered amount, plus filing costs.

Contact and forms: dhsud.gov.ph

Tip: If you're part of a group of buyers all affected by the same developer issue, file a collective complaint. Group cases get more attention and have stronger leverage in negotiation. Many developer issues are systemic, not individual.

Still have questions?

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