How do I resell a pre-selling unit (assignment of rights)?
+If you bought a pre-selling unit and want to sell before turnover, you can't yet sell the property itself — the title isn't in your name. Instead, you sell your contractual rights to the unit through an Assignment of Rights.
How it works:
- Find a buyer who wants to assume your CTS at the agreed assignment price (often original price + your accumulated profit).
- Get developer consent. Most CTS contracts require the developer to approve the new buyer. The developer will run their own credit and document checks.
- Sign a notarized Deed of Assignment of Rights with the new buyer.
- The new buyer pays you for your equity (what you've paid in) plus any agreed-upon premium for the appreciation.
- The developer transfers the CTS into the new buyer's name. The new buyer assumes all remaining payments.
- Pay applicable taxes. Your profit (sale price minus your basis) is subject to income tax. Some assignments are also subject to DST.
Watch out for:
- Developer assignment fees. Many developers charge an assignment processing fee (1–3% of the contract price).
- Lock-in periods. Some developers prohibit assignments during the first year, or require minimum payment thresholds.
- Tax exposure. If you flip multiple units, the BIR may classify you as a dealer in real estate, subjecting profits to ordinary income tax (up to 35%) and 12% VAT — not the 6% CGT.