Financing a Property Purchase in Mauritius as a Foreign Buyer
A clear overview about financing a property purchase in Mauritius as a foreign buyer, including deposits, bank checks, currency rules and local loan planning.

Financing a property purchase in Mauritius as a foreign buyer is not only about securing a mortgage. It also means understanding how your funds will be transferred, how the bank will assess your profile, which acquisition route applies, and how payment rules affect the structure of the transaction. The right preparation can make the process smoother and help avoid delays once a property has been reserved.
For a broader view of the acquisition framework, the Foreigner’s Guide to Property Acquisition in Mauritius is a useful starting point before looking more closely at financing.
Start with your full purchase budget
Before comparing properties, foreign buyers should define the full amount they can mobilise. The property price is only one part of the budget. Financing should also take into account acquisition costs, bank charges, insurance, professional fees, moving costs, furniture, and any cash reserve needed after completion.
A common mistake is to look only at the loan amount a bank may offer. In practice, the buyer should first ask a wider question: how much can be paid comfortably, including the buyer’s own funds, the expected loan, and the timing of each payment?
This is especially important for off-plan or staged-payment purchases, where instalments may be linked to construction milestones. A buyer who relies on financing should understand when the bank will release funds and whether the project structure allows enough time for approval, valuation, documentation and disbursement.
Can foreign buyers get a home loan in Mauritius?
Yes, foreign buyers may apply for home loan financing in Mauritius, but approval is not automatic. Local banks assess each file according to their lending criteria, the buyer’s income, liabilities, repayment capacity, source of funds, credit profile, property value and the legal structure of the purchase.
For a foreign buyer, the bank may also look at the country of residence, currency of income, existing banking relationship, supporting documents and whether the property falls within an approved route for non-citizen acquisition. The bank’s approval and the property acquisition approval are separate points. Both need to be aligned before the buyer commits too far into the process.
This is why financing should be discussed early. A buyer who needs a loan should ideally obtain an initial indication from the bank before signing binding documents or transferring large sums.
For the wider sequence of the transaction, see Allys’ article on the property buying process in Mauritius for foreign buyers.
The buyer’s own contribution still matters
Even when a bank is willing to finance part of the purchase, foreign buyers should expect to contribute a meaningful amount from their own funds. The exact contribution depends on the bank, the buyer’s profile, the property type, the acquisition route and the value of the transaction.
This own contribution is not only useful for the deposit. It may also be needed to cover:
reservation or preliminary agreement payments;
acquisition costs and professional fees;
registration duty and other transaction costs;
exchange-rate movements between currencies;
valuation, insurance or bank-related costs;
furniture, equipment or practical move-in expenses.
The safest approach is to separate the purchase price from the full cash requirement. A property that looks affordable on paper may become more difficult if the buyer has not allowed enough liquidity for taxes, fees, exchange movements and timing gaps between instalments.
Currency and payment rules must be checked early
For foreign buyers, financing in Mauritius is closely linked to currency and payment rules. Since the December 2024 amendments, certain new acquisitions under IRS, RES, IHS, PDS and Smart City Scheme structures require funds to be transferred to Mauritius from abroad in hard convertible foreign currency, with 85% of the purchase price paid in Mauritian rupees and the remaining 15% paid either in Mauritian rupees or in hard convertible foreign currency.
For higher-value transactions under the relevant scheme rules, local loan financing also needs careful review. Where the property price exceeds USD 750,000, the first USD 750,000, or its equivalent in hard convertible foreign currency, must be transferred to Mauritius and paid in Mauritian rupees to the promoter. A loan for the remaining amount may then be contracted with a bank in Mauritius, with repayment made in hard convertible foreign currency.
This point can materially affect financing strategy. A foreign buyer should not assume that a local bank loan can cover the same portion of every property purchase. The rule, route, property type, payment schedule and timing should be checked with the bank, notary and relevant professionals before commitment.
If you are comparing scheme-based acquisitions, Allys’ guide to buying under IRS, RES and PDS schemes in Mauritius explains the broader structure.
Documents usually needed for a financing file
Banks may request additional documents depending on the buyer’s profile, but foreign buyers should prepare their financing file early. A strong file usually gives the bank a clearer view of identity, income, commitments, property details and source of funds.
Useful documents may include:
passport and proof of address;
recent bank statements;
salary slips, tax returns or financial statements;
proof of employment, business activity or other income;
existing loan and liability details;
credit report or equivalent document, where requested;
draft title deed, reservation agreement or seller’s contract;
property details, site plan or project documentation;
source-of-funds evidence and bank references.
The bank may ask for originals, certified documents or further supporting information. For self-employed buyers, entrepreneurs or buyers with income in several countries, preparation can take longer because the bank may need a clearer view of recurring income and financial stability.
Financing should match the property route
Not every property available in Mauritius is open to foreign buyers in the same way. Financing should therefore be assessed together with the acquisition route. A PDS residence, a Smart City unit, a qualifying G+2 apartment, an IHS unit and a resale property can raise different practical questions.
The buyer should confirm three points before relying on a financing plan:
whether the property can legally be acquired by a non-citizen;
whether the bank is comfortable financing that specific type of property;
whether the payment schedule works with the expected bank timeline.
This is particularly important when buying off-plan, because payment calls may arise before the final deed is signed. The buyer should understand whether each tranche will be funded from personal funds or from the loan, and what the bank will require before each release.
Financing is therefore part of due diligence. It should not be treated as a separate administrative step that comes after the property choice.
Costs and timing can affect affordability
A property can be financeable but still not comfortable once timing and total cost are included. Foreign buyers should consider not only the bank repayment but also the cash needed before completion and the cost of owning the property afterwards.
This includes monthly repayments, insurance, syndic or estate charges, maintenance, utilities, property management if the buyer lives abroad, and any tax or compliance obligations linked to rental use. If the property will be rented, expected income should be assessed carefully and should not be treated as guaranteed.
Transaction timing also matters. From 1 July 2026, certain covered transfers to non-citizens are subject to revised registration duty and land transfer tax treatment. Financing discussions should therefore include not only the purchase price but also the likely registration date and full acquisition cost. For more context, see the Allys article on Mauritius Budget 2025 for foreign buyers.
Frequently asked Questions
Can a foreign buyer get a mortgage in Mauritius?
Yes, foreign buyers may apply for home loan financing with Mauritian banks. Approval depends on the bank’s assessment of the buyer, the property and the transaction structure.
Can the full property price be financed by a local bank?
Foreign buyers should not assume that the full price can be financed. The required own contribution depends on the bank, the buyer’s profile and the applicable property rules.
Do foreign buyers have to transfer funds from abroad?
For certain scheme-based acquisitions, funds must be transferred to Mauritius from abroad in hard convertible foreign currency. The exact treatment should be confirmed according to the property route.
What documents will the bank request?
Banks usually request identity documents, proof of address, income evidence, bank statements, property documents and source-of-funds information. Additional documents may be required depending on the buyer’s country of residence and financial profile.
Should financing be arranged before choosing a property?
It is better to discuss financing before making a firm commitment. This helps the buyer understand affordability, timing, cash contribution and whether the chosen property can be financed.
Financing your Mauritius purchase with clarity
A well-structured financing plan gives foreign buyers greater confidence before purchasing property in Mauritius. The key is to look beyond the mortgage itself and review the full budget, currency rules, bank requirements, payment schedule and acquisition route together.
When these elements are prepared early, the purchase becomes easier to manage and the buyer can focus on choosing a property that fits their lifestyle, investment horizon and long-term plans.
Planning a financed property purchase in Mauritius?
Allys can help you identify suitable properties and understand which practical questions to raise before moving forward.
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Sources
Economic Development Board, Amendments to IRS/ RES/ IHS/ PDS and SCS Regulations
Economic Development Board, FAQ Amendments to Property Regulations
The information contained in this article is provided for general guidance only and reflects the situation at the time of publication. Financing conditions, interest rates, bank criteria, currency rules, payment requirements, property eligibility, tax treatment and acquisition procedures may change without notice. Foreign buyers should verify all important information with their bank, notary, financial adviser and the relevant Mauritian authorities before making any purchase or financing decision.

