Land in Patagonia for Sale: Aysen Region
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Real Estate Market in Aysen Region
Average price per m² in Aysen Region: UF 28/m²
What to know before buying land in Aysen Region
Buying land in Aysen Region means doing more homework than buying a house: the visible stuff (boundaries, access, slope) and the invisible stuff (zoning, easements, water rights) matter equally. In the Aysen Region urban lots transact in UF while rural land is often priced in CLP or USD, with wider price dispersion. Before signing a promise-to-buy, pull the certificate of prior information (CIP) at the municipality, the approved survey, the title registration at the Conservador de Bienes Raices, and, if there is water on the property, the water rights registered with the DGA. For rural plots around Aysen Region, factor in winter access, distance from the Carretera Austral, and utility feasibility. This section covers the questions we hear most from foreign land buyers.
Can foreigners buy land in Aysen Region?
Yes. Chile allows foreign nationals to buy land on the same terms as citizens, with one key exception: the DL 1939 law restricts non-Chilean ownership in designated border zones. Most of the Aysen Region, including Aysen Region, sits outside those zones, but always confirm with a Chilean attorney because some rural parcels near the Argentine border trigger the rule. You will need a RUT (Chilean tax ID), obtainable with a passport, and either a Chilean bank account or a notarized, apostilled power of attorney so a local attorney can close on your behalf. Full steps, including RUT via consulate, are in our foreign-buyer guide.
See full guideIs land expensive in Aysen Region?
Compared to the US or Europe, land in Aysen is still cheap. Rural parcels of 0.5 to 5 hectares near Aysen Region range from USD 15,000 to USD 80,000 depending on access, water, and views. Larger fundos (20+ hectares) along the Carretera Austral corridor can exceed USD 200,000. Urban lots inside Coyhaique city limits are priced per square meter in UF and sit in the UF 3 to UF 12 range. The cheapest country to buy remote, forested, water-rich land at this latitude is arguably Chile. See our 2026 Patagonia land buying blog for current comps and case studies.
See full guideWhat due diligence should I do before closing?
Minimum checklist for a parcel in Aysen Region: (1) Certificate of current ownership from the Conservador. (2) Lien and restrictions certificate. (3) Municipal non-expropriation certificate. (4) Certificado de Informaciones Previas showing zoning and building conditions. (5) Updated topographic survey confirming boundaries. (6) Water rights certificate from the DGA if the property has springs, streams, or a well. (7) SAG resolution if rural subdivision applies. Skip any of these and you risk losing water access, being unable to build, or discovering encroachment later. Our parcela due diligence guide walks through each document with sample copies.
See full guideHow does the rural land market work in Patagonia?
Rural land in Aysen moves slower than urban real estate and is often sold off-market through word-of-mouth or local brokers in Aysen Region. Listings that do appear online are frequently overpriced or missing legal cleanups. Most rural transactions take 3 to 6 months from offer to escritura because title studies on old subdivisions uncover inheritance issues, unregistered easements, or missing water rights. Prices have risen roughly 40% over the last five years, but the market is thin: one buyer walking away can reset a listing. Our rural land market guide covers price trends, seasonality (Nov to Mar is peak), and how to source quality inventory.
See full guideWhat about water rights on the land?
In Chile water rights (derechos de aprovechamiento) are legally separate from the land. A parcel in Aysen Region with a stream running through it does not automatically include the right to use that water. Rights must be registered with the DGA (Direccion General de Aguas) and transferred in the same deed as the land, or in a separate escritura. Unregistered water is common in Aysen because historical rural parcels were subdivided before the 1981 Water Code. Regularization is possible but can take 2 to 4 years. For any agricultural, residential, or tourism project, demand a DGA certificate before signing. Full explanation in our 2026 land-buying blog.
See full guideWhat is the legal closing process for land?
Same four stages as a house purchase: promesa de compraventa with earnest money (typically 10%), title study by a Chilean attorney reviewing 10 years of ownership, escritura before a Chilean notary, and inscripcion at the Conservador de Bienes Raices. For land in Aysen Region, the title study often reveals more issues than a house (inheritance chains, unregistered subdivisions, missing water rights), so budget 30 to 60 days for this phase. Closing costs run 2% to 4% of price. If you are buying remotely, a Chilean attorney with a notarized, apostilled power of attorney can handle all signings. Full timeline in our legal process guide.
See full guideRelated reading
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Trusted brokers in this category
Anfruns Propiedades
Specialists in rural land, farms, and parcels across the Aysen Region, focused on sustainable development and conservation in Chilean Patagonia.
Campos Patagonia
Real estate brokerage and property management focused on the Aysén Region and the Carretera Austral: parcelas, farms and conservation properties, based in Coyhaique.
Corretajes Martin Pescador
Real estate brokerage in Coyhaique and the Aysen Region, focused on houses, parcelas and land along the Carretera Austral.
About lots in Aysen Region
Land in Aysen Patagonia splits into three categories: urban lots (inside municipal limits with utilities), rural parcels under DL 3.516 (5,000 m2 minimum), and larger properties with lakefront or valley-floor positions. A serviced 500 m2 urban lot in Coyhaique starts at UF 1,200. A 5,000 m2 lakefront site on Lago General Carrera runs UF 3,000 to UF 15,000 depending on water frontage, road access and view. Active submarkets: Valle Simpson, Camino Teniente Vidal, Rio Ibanez, Puerto Rio Tranquilo, Bahia Mansa (Chile Chico), and the Cochrane-Caleta Tortel corridor. Foreign buyer notes: the 10 km strip along the Argentine border carries ownership restrictions under DL 1.939, which affects parts of the eastern region (Chile Chico, Cochrane, parts of Rio Ibanez). Confirm with a local notary before signing a promesa.