Buying in Dakar from Paris, Milan or New York is not only possible — in 2026 it has become a relatively well-trodden path. But some steps still require rigour to turn a successful operation into a great one. This guide assembles what to anticipate, in order.
First: clarify the objective
A successful remote purchase starts with a simple question: what will this asset be used for? Three main cases:
- Mainly personal use — second home, frequent returns, extended family. Prioritise a mature address, a lively neighbourhood, and concierge services.
- Mainly rental — passive income goal. Prioritise a "universal" asset (well-laid-out 1- or 2-bedroom), a liquid neighbourhood, and professional management.
- Mixed use — the most common. Choose an asset compatible with furnished rental and seasonal occupancy.
Step 1: filter the market remotely
You can seriously filter 70% of the market without being on site: neighbourhood choice, typology, floor area, floor level, orientation, finishes. Modern tools — virtual tours, 3D plans, drone videos, video calls — suffice to quickly eliminate unqualified programmes. A common mistake is getting attached to one unit before comparing 3 to 5 programmes on the same basis.
Step 2: the physical visit (or delegated visit)
Ideally: a trip to Dakar to see 3-5 programmes in 2 days. If that's impossible, delegate the visit to a trusted person (family member, architect, independent real-estate advisor) with a precise checklist: site verification, true atmosphere, exposed materials, developers met.
Step 3: legal verifications
Three documents to systematically request:
- Land title, verified as free of any mortgage registration.
- Construction permit, current.
- Developer's legal status and track record, to assess delivery capability.
These verifications must go through a Senegalese notary. Don't accept signing a final act before a professional not mandated in Senegal.
Step 4: financing and transfers
Several configurations:
- Full cash contribution — most common for diaspora first-purchases below 500 million FCFA. Transfers go through a bank with clear documentation.
- Local bank loan — some Senegalese banks finance non-residents under conditions (often shorter terms, larger down payment).
- Loan in country of residence secured against an existing asset — possible for established patrimonial profiles.
In all cases, anticipate the investment declaration upfront (both Senegalese and country-of-residence sides). It conditions later repatriation of rents and resale proceeds.
Step 5: delivery
This is when presence is ideal, or delegation to an architect or independent inspector. Goal: list reserves, sign the delivery report, collect keys.
Step 6: management and operation
From delivery onwards, three actions:
- Subscribe to comprehensive home insurance.
- Set up property management (or concierge if mixed use).
- Organise recurring taxation: local filings, reporting in your country of residence.
Typical timeline: 4 to 6 months
- Month 1: define the need, shortlist 3-5 programmes.
- Month 2: visit (physical or delegated), legal verifications.
- Month 3: preliminary contract signing, reservation deposit.
- Months 4-5: notarial signing, first payment calls.
- Month 6+: construction monitoring through to delivery.
Classic diaspora traps
- Signing under family or friend pressure without filtering the developer.
- Transferring significant funds before notarial signing.
- Relying on informal communication (WhatsApp only) without written contracts.
- Forgetting to frame management from delivery — an empty asset quickly loses perceived value.
Marina Bay Dakar and the diaspora
The project was structured with the diaspora journey in mind: clear VEFA schedule, complete legal documentation, remote signing possible via power of attorney, turnkey rental-management option at delivery. Goal: make the purchase as straightforward as an investment in a mature market, while benefiting from Dakar's upside.
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