Why We Exist

There's a moment in every collective real estate project when the developer hands over the keys — and participants suddenly realize they're no longer investors. They're owners. And nobody prepared them for that.

The moment of transition from investor to property owner in Argentina
The Problem We Solve

What happens when a collective project ends?

In Argentina, collective real estate investment projects — known as fideicomisos al costo, emprendimientos colectivos, or similar structures — bring together multiple investors to fund a development. When the building is complete, each participant receives a unit.

At that point, the developer's obligation is fulfilled. The project is done. But for the participants, a new and unfamiliar phase begins: they are now co-owners of a building operating under Argentina's horizontal property framework.

Most of them have no experience with this. They never managed a property. They don't know what expensas are or how they're calculated. They've never attended a consortium assembly. They don't know how to evaluate an administrator, what their legal rights are, or what taxes apply to their new situation.

Why does this gap exist?

The gap exists because the investment phase and the ownership phase are structurally separate. Developers focus on construction and delivery. Real estate agents focus on transactions. Administrators focus on building management. Tax advisors focus on fiscal compliance.

None of these professionals have a reason to educate the new owner about the full picture — what all of these pieces mean together, how they interact, and what the new owner needs to understand to make informed decisions.

That's the gap Doxlino fills. Not by replacing any of those professionals, but by giving new owners the foundational knowledge they need to work with them effectively.

What Doxlino is — and isn't

We are an educational program. Our content is practical, structured, and specific to the Argentine context. We explain how horizontal property works, what expensas are, how to evaluate an administrator, and what the tax implications of ownership are.

We are not a building administrator. We are not a legal advisor. We are not a tax consultant. We do not manage properties, represent clients in legal proceedings, or provide personalized fiscal recommendations.

Our role is to give you the knowledge to understand your situation — and to work more effectively with the professionals who handle the operational and legal aspects of your property.

Education First

Every module is designed to give you practical understanding, not just information.

Argentina-Specific

Grounded in local law, local market realities, and the specific dynamics of collective projects.

Honest Scope

Clear about what we cover and what falls outside our educational role.

Full Journey

From deed registration to daily administration to eventual sale — the complete ownership arc.

Next Step

See what the program covers

Explore the six modules of the transition program — from escrituración to selling your unit.