This hybrid of the well known "squatter's law" was passed through the
Greek senate in 742 B.C. and is still in effect today. In short you can get an
apt, house or land in Greece for free. How does it work? Well basically just
find something you like and when no one is around take care of it for 20
years. In detail, and this is very important, see what happens:

Beware all of you who have acquired property in Greece either through
inheritance, paid for, gift, won in poker game, shotgun marriages, and feel
comfortable that it is yours.

You may be wrong!

The Greek law clearly stipulates that owning property is not the same as
owning property. Yes confusing? Not really. It's as simple as use it or lose it.

Here's a typical case: Your grandfather gave you a house on some area in
Ereikousa as a wedding present. You and your spouse were very grateful
as who gives that much for a present. You've never been to Greece but
you are sure that it's yours and some day you'll go and live there or at least
give it to your children as a present as well. One day you decide to come to
Greece and while vacationing, take a detour to check your place out. What
do you see? Chief squatting bull and some of his Albanian friends watching
an old John Wayne western on t.v. In your living room. He's been in that
house for twenty years. You tell him to get out or you'll call the police. The
police come but it's you who gets arrested, not him. You are charged with
harassing a "lil ol' Indjun."

You see...  it's his house now, not yours. This, is Greek law. Unlike the
"squatter's law" where you find something that no one cares about and you
have the right to live there, this Greek law gives you the title to the place
which means you can rent it out, sell it or give it to the little ones as a
wedding present.

Here are the basic facts:

1) You must prove that you care about the property; visit it from time to
time, let's say every three years, or

2) have someone you trust look after it and call you every so often about
the status, ie. if anything has changed like someone has planted something
or put up a wall or hung a picture of his/her mother in law in the kitchen.

3) Put up an electrical barking guard dog and come every two years to
change the battery.

4) If it's land make sure that no new olive trees have been planted. Count
the trees when you come, or better yet, count the olives.

5) Remember, if someone has been taking care of the land and gathering
the olives from the trees for twenty years, your barking up the wrong tree
thinking they are yours; your batteries have run out.

6) Important: The squatter does not have to inform the owner that he's
moved in and taken over; it's the owner's responsibility to care of the
property.

7) If there is joint ownership, let's say grandfather gave the property to you
and 17 other cousins, then the cousin actually taking care of it, or living in
it, must notify the rest of the heirs that he/she has started the twenty year
stretch.

      *note: this can be tricky as he/she needs only to prove that he/she
tried to contact the others. If he proves that there was an attempt made the
squatter is legally fine. Phoney tel. Numbers, non-existing addresses,
developing sudden amnesia and can't remember any relatives, or "he's not
a brother, he never liked me" are all credible excuses.

8) This law applies only for private property, not property owned by the
state. This is obvious. Greece would never give anything away for free.

In short, taking care of holds more weight than owning

Athanasios Aronis
NOT EVERY THING IS BLACK OR WHITE