Draft of new Developer Act
In December 2019, the new government included in its legislative agenda the amendment
to the so-called Developer Act – the informal name under which the Act of 16 September
2011 on the protection of the rights of buyers of apartments and single-family houses is
widely known – that the previous cabinet had been working on. The draft legislation, which
by now has taken the form of an entirely new law, meant to repeal and replace, rather than
merely amend, the existing one, introduces some very important changes from the point
of view of the property development sector. Entitled “Act on the protection of the rights
of buyers of apartments and single-family houses and on the Developer Guarantee Fund”
(and referred to hereinafter as the “New Developer Act”), it is expected to be approved by
the Council of Ministers in the first quarter of 2020.1
Current law deemed insufficient
The impulse to amend the Developer Act arose from the findings of a review that the
Office of Competition and Consumer Protection (UOKiK) carried out two years after
its enactment.2 The review concluded that the protection that the Act affords home
buyers should be made more effective.
Increased protection of home buyers’ money
The most important changes that the new Developer Act will bring concern protection
of the money that buyers pay developers for homes that are under construction, upon
signing the developer agreement.
Under existing law, developers are required to use one of several means of protecting this
money: a closed escrow account; an open escrow account with additional security in the form
of a bank- or insurance guarantee; or an open escrow account without additional security.
In practice, developers tend to use the last option. But this increases the risk that the
buyer will lose their money in the event of the developer’s bankruptcy.
To forestall that, the new law introduces additional mechanisms aimed at protecting
home buyers’ money. In the most important change, developers will be required to
pay into a Developer Guarantee Fund (“the Fund”), whose resources will be used to
compensate the customers of bankrupt developers. Contributions to the Fund will
depend on the amounts paid by customers into escrow, and will be expressed as
percentages. A separate regulation will lay down the rates of contributions to the Fund.
The new Developer Act also introduces important changes and additional provisions pertaining
e.g. to the way that banks manage escrow accounts; banks’ audit powers; or the contents of
the developer agreement. (With respect to the latter, the developer will be required to obtain
the bank’s consent for the establishment of the right of separate, unencumbered ownership
of the apartment; and will have to include more details in the information prospectus). It also
introduces the concept of reservation agreement for the first time.
1. Draft Act amending the Act on the protection of the rights of buyers of apartments and single-family houses, access:
https://legislacja.rcl.gov.pl/projekt/12312251/katalog/12513237#12513237,,
2. T he results of the review were presented in Information from the Council of Ministers on the effects of
the functioning of the Act of 16 September 2011 on the protection of the rights of buyers of apartments
and single-family houses (Journal of Laws no. 232, item 1377), together with proposed changes, access:
http://orka.sejm.gov.pl/Druki7ka.nsf/0/C7076B19DA40D2A7C1257CEE002E19BE/%24File/2454.pdf.
Jacek Choromański, Lawyer
Miller, Canfield, W. Babicki, A. Chełchowski i Wspólnicy Sp.k.