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Vehicle care for inherited Greek cars.

The Greek car that came with the property. KTEO, insurance, road tax (τέλη κυκλοφορίας), plate ownership transfer, the deregistration option, and what it actually costs to keep a Greek car alive while you're abroad.

Among the things diaspora heirs inherit alongside the Greek apartment is, often, the parent's car. Sometimes it's a 2008 Toyota Yaris with 80,000 km, used twice a week for the laiki and the church. Sometimes it's a 2015 Volkswagen Golf, parked in the building garage for the last 4 years. Sometimes it's a battered 1998 Fiat Punto that has more sentimental value than market value.

The question of what to do with it is non-trivial. Greek vehicle ownership comes with annual KTEO inspections, mandatory insurance, road tax, parking realities, and the inheritance-side paperwork to bring the vehicle formally into your name. This article walks through the realistic picture for diaspora heirs in 2026.

The four paths

For an inherited Greek vehicle, the practical paths are:

The right path depends on usage intention, vehicle value, family availability to drive it, and the carrying cost vs benefit calculation.

The inheritance transfer process

Before doing anything else, the vehicle needs to be formally transferred from the deceased's name to the heirs' names. Process:

  1. Vehicle title document (άδεια κυκλοφορίας) located
  2. Certificate of heirs (κληρονομητήριο) obtained alongside the property inheritance process
  3. Vehicle valuation — usually done by reference to standard depreciation tables; not contested in most diaspora cases
  4. Inheritance tax filing (which includes the vehicle alongside the property)
  5. Application to the Ministry of Transport (or its delegated district office) for plate transfer
  6. New άδεια κυκλοφορίας issued in heir's name

Cost: typically €100-€300 in administrative fees plus your lawyer's time (often bundled with the property inheritance). Timeline: usually 60-90 days once inheritance certificate is in hand.

For multi-heir situations, the vehicle can be transferred to one heir specifically (with the others' agreement) — this is the simplest structure for keeping the vehicle operational.

Annual obligations for an operational Greek vehicle

KTEO (Greek MOT)

Mandatory technical inspection. Frequency:

Cost: €40-€80 for the inspection. Lapsed KTEO triggers fines (€150-€400) and accumulates over time. KTEO is needed to renew insurance and road tax.

Insurance (ασφάλεια)

Mandatory third-party-liability minimum, optional extensions for fire, theft, collision, broader cover. Annual cost varies enormously:

Important: lapsing insurance even briefly is illegal and triggers significant penalties. Worse, an uninsured vehicle moved (even pushed) on a public road creates liability that the heir owns.

Road tax (τέλη κυκλοφορίας)

Annual tax based on engine cubic capacity and CO2 emissions. Typical 2026 figures:

Payable by 31 December for the following year. Available to pay through your accountant via TaxisNet portal.

Parking

For Athens-located vehicles, parking is the under-budgeted operational cost. Building underground parking (if available): typically included with the property, no incremental cost. Street parking: requires resident permit for some Athens zones; available to property owners on submission of relevant documents.

For diaspora owners whose property doesn't have garage space: vehicles can be stored in a third-party garage facility (typically €80-€180/month) or with arrangements through a home-watch service if vehicle storage is a service component.

Total annual cost for keeping a Greek vehicle alive

Indicative annual carrying cost for an operational inherited Greek vehicle (driven occasionally by family during visits):

Total: €700-€3,500/year depending heavily on parking situation.

For a vehicle being used only during your annual 3-week visit, the carrying cost is €25-€120/day of actual use — usually well above taxi or rental costs. The case for keeping the car operates more on convenience, family use during visits, or sentimental value than pure economics.

The storage option (καταθεση)

If you want to retain the vehicle but not pay full operational costs, Greek law allows "deposit" of the plates with the local Ministry of Transport office. This:

Practical for: diaspora owners who don't need the car right now but might want it in 2-3 years (returning retirees, family member who might use it). Less practical for: owners who genuinely want the car for occasional visits — deposit-and-reinstatement creates friction each cycle.

Cost: typically free (administrative formality only). Vehicle still has to be physically maintained — batteries die, tyres deflate, fluids degrade — so some scheduled maintenance is still wise.

The sell option

Selling an inherited Greek vehicle is straightforward once the transfer-of-ownership process has completed. Routes:

For most inherited Greek vehicles, the realistic 2026 sale value is below €5,000 — the time and stress of marketing it sometimes exceeds the proceeds. For more valuable cars (€8,000+), proper marketing through Car.gr generally works.

The deregistration option (απόσυρση)

For older vehicles with low market value, formal deregistration:

For vehicles older than 15 years with significant mechanical issues, deregistration is usually the right choice. Cleaner than trying to sell a marginal vehicle.

How home watch fits

Our Vehicle Care service covers this specific situation. For members with inherited or owner-stored Greek vehicles:

Pricing: typically €60-€120/month depending on vehicle storage situation and service level. For a vehicle worth €8,000+ that the family genuinely wants to keep operational, the service is materially cheaper than the cost of letting the vehicle deteriorate through neglect.

Companion reading: first 7 days in Greece for inherited-property heirs, setting up Greek utilities.

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