Outpost research · Spain · 2026
The true all-in cost of buying property in Spain — and when NOT to buy
Spain is one of Western Europe’s pricier markets to buy into — roughly 10–14% on top of the price in one-off taxes and fees for a resale, driven by a regional transfer tax (ITP) that swings from ~6% in Madrid to 10–11% in Catalonia and Valencia. This guide gives you the real all-in number, line by line and sourced, then does the thing competitors won’t: the honest signals to walk away — the ended Golden Visa, the rumoured 100% non-EU tax (and its true status), okupa exposure on empty property, the region trap, no NIE, and the resale taxes.
The short answer: ~10–14% all-in
Spain is not a cheap country to buy into — budget roughly 10–14% of the price in one-off taxes and fees on top of the headline number for a resale. That is more than Portugal (6–8%) or an older French property (7–8%), and the reason is a single line: the regional transfer tax (ITP), which swings from about 6% in Madrid to 10–11% in Catalonia and Valencia. New-builds swap ITP for 10% VAT plus stamp duty. But the number that surprises foreign buyers isn’t the purchase tax at all — it’s the annual non-resident tax you owe even on an empty flat, the squatter (okupa) exposure if you leave it empty, and the residency you can no longer buy. This guide gives you the real all-in number first, then the honest reasons to walk away.
One-off costs (paid at completion)
These are paid once, at or around completion. The dominant line is the transfer tax (ITP) on a resale, and it is regional — there is no single Spanish rate. Budget roughly 6% in Madrid, ~7% in Andalucía, ~8% in Murcia and 10–11% in Catalonia and Valencia, so the autonomous community matters more than buyers expect. A new-build from a developer pays no ITP — instead 10% VAT (IVA) plus ~1–1.5% stamp duty (AJD). On top of that you pay notary fees of 0.1–0.5% (set by an official scale; the notary executes the escritura), 0.1–0.4% for the Land Registry (Registro de la Propiedad), and 1–1.5% for an independent lawyer (abogado) — strongly recommended for any foreign buyer. Note: non-residents pay exactly the same ITP or VAT as Spaniards; there is no extra foreigner purchase tax today.
Recurring costs (every year you own)
The costs you carry every year you own are where Spain quietly bites a non-resident. IBI, the municipal property tax, runs 0.4–1.1% of the cadastral value (not the market price) annually. The sting is the non-resident income tax (IRNR): if you let the property you’re taxed on the rent — 19% on net rent if you’re an EU owner, 24% on gross rent if you’re not — and even if you never rent it, Spain taxes an imputed income (around 1.1% of the cadastral value, taxed at 19%) filed each year on Modelo 210. So an empty second home still files and still pays. Add community fees (comunidad) and the municipal waste tax (basura), and budget a gestor at roughly €150–500/year to file the annual return correctly.
A worked example: €400,000 in Madrid
Take a €400,000 resale in Madrid, bought by a non-EU couple. ITP in Madrid at ~6% is about €24,000 [verify the current Madrid ITP rate with the Spain ITP calculator] — but the very same flat in Catalonia or Valencia at 10–11% would be €40,000–44,000, which is the whole point about región. Add notary at ~0.4% (€1,600), Land Registry at ~0.25% (€1,000), and an independent lawyer at ~1.25% (€5,000). That is roughly €31,000–32,000 in one-off costs in Madrid — about 8% here — but closer to €48,000–51,000 (12–13%) on the same price in a high-ITP region. Then, every year, IBI of perhaps €600–1,500, the Modelo 210 imputed-income filing even if empty, comunidad fees, and a gestor. The single most useful thing you can do before offering is run the exact ITP for your price in that specific autonomous community.
If you finance: non-resident mortgage & currency
Most foreign buyers in Spain can finance, but plan for a big deposit. Spanish banks typically lend non-residents up to around 70% of value (versus ~80% for residents) [verify the current loan-to-value with the lender], so you’re looking at a 30% deposit plus the 10–14% costs — roughly 40% of the price in cash up front. Expect a bank valuation (tasación), an arrangement fee, and AJD stamp duty on the mortgage deed itself. The bigger, quieter risk is currency: if your income and savings are in pounds or dollars and the mortgage is in euros, an adverse FX move raises both your deposit and every monthly payment. Don’t let a strong exchange rate on the day you view become the rate you assume for the next 20 years.
When NOT to buy — the honest walk-away signals
This is the part competitors leave out. Buying property in Spain is often a good decision — but there are concrete situations where the honest answer is don’t, or not yet:
How Outpost helps
Outpost is the preparation layer, not an agent or a law firm — we list nothing, take no commission, and move no money. We do the research so you arrive at the notary knowing your real all-in cost in your specific región, your tax position as a foreigner, and the specific red flags on the building and the area. When you need to act, we connect you to an independent, verified Spanish lawyer (abogado) who confirms the title, the comunidad position and any contract. The honesty on this page is the product: we would rather you walk away from the wrong flat than sell you a dossier on it.
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Questions
How much does it really cost to buy property in Spain as a foreigner?
For a resale, budget roughly 10–14% of the price all-in for one-off taxes and fees. The bulk is the regional transfer tax (ITP), ~6% in Madrid up to 10–11% in Catalonia and Valencia, plus notary (0.1–0.5%), land registry (0.1–0.4%) and an independent lawyer (1–1.5%). New-builds pay 10% VAT + ~1–1.5% stamp duty instead of ITP. Use the ITP calculator for the exact tax in your region.
Do non-residents pay extra tax to buy in Spain?
No. Non-residents pay exactly the same ITP or VAT as Spanish buyers — there is no special foreigner purchase tax. The proposed 100% surcharge on non-EU buyers is only a stalled parliamentary proposal, not law. What you do face is extra professional cost (translation, power of attorney, a gestor) and the annual non-resident filing on Modelo 210.
Can I still get residency by buying property in Spain?
No. Spain abolished its property-based Golden Visa on 3 April 2025, with no investor-visa replacement tied to real estate. Owning a Spanish home gives you no residency right on its own. To live there you’d use a separate route — the non-lucrative visa (passive income) or the digital nomad visa — neither of which requires a purchase.
What do I pay every year on a Spanish property, even empty?
IBI municipal tax (0.4–1.1% of the cadastral value), plus the non-resident imputed-income tax (around 1.1% of cadastral value taxed at 19%) filed on Modelo 210 even if you never rent it. If you do let it, rental tax is 19% on net rent for EU owners or 24% on gross rent for non-EU. Add community fees, the basura waste tax, and a gestor (~€150–500/year) to file.
Why does the Spanish region matter so much?
Because the transfer tax (ITP) on a resale is set by each autonomous community, not nationally — roughly 6% in Madrid versus 10–11% in Catalonia and Valencia. On a €400,000 home that is a €16,000–20,000 swing in tax alone. Budgeting on a single national rate is the most common way foreign buyers under-cost a Spanish purchase.
When should I NOT buy in Spain?
When you’re buying mainly for residency (the Golden Visa ended in 2025); when your budget assumes one national ITP rate instead of the real regional one; when you’ll leave the flat empty in a high okupa-risk area and can’t monitor it; when you haven’t got your NIE; or when the deal only works if you ignore the resale taxes (plusvalía and IRNR capital gains). The honest answer is sometimes 'not this one' or 'not yet'.
Sources
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