Buying Property in Spain vs the UK — Key Differences for British Buyers

If you are a British buyer comparing the property purchase process in Spain to what you know from the UK, the differences are deeper than they look. Spanish conveyancing is structured, taxed and verified differently. This guide explains how the two systems compare across the seven points that matter most.

1. Role of the Lawyer (Solicitor vs. Spanish Abogado)

In the UK, the conveyancing solicitor handles every step of the transaction and protects the buyer. In Spain, the buyer’s protection comes from an independent Spanish-qualified abogado registered with a Spanish Bar Association (Colegio de Abogados). The Spanish notary is a public officer who certifies the deed but does not represent the buyer’s interests. A UK solicitor cannot represent you in Spain — only a Spanish-qualified lawyer can file deeds, attend Spanish notaries, and handle the 3% non-resident retention.

2. Role of the Notary

The Spanish notary is not the same role as a UK notary public. In Spain the notary certifies the legality of the deed, verifies identities, and witnesses signatures, but does not investigate hidden debts, planning issues, illegal extensions, or community fee arrears. That investigation must be done independently by your Spanish conveyancing lawyer before signing. In the UK the solicitor performs all due diligence; in Spain the lawyer plus the notary divide the roles.

3. Process Sequence

UK: Memorandum of Sale → Searches → Mortgage offer → Exchange of contracts → Completion.

Spain: Reservation → Lawyer due diligence at Land Registry, Cadastre and Town Hall → Private contract of arras (deposit) → Public title deed (Escritura) at the Spanish notary → Land Registry registration in your name. The Spanish process has its own checkpoints — each step must be verified before progressing.

4. Taxes and Costs Structure

UK: Stamp Duty Land Tax based on price brackets, plus solicitor and search fees.

Spain: Resale property — ITP (transfer tax, percentage varies by region). New build — VAT (IVA) plus AJD (stamp duty). Plus notary fee, Land Registry fee, NIE application, and lawyer fees. Our firm provides a personalised cost estimate during the initial consultation, without surprises.

5. Hidden Risks the UK Buyer May Not Anticipate

Our due diligence covers each of these before you commit any deposit.

6. Selling Later: the 3% Non-Resident Retention (Modelo 211)

If you later sell the Spanish property as a non-resident, the buyer is legally required to retain 3% of the sale price and pay it directly to the Spanish tax authority via Modelo 211, as an advance against your capital gains tax. This is a Spanish-specific obligation that has no UK equivalent. Our firm handles the Modelo 211 filing and any subsequent refund claim.

7. Power of Attorney — Buying Without Travelling to Spain

Most British buyers we work with complete the entire purchase remotely with a Spanish Power of Attorney signed in front of a UK notary public and apostilled under the Hague Convention. We then sign the reservation, deposit contract, and public deed at the notary in Spain on your behalf. There is no UK equivalent of this remote-purchase model.

Why work with a Spanish lawyer based in Costa Blanca?

For property purchases on the Costa Blanca, Marina Alta and Valencia province, working with a local Spanish-qualified lawyer means the firm knows each Town Hall, the local Land Registry offices, the Cadastre quirks of each municipality, and the licensing patterns specific to villas, apartments and rural properties in the region. See our full Spanish property conveyancing service for British buyers and other international clients.

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