Why this guide exists
Before you can sign at the notary on a Costa del Sol property, two pieces of admin need to be in place: a Spanish tax identification number for foreigners (the NIE), and a Spanish bank account to fund the purchase and pay running costs. Neither is complicated on its own, but both have moving parts that catch buyers out. This guide explains what each document is, how to apply from Spain or from abroad, what paperwork to bring, realistic timelines, how the NIE differs from the TIE residence card, and how to set up banking efficiently as either a non-resident or newly arrived resident.
What the NIE actually is
The NIE (Número de Identidad de Extranjero) is a personal tax and identification number issued by the Spanish Directorate General of Police to any non-Spaniard who has economic, professional or social dealings in Spain. It is not a residence permit. It is not a visa. It is a number, printed on an A4 certificate (the Certificado de NIE), and once issued it stays with you for life.
You need an NIE to:
- Sign a property purchase deed (escritura) at the notary.
- Pay property transfer tax (ITP) or VAT (IVA) plus stamp duty (AJD).
- Register with the Land Registry.
- Open a non-resident Spanish bank account in most branches.
- Set up utility contracts, IBI council tax, and community of owners fees.
Each adult on the title needs their own NIE. Children listed on a deed need one too.
NIE versus TIE: don't confuse them
The NIE is just a number on a paper certificate. The TIE (Tarjeta de Identidad de Extranjero) is a physical plastic card issued to non-EU nationals who have been granted a residence authorisation, post-Brexit British residents included. EU nationals who reside in Spain receive a different document: a green A4 or credit-card-sized Certificado de Registro de Ciudadano de la Unión, which also contains an NIE.
For a pure property purchase with no residence intention, a standalone NIE certificate is what you need. Since the Spanish Golden Visa investor route closed on 3 April 2025 under Organic Law 1/2025, buying property no longer leads to any residence right, so the TIE is only relevant if you separately qualify for a residence visa such as the non-lucrative visa, digital nomad visa, or family reunification.
How to apply for an NIE
There are two practical routes: in Spain, or at a Spanish consulate in your home country. A third option, used by buyers who cannot travel, is to grant a power of attorney to a Spanish lawyer who applies on your behalf.
Route 1: In Spain, at a police station
You apply at a Comisaría de Policía Nacional with an Extranjería or foreigners' department. On the Costa del Sol the relevant offices are typically in Marbella, Fuengirola, Estepona, Málaga and Vélez-Málaga. You will need:
- A booked appointment (cita previa) via the official sede electrónica of the Ministry of the Interior. Slots are scarce in summer and can be booked weeks ahead.
- Form EX-15, completed and signed.
- Your passport, plus a photocopy of the photo page.
- A short written statement of the reason for the application, naming the property purchase, the seller, and the approximate price. A signed reservation contract or nota simple from the Land Registry helps.
- Proof of payment of the Tasa modelo 790-012, currently around €9.84. The form is downloaded from the Tax Agency website, completed, then paid at any Spanish bank (in person or via online banking if you have a Spanish account).
If the file is complete, the certificate is often issued the same day or within a few working days. In peak season collection can stretch to a week or two.
Route 2: At a Spanish consulate abroad
For British buyers, the Spanish consulates in London, Manchester and Edinburgh process NIE applications. The documents required mirror the in-Spain list: EX-15, passport plus copy, reason statement, and proof of fee payment in the consulate's preferred method (often bank transfer or postal order in sterling equivalent).
Timelines vary by consulate and season. Plan on four to twelve weeks. Some consulates accept postal applications, others require an in-person appointment. Check the specific consulate's published procedure before assembling the file.
Route 3: Power of attorney
If travelling is impractical, you sign a poder notarial (power of attorney) authorising a Spanish abogado to apply for the NIE on your behalf. The POA can be signed:
- Before a Spanish notary while you are in Spain.
- Before a notary public in your home country, with an apostille under the 1961 Hague Convention, then translated by a sworn (jurado) translator.
- At a Spanish consulate abroad.
A standard purchase POA typically costs €60-€150 in notary fees in Spain, plus translation if signed abroad. The same POA can also empower your lawyer to sign the purchase deed, open the bank account, and arrange utilities.
Setting up a Spanish bank account
Once the NIE is in hand (or sometimes in parallel, depending on the bank), the next step is banking. The choice is between a non-resident account (cuenta de no residente) and a resident account (cuenta de residente). The product is similar; the documentation and tax classification differ.
Non-resident accounts
For buyers who will not become Spanish tax residents (under 183 days a year in Spain, no centre of economic interests here), this is the correct account. To open one, expect to provide:
- Passport (original).
- NIE certificate.
- Certificado de no residencia issued by the Policía Nacional, valid for three months. Many banks will obtain it on your behalf for a fee of around €15-€25; some require you to obtain it yourself.
- Proof of address abroad (recent utility bill or bank statement, often translated).
- Proof of income or source of funds: employment contract, payslips, pension statement, or accountant's letter for the self-employed. Banks apply anti-money-laundering rules strictly on inbound purchase funds.
The non-residence certificate must be renewed every two years if the bank requires ongoing proof. Most Costa del Sol branches in Marbella, Estepona and the surrounding towns have dedicated international desks with English-speaking staff.
Resident accounts
If you have moved to Spain, registered on the padrón at the town hall, and obtained either a green EU registration certificate or a TIE, you open a resident account. The benefits are lower maintenance fees, broader product access (mortgages on resident terms, investment products), and simpler tax treatment. Switching from non-resident to resident status with the same bank usually requires only the new documentation, not a fresh account.
Fees and maintenance
Non-resident account maintenance typically runs €60-€240 per year, often charged quarterly or semi-annually. Card fees, transfer fees, and minimum balance waivers vary widely. Ask in writing for the full fee schedule (folleto de tarifas) before signing. Some banks waive maintenance if you direct-debit a Spanish utility or hold a minimum balance.
International incoming SEPA transfers in euro are usually free or low cost. Inbound transfers from the UK in sterling will incur an FX margin from either the sending bank or a currency broker; for a purchase of any size, a specialist FX broker generally beats high street rates by 1-3% of the transferred amount.
Why you need a Spanish account at all
It is technically possible to complete a purchase using a banker's draft from a UK or EU account, and some sellers accept funds wired directly. Practically, you will still need a Spanish account because:
- The notary expects payment by Spanish bank cheque drawn on the buyer's Spanish account, which is the cleanest evidence of provenance.
- IBI (annual council tax), basura (refuse), and community fees are paid by direct debit (domiciliación) from a Spanish IBAN. Town halls and communities of owners rarely accept foreign IBANs reliably.
- Electricity, water and gas suppliers will set up contracts only with a Spanish IBAN in most cases.
- Non-resident income tax (Modelo 210) and, if you let the property, quarterly rental tax filings are settled by direct debit from a Spanish account.
Alternatives and where they fall short
UK-based EUR accounts and fintech accounts (Wise, Revolut, N26, Monzo's EUR features) are useful for holding euros and moving money cheaply. They are not a substitute for a Spanish IBAN at completion because:
- Many Spanish utility and tax direct debits reject non-Spanish IBANs despite SEPA rules in theory permitting them.
- Bankers' drafts cannot be issued from fintech platforms.
- Communities of owners' administrators often refuse foreign IBANs outright.
The pragmatic setup most foreign buyers adopt: hold the bulk of euros in a fintech or FX-broker account for cheap conversion, then transfer to the Spanish account in tranches for completion and ongoing bills.
Worked example: a British buyer purchasing in Estepona
Assume a couple buying a €650,000 apartment, neither of whom will be Spanish tax resident.
- Step 1, week 1: Both sign a power of attorney at a notary in London authorising a Marbella abogado. Cost: roughly £180 in notary fees, plus £90 apostille, plus €280 sworn translation in Spain.
- Step 2, weeks 2-4: The abogado submits two EX-15 applications with the POA, passport copies, purchase reservation contract, and pays 2 x €9.84 tasa 790-012. NIE certificates issued in around three weeks.
- Step 3, week 4: The abogado opens a joint non-resident account at a Costa del Sol branch using POAs, NIEs, passport copies, and certificates of non-residence (obtained by the bank for €20 per applicant). Account live within five working days.
- Step 4, week 5: The buyers transfer €670,000 in two tranches via a currency broker, saving roughly €8,000-€12,000 versus a high-street bank rate.
- Step 5, week 6: Funds clear, banker's drafts are issued, and completion takes place at the notary in Marbella.
Total NIE and banking admin time: around six weeks. Total admin cost (excluding FX): under €700.
Common pitfalls
- Booking the wrong appointment type. The cita previa system distinguishes asignación de NIE from other procedures. Booking the wrong category wastes the slot.
- Using an out-of-date EX-15. The Ministry updates the form periodically. Download it fresh from the official site on the day.
- Forgetting the tasa receipt. The 790-012 must be paid and the stamped receipt presented, not just the form.
- Assuming the NIE certificate has an expiry. The number does not expire. Some banks and notaries ask for a certificate issued within the last three months, which is a bank or notary preference, not a legal rule. If pushed, your abogado can usually negotiate this.
- Treating the NIE as residency. It is not. Spending more than 183 days in Spain on the back of an NIE alone does not legalise your stay and can create tax residency exposure without immigration status.
- Underestimating bank onboarding KYC. Banks now ask detailed source-of-funds questions. Have payslips, pension statements, property sale contracts or inheritance documentation ready, ideally translated.
- Relying solely on a fintech IBAN. It works for transfers, not for the day-to-day direct debits a Spanish property generates.
- Signing a generic POA. A poorly drafted power of attorney can either be too narrow (missing the bank account opening clause) or too broad (granting more authority than you intended). Have it drafted by a Spanish abogado.
For newly arrived residents
If you have moved to Spain on a non-lucrative visa, digital nomad visa, or family reunification, the sequence is slightly different. Your residence visa process produces a TIE, and the NIE number appears on the TIE card itself; you do not apply for a separate NIE certificate. For banking, once registered on the padrón and holding a TIE, you open a resident account directly. You will need:
- TIE card.
- Padrón certificate (issued by the local ayuntamiento).
- Proof of income or activity in Spain: employment contract, autónomo registration, pension confirmation.
- Spanish address.
Resident accounts unlock resident mortgage products, which on the Costa del Sol typically offer up to 80% loan-to-value versus 60-70% for non-residents, and slightly tighter spreads.
When to engage professional advisers
For most foreign buyers, three professionals are worth their fees:
- A Spanish abogado independent of the seller and the agent, to handle the NIE, draft or review the POA, run due diligence on the property, and oversee the deed. Budget roughly 1% of the purchase price plus VAT, with a minimum often around €1,500-€2,500.
- A gestor or asesor fiscal for ongoing tax filings: Modelo 210 for non-residents annually, or full resident filings including Modelo 720 and wealth tax where applicable. Annual cost typically €300-€800 for straightforward non-resident filings.
- A regulated mortgage broker if you are financing the purchase, particularly for non-resident lending where terms vary widely between lenders.
Engage the abogado before paying any reservation deposit, ideally before viewing trips end. The NIE and bank account can run in parallel with property search, and getting them moving early removes the most common cause of completion delays on the Costa del Sol: buyers ready to sign, paperwork not yet ready to support them. Tax and immigration rules change frequently, so treat this guide as orientation, not advice, and confirm the current procedure with your Spanish professional before acting.
Frequently asked
Can I buy a property in Spain without an NIE?
No. The notary will not authorise the escritura without an NIE for every adult on the title, and the Land Registry will not register a deed without it. The NIE is also required to settle property transfer tax (ITP) or VAT plus stamp duty, which must be paid before registration. Children listed on a deed also need their own NIE. The only workaround for a buyer who cannot attend in person is to grant a power of attorney to a lawyer, who then applies for the NIE on your behalf before completion. Plan the NIE early in the buying timeline, not in the final week.
How long does it take to get an NIE on the Costa del Sol?
It depends on the route and the season. Applying in person at a police station in Marbella, Fuengirola, Estepona, Málaga or Vélez-Málaga, with a complete file, often produces the certificate the same day or within a few working days. In summer, appointment availability (cita previa) is the bottleneck and slots can be booked weeks ahead. At Spanish consulates abroad, typical processing is four to twelve weeks. If a lawyer applies under a power of attorney, allow two to four weeks once the POA is in their hands. Build slack into the purchase timeline accordingly.
Does buying a property in Spain still give me residence rights?
No. The Spanish Golden Visa investor route, which previously granted residence to buyers of property worth €500,000 or more, was abolished on 3 April 2025 under Organic Law 1/2025. Buying a Costa del Sol property in itself no longer leads to any residence permit. If you want to live in Spain, you need to qualify separately under another route such as the non-lucrative visa, the digital nomad visa, work authorisation or family reunification. The NIE you obtain as a buyer is only a tax identification number, not a residence document. Take specific immigration advice if residence is part of your plan.
What is the difference between an NIE and a TIE?
The NIE is a tax identification number printed on an A4 certificate, issued to any foreigner with economic, professional or social dealings in Spain. It is not proof of residence. The TIE (Tarjeta de Identidad de Extranjero) is a physical plastic card issued to non-EU nationals who have already been granted a residence authorisation, including post-Brexit British residents. EU nationals who reside in Spain instead receive a green registration certificate that also contains an NIE. For a pure property purchase with no residence intention, a standalone NIE certificate is all that is required.
Can I open a Spanish bank account before I get my NIE?
Sometimes, but it is increasingly rare. Some Costa del Sol branches with international desks will open a non-resident account on the passport alone and request the NIE within a short window, often 30 days. Most banks now ask for the NIE upfront, together with the certificado de no residencia, proof of address abroad and source-of-funds evidence. The cleaner sequence is NIE first, then account. If you are working under a power of attorney, your lawyer can usually open the account at the same time as applying for the NIE, using the same POA.
What does a non-resident Spanish bank account cost to run?
Maintenance typically runs €60 to €240 per year, often billed quarterly or semi-annually. Debit card fees, transfer fees and minimum balance terms vary by bank. Some banks waive maintenance if you direct-debit a Spanish utility, hold a minimum balance, or bundle products. The non-residence certificate, which most banks require, costs around €15-€25 if the bank obtains it for you, and must be renewed roughly every two years. Always ask for the full written fee schedule (folleto de tarifas) before signing. Costs are negotiable for larger balances, particularly at branches with dedicated international desks.
Should I transfer purchase funds through my bank or a currency broker?
For a property purchase of any meaningful size, a specialist FX broker generally beats high street bank rates by roughly 1-3% of the transferred amount, which on a €500,000 purchase can mean €5,000-€15,000 saved versus the bank's retail FX margin. Brokers also offer forward contracts to lock in a rate between reservation and completion, which protects the budget from currency swings during a three-to-six-month buying timeline. Incoming SEPA euro transfers into your Spanish account are usually free or low cost. The key is to convert sterling (or other currency) to euro outside the Spanish bank, then send euro in.
Can I use a power of attorney for the whole purchase?
Yes, and many remote buyers do. A properly drafted poder notarial can empower a Spanish lawyer to apply for your NIE, open the bank account, sign the reservation and private purchase contracts, sign the escritura at the notary, pay taxes, register the deed and arrange utilities. The POA can be signed before a Spanish notary, before a notary in your home country with a Hague apostille and a sworn translation, or at a Spanish consulate. Notary fees in Spain run roughly €60-€150. Take independent legal advice on the scope of the POA, since a broad POA gives significant authority over your assets.
Do I need to renew my NIE or the non-residence certificate?
The NIE number itself is permanent and stays with you for life. The paper certificate, however, is sometimes treated by banks and other institutions as valid for three months from issue for the specific transaction at hand. The number does not expire. The certificado de no residencia, by contrast, is a separate document with a three-month validity for opening accounts, and banks typically require it to be refreshed every two years if you remain a non-resident customer. If you later become a Spanish tax resident, you switch the account classification to resident rather than reapplying for a new NIE.
Legal notice
Banking and immigration procedures change. Confirm current documentation requirements with the consulate, police station, or bank at the time of application.
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