This guide explains how a non-resident foreign buyer secures a mortgage in Spain in 2026. It covers loan-to-value bands, the current mix of fixed and Euribor-linked pricing, the documentation Spanish banks expect, the appraisal (tasación) process, currency options, the life and home insurance commonly bundled into offers, the full cost stack at completion, and realistic timelines from application to drawdown. We also compare resident and non-resident treatment, flag the most common pitfalls, and indicate when to bring in a qualified Spanish mortgage broker, abogado, or asesor fiscal. Pricing here is indicative only; lenders publish current rates and revise terms frequently.
Who counts as a non-resident borrower
Spanish banks classify you as non-resident if you do not hold Spanish tax residency, meaning you spend fewer than 183 days a year in Spain and your centre of economic interests sits elsewhere. Nationality is not the test. A British buyer with a Costa del Sol holiday home is non-resident. A French citizen who has relocated to Marbella and pays IRPF in Spain is treated as resident, with materially better mortgage terms.
The distinction matters because non-resident files carry higher perceived risk for the lender. The property usually sits in Spain while the borrower's income, credit history, and assets sit in another jurisdiction. That asymmetry is why loan-to-value is tighter, pricing is firmer, and documentation is heavier.
Typical LTV bands in 2026
For non-residents purchasing a primary or secondary home on the Costa del Sol, expect the following indicative bands:
- 60 to 70 percent LTV on the lower of purchase price or bank appraisal for most EU and UK buyers with clean files.
- 50 to 60 percent LTV for buyers from outside the EEA, for complex income structures, or for properties the bank views as harder to resell.
- Up to 70 percent in selected cases where the borrower commits to additional products with the bank, such as wealth management or significant deposits.
Resident buyers, by contrast, regularly secure 80 percent on a primary residence and occasionally higher with strong files. The 10 to 20 percentage point gap is the single biggest financial consequence of non-resident status.
The bank applies LTV to the lower of the agreed purchase price and the official appraisal. If you agree 600,000 euros but the tasación comes in at 550,000 euros, a 70 percent loan is calculated on 550,000, giving 385,000 euros rather than 420,000. The shortfall must be covered from your own funds.
Interest rates: fixed, variable, and mixed
Spanish mortgages come in three formats. In 2026 the market mix for non-residents looks broadly like this, though individual lender pricing varies week to week:
- Fixed rate for the full term, indicatively in the 3.0 to 4.5 percent range for non-residents on 15 to 25 year terms. Predictable, easier to budget, and the dominant choice since the rate cycle of 2022 to 2024.
- Variable rate linked to 12-month Euribor plus a margin, typically Euribor plus 1.5 to 2.5 percent for non-residents. Pricing moves with the index, which sat in a different range only two years ago and may move again.
- Mixed rate with a fixed period of 3 to 10 years followed by a Euribor-linked variable phase. Often the sharpest headline pricing, useful if you expect to refinance or sell inside the fixed window.
Margins improve when you bundle ancillary products: life insurance with the bank, home insurance, direct debit of utilities, or a payroll-equivalent income deposit. These bundled discounts are called bonificaciones and can shave 0.30 to 1.00 percentage points off the headline rate. Read the small print: drop the product and the margin rises automatically.
Documentation Spanish banks expect
Non-resident files are paper-heavy. Assume eight to twelve weeks to collect, translate, and submit everything cleanly. Banks typically request:
- NIE (Número de Identidad de Extranjero) for each borrower, obtained through a Spanish consulate or in Spain with an appointment.
- Passport copies for all borrowers and any guarantors.
- Proof of income: last three months of payslips for employees, or the last two years of accounts plus current management figures for self-employed and company directors.
- Tax returns from your country of residence for the last two fiscal years. UK borrowers usually provide SA302s and tax year overviews. Other jurisdictions provide the local equivalent.
- Bank statements covering the last six to twelve months across all main personal and business accounts.
- Credit report from your country of residence. UK applicants typically supply an Experian or Equifax report.
- Asset and liability statement, listing existing properties, investments, and outstanding loans worldwide.
- Existing mortgage statements for any property you already own.
- Property documentation: nota simple from the Land Registry, draft purchase contract, and the bank's appraisal once instructed.
Documents in English are usually accepted by larger international-facing banks on the Costa del Sol. Other languages typically require a sworn translation (traducción jurada). Some lenders also require an apostille on foreign tax documents.
The appraisal process
The tasación is carried out by an appraisal company regulated by the Bank of Spain and registered under the homogeneous valuation standard ECO/805/2003. The bank instructs the appraiser, though you pay the fee, typically 300 to 600 euros depending on property size and location.
The appraiser inspects the property, reviews comparable transactions, checks the Land Registry status, and produces a formal report valid for six months. The bank applies LTV to this figure or to the purchase price, whichever is lower. If the appraisal undershoots, you can challenge it with additional comparables, commission a second appraisal at your own cost, or renegotiate the purchase price with the seller.
Under Law 5/2019, you have the right to provide your own appraisal from a registered firm, and the bank must accept it provided it meets the standard. In practice, most non-resident buyers use the bank's preferred appraiser to avoid friction.
Currency of the loan
Spanish mortgages are denominated in euros by default. A small number of private banks will offer loans in sterling, US dollars, or Swiss francs for high-net-worth clients, usually above 500,000 euros and often through their private banking arms.
Borrowing in a currency other than the one in which you earn introduces exchange rate risk on every monthly payment. Law 5/2019 implemented the EU Mortgage Credit Directive and gives borrowers the right to convert a foreign-currency mortgage to the currency of their income in certain circumstances. The mechanics are bank-specific and a qualified asesor fiscal or mortgage broker should walk you through the trade-off before signing.
Life insurance and bundled products
Spanish lenders cannot legally require you to take their life insurance, but they can offer a meaningful rate discount if you do. The same applies to home insurance, which is effectively mandatory for any mortgaged property in Spain. Typical patterns:
- Life insurance: single premium or annual policy covering the outstanding loan balance. Costs vary widely with age and health, indicatively 0.2 to 0.6 percent of the sum insured per year.
- Home insurance: buildings cover at minimum, often combined with contents. Expect 300 to 800 euros annually for a typical Costa del Sol apartment or townhouse.
- Payment protection: offered by some banks, rarely good value, usually optional.
You are entitled to shop these policies on the open market. The bank must accept any policy that meets equivalent cover requirements, though they may withdraw the bundled rate discount if you do.
The full cost stack at completion
Beyond the deposit, a non-resident buyer with a mortgage should budget 10 to 14 percent of the purchase price for transaction costs. The exact figure depends on whether you buy resale or new-build and on the autonomous community. For Andalucía in 2026, indicative figures are:
- ITP (Impuesto de Transmisiones Patrimoniales): 7 percent on resale property in Andalucía. Replaces VAT.
- VAT (IVA): 10 percent on new-build residential, paid to the seller.
- AJD (Actos Jurídicos Documentados): 1.2 percent in Andalucía, applied to new-build purchases and to the mortgage deed. Following the 2018 reform, the bank pays the AJD on the mortgage itself.
- Notary fees: 600 to 1,500 euros depending on transaction value and complexity.
- Land Registry fees: 400 to 1,000 euros, scaled to value.
- Appraisal fee: 300 to 600 euros, paid by the borrower.
- Bank arrangement fee (comisión de apertura): 0 to 1.5 percent of the loan amount. Negotiable.
- Legal fees: typically 1 to 1.5 percent of purchase price for an independent abogado, plus IVA.
- Gestoría fees: 300 to 600 euros to handle post-completion filings.
The bank arrangement fee and life insurance bundling are the two negotiable items where a broker often earns their fee several times over.
Worked example: 750,000 euro resale in Marbella
Assume a British non-resident buyer, employed, clean credit, purchasing a 750,000 euro resale apartment with a 70 percent LTV fixed-rate mortgage at 3.6 percent over 20 years. Indicative figures only.
- Loan amount: 525,000 euros
- Deposit: 225,000 euros
- ITP at 7 percent: 52,500 euros
- Notary, registry, gestoría: approximately 2,500 euros
- Appraisal: 500 euros
- Bank arrangement fee at 1 percent: 5,250 euros
- Independent legal fees at 1 percent plus IVA: approximately 9,075 euros
- Annual home insurance: 500 euros
- Annual life insurance: approximately 1,500 euros for a mid-40s borrower
- Total cash required at completion: approximately 294,825 euros
- Monthly mortgage payment: approximately 3,075 euros
Cash-to-close therefore sits around 39 percent of purchase price. Many non-resident buyers underestimate this and arrive at the notary short. Build your budget from the cost stack upwards, not from the deposit downwards.
Timeline from application to drawdown
A clean non-resident file in 2026 typically follows this pattern:
- Weeks 1 to 2: initial enquiry, document collection, preliminary offers from two or three banks via broker or direct.
- Weeks 3 to 5: formal application submitted, bank's risk department reviews the file, conditional approval issued.
- Weeks 5 to 7: appraisal instructed, report delivered, final offer (FEIN and FiAE) issued under Law 5/2019.
- Weeks 7 to 8: ten-day mandatory cooling-off period during which you visit the notary for the free pre-signing review.
- Weeks 8 to 10: signing at the notary, drawdown, registration.
Eight to ten weeks is realistic for a well-prepared file. Twelve to sixteen weeks is common where documents arrive piecemeal or the borrower's income structure is complex. Build a financing condition into your reservation contract and avoid hard completion deadlines under ten weeks from offer acceptance.
Resident versus non-resident treatment
The headline differences across a typical file:
- LTV: residents 80 percent on primary home, non-residents 60 to 70 percent.
- Term: residents up to 30 or even 40 years, non-residents typically capped at 20 to 25 years and to age 70 to 75 at maturity.
- Pricing: residents access the sharpest published rates, non-residents pay a margin premium of roughly 0.25 to 0.75 percentage points on equivalent products.
- Documentation: residents file domestic payslips and Spanish tax returns, non-residents file foreign-jurisdiction equivalents, often with sworn translations.
- Timeline: resident files often close in four to six weeks, non-resident files in eight to twelve.
Common pitfalls
- Assuming property purchase grants Spanish residency. The Golden Visa investor route closed on 3 April 2025 under Organic Law 1/2025. Buying property in Spain does not, on its own, give you a right to reside. Residency must be pursued through a separate visa pathway with an abogado de extranjería.
- Underbudgeting the cost stack. Plan for 10 to 14 percent of purchase price in fees and taxes on top of the deposit.
- Trusting the seller's price as the loan base. The bank lends against the lower of price and appraisal. A weak tasación can blow a hole in your deposit plan.
- Ignoring bundled product economics. A rate that looks sharp may rely on five bonificaciones. Drop one and the margin jumps.
- Currency mismatch. Earning in sterling and borrowing in euros is the norm for British buyers, but the exchange exposure on the deposit and on monthly payments needs a deliberate plan.
- Missing the FEIN cooling-off period. Under Law 5/2019, you must have the binding offer at least ten days before signing. Tight contractual deadlines without this buffer cause completion to slip.
- Skipping the independent abogado. The notary checks the deed, not your interests. Use a Spanish lawyer who acts solely for you.
When to engage professional advisers
Roccabox is a real-estate agency, not a regulated mortgage adviser. We can introduce you to qualified Spanish mortgage brokers, abogados, and asesores fiscales who handle non-resident files daily on the Costa del Sol, and we strongly recommend you engage them early:
- A Spanish mortgage broker before you make an offer, to confirm realistic LTV, pricing, and bank appetite for your profile. Brokers typically work across 10 to 20 lenders and negotiate bonificaciones on your behalf.
- An independent abogado before signing any reservation contract, to review the nota simple, check planning and community status, and structure the purchase.
- An asesor fiscal if your income includes company dividends, foreign trusts, or rental income, and to plan for Spanish non-resident taxes (IRNR, IBI, wealth tax) after purchase.
- A gestoría for
Frequently asked
Can a non-resident get 80 percent LTV on a Spanish mortgage in 2026?
Generally no. Non-resident buyers typically secure 60 to 70 percent LTV on the lower of purchase price or bank appraisal. Buyers from outside the EEA or with complex income often see 50 to 60 percent. The 80 percent band is reserved for Spanish tax residents on primary residences, and even then requires a strong file. Some private banks may stretch to 70 percent or slightly higher for high-net-worth clients who commit to wealth management products, but this is negotiated case by case. Plan your cash on the assumption of 30 to 40 percent equity plus the cost stack at completion.
Should I choose a fixed, variable, or mixed-rate Spanish mortgage?
It depends on your horizon and risk tolerance. Fixed rates (indicatively 3.0 to 4.5 percent for non-residents in 2026) suit buyers who want payment certainty over a 15 to 25 year term. Variable rates linked to 12-month Euribor plus a margin of 1.5 to 2.5 percent suit borrowers comfortable with index movement. Mixed rates with a 3 to 10 year fixed phase often show the sharpest headline pricing and work well if you expect to sell or refinance inside the fixed window. A qualified Spanish mortgage broker can model the three options against your specific income and exit plans before you commit.
How long does a non-resident Spanish mortgage take from application to drawdown?
Realistically, eight to twelve weeks from a complete application to signature at the notary, assuming no document gaps. The slowest steps are usually collecting and translating foreign tax returns, obtaining NIE numbers if not already held, and the bank's underwriting review of non-resident income. The appraisal itself takes one to two weeks once instructed. Under Law 5/2019, the bank must also observe a ten-day reflection period between issuing the binding offer (FEIN) and the notary signing. Starting document collection before you make an offer on a property shortens the critical path considerably.
Do I need an NIE before applying for a mortgage in Spain?
Yes. Every borrower and guarantor needs an NIE (Número de Identidad de Extranjero) before the bank can formally process the application or before you can sign at the notary. You can obtain it through a Spanish consulate in your country of residence or in person in Spain by appointment. Processing times vary from days to several weeks depending on the channel. Apply early, as a missing NIE is one of the most common reasons non-resident files stall close to completion. A Spanish abogado can apply on your behalf with a power of attorney.
Can I borrow in pounds or dollars instead of euros?
Possibly, but options are limited. Most Spanish retail banks lend only in euros. A small number of private banks offer sterling, US dollar, or Swiss franc mortgages, typically for loans above 500,000 euros through their private banking arms. Borrowing in a currency other than the one you earn introduces exchange rate risk on every payment and on the principal balance. Law 5/2019 gives borrowers a right to convert in certain circumstances, but mechanics differ by lender. Discuss the trade-off with a qualified asesor fiscal or mortgage broker before signing, as the long-term cost can swing materially.
Is the bank's life insurance mandatory?
No. Spanish lenders cannot legally require you to take their life insurance, and Law 5/2019 explicitly protects this. However, they can offer a bonificación discount of typically 0.10 to 0.30 percentage points on the rate if you do. Home insurance is effectively mandatory for any mortgaged property, though you can usually source it externally. Compare the bundled discount against the premium cost over the loan term: in many cases an independently sourced life policy is cheaper even after losing the discount. A qualified broker can run the numbers on your specific quote.
What happens if the bank appraisal comes in below the purchase price?
The bank applies your LTV to the lower of purchase price and appraisal, so a low tasación reduces the loan amount and increases the cash you need. For example, on a 600,000 euro purchase appraised at 550,000 with 70 percent LTV, you borrow 385,000 instead of 420,000, a 35,000 euro shortfall. Your options are to challenge the appraisal with comparable sales evidence, commission a second appraisal at your own cost from a Bank of Spain registered firm, renegotiate the price with the seller, or cover the gap from savings. Build appraisal risk into your offer strategy.
What is the full cost stack on top of the purchase price?
For resale properties on the Costa del Sol, budget roughly 10 to 14 percent of the purchase price in transaction costs. This typically includes Andalucía transfer tax (ITP) at 7 percent, notary and Land Registry fees of around 0.5 to 1 percent combined, gestoría administration, the appraisal fee (300 to 600 euros), and your abogado's fees (around 1 percent plus VAT). For new-build properties, replace ITP with 10 percent VAT plus 1.2 percent AJD stamp duty in Andalucía. Mortgage arrangement fees, if any, are paid by the bank under Law 5/2019, not the borrower. Rates and rules change, so confirm current figures with a qualified asesor fiscal.
When should I bring in a mortgage broker versus going direct to a bank?
Going direct works if you already bank with a Spanish or international lender that handles non-resident files and you have a straightforward employed income from an EU or UK source. A qualified Spanish mortgage broker earns their fee when your file is complex: self-employed income, company director structures, non-EEA nationality, multiple existing properties, or a tight completion timeline. Brokers also know which lenders are actively writing non-resident business in any given quarter, as appetite shifts. For purchases above 500,000 euros, the broker's access to private banking channels can materially improve pricing and LTV. Always confirm the broker is registered with the Bank of Spain.
Legal notice
This guide provides general information and is not regulated mortgage, tax, or legal advice. Rates, criteria, and regulations change. Consult a qualified Spanish mortgage broker, lender, or financial adviser regulated by the Bank of Spain before proceeding.
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