Hvad denne guide dækker
Spansk ejendomsbesiddelse medfører to uundgåelige løbende omkostninger, der overrasker mange udenlandske købere: det månedlige fællesgebyr betalt til din comunidad de propietarios, og den årlige Impuesto sobre Bienes Inmuebles (IBI), den kommunale ejendomsskat. Denne guide forklarer, hvordan hver enkelt beregnes, hvad der er typisk langs Costa del Sol, hvordan man læser fællesskabsdokumenter, inden man underskriver, hvordan man anfægter en oppustet katastralværdi, og de mindre løbende omkostninger, der følger med, herunder basura, forsyninger, forsikring og ikke-residenters indkomstskat på uudlejede fritidsboliger.
Comunidad de propietarios: hvad du faktisk betaler for
Hvis din ejendom er en del af en bygning, urbanisation eller et lukket boligkompleks med fælles elementer, tilhører du automatisk en comunidad de propietarios, der reguleres af Spaniens lov om vandret ejendomsret (Ley de Propiedad Horizontal, lov 49/1960, ændret adskillige gange). Medlemskab er ikke valgfrit. Fællesskabet er en juridisk enhed, der vedligeholder alt, hvad de individuelle ejere deler.
Typiske inkluderinger:
- Rengøring, belysning og mindre reparationer i fællesarealer
- Vedligeholdelse af fælles swimmingpool, kemisk behandling og livredder, hvor det kræves af andalusiske regler
- Havepleje og vanding
- Elevatordrift og den obligatoriske årlige inspektion
- Bygningsforsikring for konstruktionen (ikke dit indbo)
- Concierge, sikkerhedspatruljer eller adgangssystemer med port i større boligkomplekser
- Administrative gebyrer betalt til den udpegede administrador de fincas
- Bidrag til reservefond (lovligt minimum 10% af det ordinære budget)
Hvad det ikke dækker: alt inden for de fire vægge af din private ejendom, dine egne forsyningsregninger eller din indboforsikring.
Sådan beregnes din andel
Hver ejendom i et fællesskab har en cuota de participación, en procentkoefficient fastsat i skødet for vandret deling (escritura de división horizontal). Koefficienterne for alle ejendomme i bygningen skal tilsammen give 100%. Koefficienten vægtes normalt efter bebygget areal, men beliggenhed, udsigt og brug af fælles faciliteter kan også indgå. En penthouse med stor terrasse og adgang til privat pool har ofte en højere koefficient end en stueetagelejlighed i samme blok.
Dit månedlige gebyr er din koefficient anvendt på det årlige fællesskabsbudget, derefter opdelt i rater (månedligt, kvartalsvis eller halvårligt afhængigt af fællesskabets regler).
Typiske gebyrspænd på Costa del Sol
Tallene varierer meget, men som en praktisk vejledning:
- Lille lejlighed, beskeden blok, ingen pool eller elevator: cirka €40 til €90 pr. måned
- Middelklasselejlighed i et boligkompleks med pool, haver og elevator: cirka €120 til €250 pr. måned
- Luksuriøst lukket boligkompleks med 24-timers sikkerhed, flere pools, spa, fitnesscenter, concierge: €300 til €800 pr. måned, med visse Marbella-strandkomplekser over €1.000
- Fritliggende villa i en urbanisation med fælles veje, porte og havepleje: €150 til €500 pr. måned
En fritliggende villa uden fælles infrastruktur har slet intet fællesgebyr, selvom den typisk medfører højere direkte omkostninger til poolservice, havepleje og alarmovervågning.
Ofte stillede
When is IBI actually due, and what happens if I miss it?
Each ayuntamiento sets its own IBI billing window, typically falling between August and November on the Costa del Sol. You'll receive a notice, but if your registered address is abroad, post can be unreliable. The simplest fix is to set up a direct debit (domiciliación bancaria) with a Spanish bank account; many town halls offer a small discount, often 3% to 5%, for doing so.
Missing the payment window triggers a recargo, a surcharge that escalates: typically 5% if paid voluntarily after the deadline, rising to 20% plus interest once enforcement begins. Persistent non-payment can lead to an embargo on the property. Check your town hall's portal annually to confirm the bill has been issued.
Can I challenge my cadastral value if I think it's too high?
Yes, but the process is technical and time-limited. You can file a recurso de reposición with the within one month of notification of a new value, or pursue an economic-administrative claim. Grounds usually involve errors in recorded surface area, incorrect classification, or outdated construction-quality coefficients.
In our experience, challenges succeed most often where there's a clear factual error: the wrong square metres, a non-existent pool on file, or a misclassified use. Generic complaints that the value feels high rarely prosper. Engaging a técnico (architect or surveyor) to document the discrepancy strengthens any appeal. This is not legal advice; consult a Spanish lawyer or tax adviser for your specific case.
Who pays the community fees during the year a property is sold?
Liability splits at the completion date. The seller pays community fees up to and including the date of transfer; the buyer pays from the day after. In practice, the administrador issues a closing statement, and any pro-rata amount is settled at the notary.
The seller must also produce a certificado de estar al corriente confirming no outstanding debts. Under Article 9.1.e of the Horizontal Property Law, unpaid community charges from the year of sale plus the three preceding natural years attach to the property itself, meaning an unwary buyer can inherit them. Never waive the certificate. If a derrama was approved before completion but billed after, allocate responsibility explicitly in the private contract.
Do I have to pay community fees if I never use the property?
Yes. Community fees are based on your cuota de participación, not on occupancy. Whether you visit twice a year or never set foot in the property, you owe the same monthly amount. The community provides services to the building and grounds, which exist regardless of your presence.
The only narrow exception involves services you provably cannot use, and even that's contested. For example, ground-floor owners sometimes argue they shouldn't fund lift maintenance, but Spanish case law generally requires this exemption to be written into the original statutes or approved by qualified majority. If it isn't, you pay. Non-payment leads to interest, legal action, and ultimately a charge registered against the property.
What's the difference between IBI and non-resident income tax?
They're separate taxes with different recipients. IBI is a municipal tax paid to your town hall, based on cadastral value, and applies to every property owner. Non-resident income tax (IRNR) is a national tax paid to the , applicable to non-resident owners of Spanish property.
If your second home isn't let, you still owe imputed income tax: typically 1.1% or 2% of the cadastral value (depending on when the value was last revised), taxed at 19% for EU/EEA residents or 24% for others. If you do let the property, you pay tax on rental income instead. The two systems run in parallel: IBI annually to the ayuntamiento, IRNR annually (or quarterly if letting) to Hacienda.
How much should I budget for total annual running costs?
For a mid-range two-bedroom apartment in a Costa del Sol development with pool and gardens, a realistic annual total sits between €3,500 and €6,500, broken down roughly as: community fees €1,500–€3,000, IBI €400–€900, basura (refuse) €100–€200, building and contents insurance €300–€600, utilities standing charges €400–€700 even if unused, and non-resident imputed income tax €200–€600.
Villas climb substantially higher once you add pool service, gardening, alarm monitoring, and higher IBI. Luxury gated communities can push total annual running costs above €15,000 before you've spent a euro on actually using the property. Build a buffer for occasional derramas; assuming zero extraordinary costs across a decade of ownership is unrealistic.
Can the community force me to pay for works I voted against?
Generally, yes. Once a works proposal passes the required voting threshold at a properly convened junta, the decision binds all owners, including those who voted against and those who didn't attend. You cannot opt out of paying your coefficient share.
Limited exceptions exist. Article 17 of the Horizontal Property Law allows owners to be excused from funding certain non-essential improvements (not repairs or accessibility works) if the cost exceeds three months of ordinary fees and they voted against, though they then lose the right to use the resulting installation. Mandatory works, structural repairs, and anything required by ITE or safety regulations cannot be opted out of. Challenging a resolution requires court action within strict deadlines, typically three months.
Should I attend community meetings if I live abroad?
Where practical, yes, at least the annual junta ordinaria. Decisions taken in your absence bind you, and budgets, quotas, and major works are voted at these meetings. Reading minutes after the fact leaves you no influence.
If attending in person isn't feasible, grant a written delegación de voto to another owner you trust, your lawyer, or a property manager who knows the community. The proxy should specify the meeting date and ideally your voting instructions on agenda items circulated in advance. Many administrators now allow video attendance, though formal voting rules vary. At minimum, request agendas and minutes by email and respond promptly to budget consultations; silence is often treated as acquiescence.
What's basura and how is it different from community fees?
Basura is the municipal refuse collection charge, paid to the ayuntamiento, entirely separate from your community fees. Community fees cover communal-area cleaning; basura covers the town's collection of household waste from the street bins.
It's billed annually or twice yearly depending on the municipality, typically between €100 and €250 for a residential property on the Costa del Sol. Some town halls bundle it with water, others issue it as a standalone bill. Like IBI, it applies regardless of occupancy: you owe it whether you live there or not. Set up direct debit to avoid missed notices, as the surcharge regime for late payment mirrors IBI and can escalate quickly into enforcement proceedings.
Legal notice
Skattesatser og fællesskabsstrukturer varierer. Bekræft de aktuelle tal med det lokale rådhus, administratoren for fællesskabet og din gestor.
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