A Spanish will is the single most effective piece of estate planning an expat in Spain can do. It drops months off the time your family will spend in probate, protects your choice of inheritance law under Brussels IV, and avoids the forced heirship rules that trip up foreign estates every week. We draft it, register it, and make sure it sits properly alongside the will you already have in your home country.
If you own anything in Spain — a home, a holiday apartment, a plot of land, a Spanish bank account, a share in a Spanish company, even a car — you need a Spanish will. The usual assumption expats bring with them from the UK, the US, Ireland or elsewhere is that a will drafted at home covers everything, everywhere. It doesn't. Your home-country will is valid in Spain, but Spain has its own succession system, its own notaries, its own tax calendar, and its own Land Registry. When you die without a Spanish will, your family inherits all of that friction.
A Spanish will fixes the friction. It's a short, structured document signed before a Spanish notary and registered with the Registro Central de Últimas Voluntades — the central wills registry in Madrid. It names who inherits your Spanish assets. It elects the national law you want to govern the succession. It sits alongside your UK or US will rather than replacing it. And when the time comes, your family walks into a Spanish notary with a copy of the will and a death certificate, and things move — rather than spending six to twelve months translating a foreign probate grant, sending apostilled documents between countries, and paying for every step twice.
This is the hub page for every Spanish will service we provide. We've written it for anyone in the English-speaking expat community who needs clarity on how a Spanish will works, why it matters, what it costs to get wrong, and what the full range of options looks like. Whether you're a British retiree on the Costa Blanca, an American remote worker in Valencia, an Irish family with a holiday home in Andalusia, or a Canadian couple looking at residency in Murcia, this is where to start.
If you already know the specific service you need — mirror wills for a couple, an updated will after a divorce or remarriage, a living will (advance directive), or a Spanish power of attorney — scroll down to the services grid and click through. If you're earlier in the process, keep reading. The next sections explain exactly how a Spanish will works, when you need one, and what the cost of not having one actually looks like.
A Spanish will is a succession instrument. Its job is to tell the Spanish system who inherits which of your Spanish assets, and to state the national law that should govern that succession. It does not create a trust. It does not avoid Spanish inheritance tax by itself (though good drafting can materially reduce the bill by allowing the right regional reliefs to be claimed). It does not replace a living will. It does not pass on your foreign assets — those still run through your home-country will and your home-country probate.
That limitation is actually the design. A well-drafted Spanish will is deliberately narrow. It covers your Spanish estate and only your Spanish estate, and it expressly leaves everything else to your home-country will. The two wills run in parallel: your UK or US executor handles the home estate, our team handles the Spanish estate, nothing collides, nothing contradicts. Where it goes wrong is when people use a "global" will drafted at home and try to apply it in Spain — or when people draft a Spanish will that accidentally revokes their entire prior will. We see both regularly.
The EU Succession Regulation (commonly called Brussels IV or, more properly, Regulation 650/2012) changed how cross-border succession works in Spain from August 2015 onwards. The default rule is that the law of your habitual residence at death governs your succession. If you're a British citizen who's been living in Málaga for a decade, that default would mean Spanish succession law applies — including Spanish forced heirship, the legítima, which reserves compulsory shares for your children whether you wanted them to inherit or not.
Brussels IV lets you override that. You can elect the law of your nationality to govern your succession instead. For a British national that means English and Welsh succession law (or Scots or Northern Irish as appropriate), which preserves your freedom to leave your estate to whoever you want. For an American national it means the law of your US state of nationality. That election has to be made in writing. The cleanest place to make it is in a Spanish will. Without that election, we've seen otherwise clear estates end up in Spanish court because a child from a first marriage challenged a will that wanted to favour the second spouse. Brussels IV is the single most important clause in an expat Spanish will, and it's also the one most commonly missing from DIY versions.
If you take nothing else from this page: the Brussels IV choice-of-law election is the reason a properly drafted Spanish will is worth many times what it costs. It is what gives an English or American or Irish testator the freedom to distribute their Spanish assets the way they'd distribute their English or American or Irish ones.
Spanish law recognises three types of will, and it's worth understanding the differences because the wrong choice creates problems that only surface after death — when no one can fix them.
The open or "notary" will (testamento abierto). This is the standard. You sign before a Spanish notary, the notary reads the will back to you, confirms you understand and intend it, and it's filed in the notary's protocol and registered with the central registry in Madrid. It's the fastest will to execute after death because its validity and authenticity are established the moment you sign. This is the will we draft for 95% of clients. Unless you have a very unusual reason to do otherwise, this is what you want.
The closed or "sealed" will (testamento cerrado). You draft the will privately, seal it in an envelope, present it to the notary who certifies the envelope without reading the contents. Rarely used today. The risk is that the unread document turns out to have drafting problems that can't be corrected.
The handwritten or "holographic" will (testamento ológrafo). Written entirely in your own hand, dated, and signed. No notary involved during your lifetime. Legally valid, but practically a disaster: after death it has to be judicially authenticated, which means court proceedings that routinely take eight to eighteen months and are frequently contested. Whatever you saved on notary fees in your lifetime, your family will pay back several times over. We strongly advise against holographic wills in virtually every situation.
Every situation we meet — from a first-time Spanish will for a single expat to a mirror-will package for a cross-border family, to revoking an old will that no longer reflects the family structure — handled by bar-registered solicitors and estate planning specialists in plain English.
We draft your Spanish will from scratch — tailored to your assets in Spain, your family structure, and the national law you want to apply under Brussels IV. Fixed fee, English explanation of every clause.
Learn more How It WorksThe full step-by-step process from first instructions through the notary signing and the final registration at Madrid's central wills registry. Plain-English walkthrough of every stage.
Read the process Testamento AbiertoThe standard Spanish will, signed before a notary and held in the notary's protocol. We explain what actually happens on the day, what the notary asks you, and what you leave with.
How it works For CouplesTwo matching wills, drafted together, so each partner inherits first and then the children inherit on second death. The cleanest approach for married, civil-partnered and unmarried couples in Spain.
See the package RevisionsMarried, divorced, had a child, bought another property, moved region? We revise and re-sign. The new will automatically supersedes the old at registration.
Update a will RevocationThere are situations where a will needs to be fully revoked rather than replaced — especially where a sole beneficiary has died or where circumstances have changed so substantially that a clean slate is safer.
Revoke a will Advance DirectiveEntirely separate from a succession will. A living will records your medical wishes if you lose capacity — recognised across the Spanish regional health services and crucial for expats without family nearby.
Living will service AuthorityOften drafted alongside a will. A Spanish power of attorney lets a trusted person act for you on Spanish property, banking, tax and legal matters — indispensable for cross-border living.
POA service Decision GuideDo you need both? Can one cover everything? The short answer: you almost always need both, and we explain why in depth here — including the specific interactions between English and Spanish succession law.
Compare bothDrafting a Spanish will with us is one of the simplest pieces of legal work you'll do in Spain, and one of the most useful. Most clients go from first consultation to registered will in two to three weeks. Here is exactly how it unfolds.
A video call, usually forty-five minutes to an hour. We map your Spanish assets (property, bank accounts, vehicles, business interests), your family structure (spouse or partner, children including from previous relationships, any dependants), your home-country will if one already exists, and your preferences on who inherits what. If there is anything unusual — stepchildren, a gifted property to one child, a business share, an asset you intend to sell soon — we flag the treatment now. By the end of the call, we have everything we need to draft.
We prepare a draft in Spanish with an English translation column, so you can read every single clause in both languages. We send it with a commentary note explaining the choices: why the Brussels IV election looks the way it does, why we've phrased the substitute beneficiary clause the way we have, why we've split the residuary estate this way rather than that way. You review, come back with any changes, we iterate until you're entirely comfortable.
Short and calm. You attend a Spanish notary (we arrange the appointment near your home or your Spanish property). We attend with you. The notary reads the will aloud, confirms you understand and intend it, you sign. The whole appointment takes around thirty minutes. The notary keeps the original in their protocol.
The notary transmits the details of the will to the Registro General de Actos de Última Voluntad in Madrid within a few days of signing. This is the central registry that every Spanish notary consults after a death to determine whether a will exists. You receive a certified copy of the will (the copia autorizada) which you can keep at home or in a safe. You're done.
Our own fee for drafting a Spanish will is fixed, quoted up front after the first call, and reflects the complexity of the estate rather than an hourly timer. A single will for an individual with straightforward Spanish assets sits at one price; a mirror-will package for a couple with matched wills sits at another; a more complex estate with business assets, stepchildren, or non-standard structures needs a specific quote. We'll always tell you the total before work starts, and we don't add charges after the fact.
On top of our fee there are notary fees and registration fees, which are set by Spanish tariff and are modest relative to what a will achieves. We itemise them in the quote so there are no surprises on the day. For context: for the vast majority of expats, the full cost of drafting and registering a Spanish will is a small fraction of what the family would save in probate time, tax reliefs claimed on time, and professional fees avoided later.
The consequences of not having one aren't theoretical. We see them every week in our inheritance work — always cleaning up after the fact, always for families who didn't know the rules.
Without a Spanish will, your executors have to bring your foreign will through the Spanish system — apostilled, sworn-translated, and sometimes re-proven through a Spanish notary. That process routinely takes six to twelve months. A Spanish will reduces that timeline to weeks, because the will is already in the Spanish system, ready for use.
Under the EU Succession Regulation (Brussels IV), you can elect the succession law of your nationality — English, Scots, Irish, US state law — to govern who inherits. That choice has to be expressed in writing. A Spanish will is where we do it. Without it, Spanish default rules can apply to your estate and override the intentions stated in your home-country will.
Spanish civil law reserves compulsory shares — legítima — for children and, in some circumstances, surviving spouses. Without a properly drafted will electing your national law, the Spanish forced heirship rules can override your wishes and compel distributions you never intended, particularly problematic in blended families and second marriages.
Spanish inheritance tax is regional, time-sensitive, and filed within six months of death. A will that names beneficiaries clearly lets us file on time, claim the right regional reliefs (which in Andalusia, Valencia, Madrid, Murcia, the Balearics and Canaries can reduce the bill between close family by up to 99%), and avoid the surcharges that hit badly organised estates.
Patterns we see on the other end of this — in inheritance files where the expat planning went wrong. Every one of these is fixable in the lifetime of the testator. None of them is fixable afterwards.
The foreign will is recognised in Spain, but the process of proving it in Spain adds six to twelve months to probate and several thousand euros in translation and apostille costs. A short Spanish will covering Spanish assets solves it.
A Spanish will without the choice-of-law clause leaves the succession potentially subject to Spanish forced heirship. The clause is a single sentence. Its absence can cost an estate tens of thousands of euros and years of delay.
Template Spanish wills often contain generic revocation language. Applied literally, that language revokes all prior wills — including the UK or US will handling the rest of the estate. Disastrous and entirely avoidable with proper drafting.
A will drafted before a divorce, remarriage, a new child, or an inheritance received is almost always out of date. Spanish law doesn't automatically update a will for you. If the facts of your life have changed, so should the document.
A handwritten will is legally valid but practically hostile. It needs judicial authentication after death, during which it can be (and routinely is) challenged. Any cost saving during the testator's lifetime is erased many times over in court fees afterwards.
Separate from a succession will, the living will (testamento vital) needs to be registered regionally to be used by Spanish medical staff. An unregistered advance directive held at home doesn't help anyone in an intensive care unit at three in the morning.
Most Spanish wills are drafted, signed and registered within two to three weeks of first instruction — and sit quietly in the background for the rest of your life.
Book a ConsultationOur wills work runs across the whole English-speaking expat community in Spain. The approach is always the same: understand the family and the assets, protect the plan, write it down in language the notary will accept and the family will understand.
Full-time residents, holiday-home owners, and Brexit-era arrivals. Dedicated guidance in our British expat wills in Spain page, including post-Brexit domicile and IHT interaction.
US citizens with Spanish property or residency — including coordination with US state law and the US federal estate-tax position. See American expat wills in Spain.
Irish nationals with Spanish assets, including interaction between Irish succession law and Spanish legítima. See Irish expat wills in Spain.
Married, in a civil partnership, or unmarried with shared property. Our mirror wills package is built specifically for couples with Spanish assets.
Holiday-home owners who don't live in Spain but want their Spanish apartment, villa or land to pass cleanly without their family dealing with Spanish probate from abroad.
Second marriages, stepchildren, children from earlier relationships — exactly the situations where forced heirship and Brussels IV elections need the most careful drafting.
Every term here is something you'll see on a Spanish will, a notary invoice, or a tax filing. We translate them in our drafts; this glossary is for reference.
The standard Spanish notary will. Drafted and signed at the notary, who reads it to you on the day and keeps the original.
Handwritten will. Valid but procedurally hostile after death. We advise against.
Living will — advance medical directive. Separate from succession.
Forced heirship share reserved by Spanish civil law for children and in some cases spouses.
EU succession regulation that lets you elect your national law over Spanish default rules.
The central wills registry in Madrid where every notary will is recorded. Searched on death.
Certified copy of the will issued by the notary after signing. Kept by you.
Forced heirs — the category of family members protected by legítima.
Executor — the person responsible for carrying out the will. Appointed in the will itself.
Spanish notary. A public officer, not a solicitor. Drafts the deed and holds the protocol.
Everything expat clients ask us in the first consultation, answered here.
Most of our clients walk away from the first call with a clear plan and a fixed fee. A Spanish will is one of the cheapest pieces of legal work you'll ever do — and one of the most useful.

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