Since 2022, a value set by the Spanish Catastro — not the price you actually pay — can decide how much Transfer Tax and Inheritance Tax you owe on a property. Here is what the valor de referencia is, when it costs you money, and how to challenge it when it is wrong.
The valor de referencia — the "reference value" — is a figure that the Spanish cadastre (the Dirección General del Catastro) assigns to almost every property in the country. It is not the price you pay, it is not what an estate agent lists the property for, and it is not the same as the older cadastral value you may have seen on an IBI bill. It is a separate value, calculated centrally, published once a year, and — crucially — used by the tax authorities as a minimum taxable base for two of the most important taxes a foreign buyer or heir will ever face in Spain.
Until the start of 2022 the rule was straightforward: when you bought a resale property or inherited one, you generally paid tax on the price stated in the deed or the value you declared. The tax office could challenge a figure it thought was too low, but the burden was on them to prove it. From 1 January 2022 that changed. For Transfer Tax on second-hand purchases and for Inheritance and Gift Tax, the taxable base became the greater of the price you declared and the valor de referencia. If the reference value is higher than the price you actually paid, you are taxed on the higher figure — even though no more money changed hands.
Spanish property has several "values", each used for a different tax. Mixing them up is where the confusion starts.
Set by the Catastro, published yearly, and used as the minimum taxable base for Transfer Tax (ITP) on resale purchases and for Inheritance & Gift Tax. This is the figure that can sit above the real price and increase your bill. It is the subject of this page.
The older cadastral value, typically well below market value, used to calculate the annual IBI property tax and the municipal "plusvalía". It is a different number, set differently, and the 2022 reform did not change its role. It is not what ITP or inheritance tax is based on.
What the property is actually worth and what you actually pay. It still matters — your tax base is the higher of this and the valor de referencia — but it is no longer the automatic starting point it once was for resale and inheritance taxes.
The single most common mistake we see is a buyer assuming the valor de referencia is the same as the valor catastral on an old IBI receipt and concluding "the tax value is low, so my tax will be low." They are not the same number. The valor catastral is usually a fraction of market value; the valor de referencia is designed to track much closer to it. Budgeting your purchase taxes off the wrong value can leave you thousands of euros short when the bill arrives.
The valor de referencia was created by Law 11/2021 — the law on measures to prevent and combat tax fraud — and took effect for transactions and acquisitions from 1 January 2022. For years the Spanish tax administration had fought a running battle over the value of property. Buyers and heirs declared one figure; regional tax offices often disagreed and issued comprobación de valores — value-check assessments demanding tax on a higher amount. Those assessments were challenged constantly, and the courts repeatedly told the tax office that it could not simply apply a coefficient to the cadastral value without properly inspecting and justifying the figure for the specific property.
The valor de referencia was the administration's answer to losing those battles. Instead of having to prove a property was worth more after the event, the law now provides a published value in advance and, in effect, reverses the burden of proof. The taxable base is presumed to be at least the valor de referencia, and if you think that is too high, it is now you who must prove it — not the tax office. That shift, from "the state must justify a higher value" to "the taxpayer must disprove the published value," is the real significance of the reform, and it is why understanding the figure before you commit matters so much more than it used to.
The Catastro does not value your individual property by sending someone to inspect it. Instead it works from the prices recorded in front of notaries when properties change hands, grouped by area and property type. From that transaction data it builds annual "modules" — representative value bands for each zone — and applies them to the characteristics of each property already held in the cadastral record, such as its surface area, use, age and location. The result is a value that is meant to reflect the general market in that area without being a bespoke appraisal of your specific home.
Two features of this method matter in practice. First, because it is built from averages across an area, the valor de referencia can be wildly off for an individual property — it does not know that your flat is on the ground floor facing a noisy road, that it needs full renovation, or that it has no lift. A street-level average applied to a below-average property is exactly where unfair figures come from. Second, to stop the reference value routinely exceeding real market prices, the law applies a reducing factor to the raw modules; for property this has been set at a coefficient of 0.9, intended to keep the figure at or below market. That safeguard helps, but it does not cure the problem for properties that are genuinely worth less than the area average.
For a buyer, the valor de referencia turns one question into a habit you should never skip: before you agree a price and certainly before you complete, find out the reference value of the specific property. If it sits at or below the price you are paying, it changes nothing — you are taxed on the price as normal. The problem arises when the reference value is higher than the price. That can happen with a genuine bargain, a motivated seller, a probate or repossession sale, or simply a property in poorer condition than the area average. In those cases the tax office will calculate your ITP on the reference value, and you will pay transfer tax on money you never spent.
There is a second, less obvious trap. If you buy well below the valor de referencia and declare the low real price, the gap between the two figures can be treated by the authorities as though value has been transferred to you — potentially raising questions for both buyer and seller, including possible gift-tax exposure and income-tax consequences for the seller. The safe approach is to know the reference value in advance, model the real tax cost into your budget, and decide deliberately whether the deal still works or whether the figure is worth challenging. This is precisely the kind of check a good independent lawyer acting only for the buyer builds into the conveyancing, alongside the wider cost of buying analysis.
For families dealing with a death or planning a lifetime gift, the valor de referencia is just as significant — and arguably harder to plan around, because the property is not being sold and there is no real price to compare against. When Spanish property passes on death or by gift, Inheritance and Gift Tax is calculated on a value that cannot be lower than the reference value. Heirs who once declared a conservative figure to keep the tax down no longer have that option for the part of the estate that is real property: the floor is fixed by the Catastro.
The consequence reaches into the future as well. The value used for inheritance or gift tax generally becomes the acquisition value of the property for the heir or recipient. That matters when they later sell, because capital gains tax is charged on the difference between the acquisition value and the sale price. A higher inheritance value means more inheritance tax now but a smaller capital gain later; a lower one means the reverse. Because the valor de referencia removes much of the discretion that used to exist here, sensible estate planning for foreign owners now has to take the reference value into account from the start. Our guidance on inheritance tax in Spain looks at the wider picture, including the regional reliefs that can dramatically change the final bill.
One point that frequently confuses foreign buyers is the relationship between the national reference value and the regional taxes it feeds. The valor de referencia itself is set centrally by the Catastro and is the same wherever you are in mainland Spain. But the taxes built on top of it — Transfer Tax and Inheritance and Gift Tax — are devolved to the autonomous communities, which set their own rates and reliefs. So the base may be national, but the rate applied to it, and the reliefs that reduce the final bill, depend heavily on where the property is.
That is why the same inheritance can produce a modest bill in one region and a painful one in another, and why ITP on an identical purchase price differs between, say, Andalucía, the Valencian Community and Murcia. The valor de referencia decides the size of the cake; the region decides how big a slice the tax authority takes. When we advise on a specific transaction we look at both together — the reference value for that property and the rules of the relevant autonomous community — because only the combination tells you the real number. The Balearic and Canary Islands and the foral territories of the Basque Country and Navarra have their own particularities again, which is another reason general online estimates so often mislead.
The valor de referencia is one of those reforms that is simple to state and awkward to live with. The principle — tax on the higher of price and a published value — fits in a sentence, but the consequences ripple through your purchase budget, your inheritance planning and your future capital gains, and the means of challenging an unfair figure are technical and time-limited. For a foreign buyer or heir who is not reading the Spanish tax bulletins, the risk is not that the rule is complicated to understand but that it is easy to overlook until the bill lands.
Our role is to make the figure visible and manageable before it can hurt you. On a purchase, we obtain and check the reference value for the specific property, model the real transfer-tax cost into your budget, and flag when the figure looks high enough to be worth challenging. On an inheritance or gift, we factor the reference value into the tax calculation and the longer-term capital-gains position, and we coordinate the valuation evidence where a challenge makes sense. And when a figure genuinely overstates a property, we assess the strength of a challenge honestly and run the rectification or appeal where it is worth it. We act for English-speaking clients across Spain, we explain everything in plain English, and where the work falls outside a clear scope we will tell you what it involves and quote for it rather than leave you guessing. Extras may apply depending on the complexity of your matter.
It is a reference value assigned to almost every property by the Spanish Catastro, published annually. Since 2022 it acts as the minimum taxable base for Transfer Tax (ITP) on resale purchases and for Inheritance and Gift Tax. If it is higher than the price you paid or the value you declare, you are taxed on the reference value.
No. The valor catastral is an older value, usually well below market price, used for the annual IBI tax and the municipal plusvalía. The valor de referencia is a separate figure, designed to track much closer to market value, and is used for purchase and inheritance taxes. Confusing the two is the most common and costly mistake.
It applies to transactions and acquisitions from 1 January 2022, under Law 11/2021 on measures to prevent tax fraud. Purchases and inheritances before that date were generally taxed on the declared price or value.
Mainly two: Transfer Tax (ITP) on second-hand property purchases, and Inheritance and Gift Tax (ISD). It does not change the IBI or plusvalía, which are still based on the cadastral value, and it does not apply to new-build purchases, which are taxed on price via VAT and Stamp Duty.
Generally no. The first sale of a new property by a developer is subject to VAT (IVA) plus Stamp Duty (AJD), calculated on the actual price. The valor de referencia regime is aimed at resale purchases and inheritances, not new builds.
You will still be taxed on the reference value, not the lower price, for ITP purposes. In addition, a large gap between the price and the reference value can raise questions about whether value has effectively been gifted, with possible tax consequences for both buyer and seller. It is best to know the figure before you complete.
Yes. It is presumed correct but not unchallengeable. You can either pay the tax on the reference value and then file to rectify the self-assessment and reclaim the excess, or declare the real value and appeal the supplementary assessment that follows. Both routes require evidence — typically an independent appraisal, comparable sales and proof of the property's condition.
The strongest evidence is a formal valuation by a qualified appraiser (a tasación), records of comparable sales of genuinely similar properties, and documentation of the property's actual condition — defects, the absence of a lift, poor orientation, or works needed. This shows the area-average reference value overstates your specific property.
The Catastro builds annual value modules from prices recorded before notaries, grouped by area and property type, and applies them to each property's cadastral characteristics. A reducing coefficient (0.9 for property) is applied to help keep the figure at or below market. Because it is based on area averages, it can be inaccurate for an individual property.
It is published on the Catastro's electronic portal (the Sede Electrónica del Catastro), and the owner or an authorised representative can obtain a certificate of the figure for a specific property. We routinely obtain and check it as part of advising on a purchase or inheritance.
Indirectly, yes. When property is inherited or gifted, the value used for inheritance or gift tax — which cannot be below the reference value — generally becomes the acquisition value for the recipient. That figure is then used to calculate capital gains tax if they later sell, so the reference value can affect tax years into the future.
The valor de referencia is set nationally, but Transfer Tax and Inheritance and Gift Tax are devolved to the autonomous communities, which set their own rates and reliefs. So the taxable base may be similar while the rate and final bill differ significantly depending on where the property is located.
Yes. We obtain and review the reference value for a specific property as part of advising on a purchase, inheritance or gift, model the real tax cost, and advise whether the figure is worth challenging. We act for English-speaking clients across Spain and will quote clearly for any work beyond an initial assessment.
The valor de referencia can quietly add thousands to a purchase or an inheritance — or be challenged when it is wrong. We check it, model your real tax, and act where a challenge is worth it. In plain English, across Spain.
The information on this page is general guidance only and does not constitute legal or tax advice. The valor de referencia, the coefficients applied to it, and the rates and reliefs for Transfer Tax (ITP) and Inheritance and Gift Tax (ISD) are set out in legislation that changes over time and varies between Spain's autonomous communities and foral territories. Always obtain advice on your specific property and circumstances before acting. Platinum Legal Spain is an independent English-speaking legal practice serving clients across Spain.