The Declaración de la Renta (Modelo 100) is the annual personal income tax return for Spanish tax residents, reporting worldwide income — salary, pensions, rental income, interest, dividends and capital gains. It's filed in the spring/early summer for the previous calendar year (the window typically runs roughly April to the end of June). Income tax (IRPF) is progressive, with combined state and regional rates running from around 19% to roughly 47–54% at the top depending on your region; savings income (interest, dividends, gains) is taxed on a separate, lower scale (about 19%–28%). Personal and family allowances reduce the bill, and foreign income is relieved under the relevant treaty. Your first year as a resident is the one to get right — that's when worldwide income, treaty claims and any Modelo 720 reporting all start. Non-residents don't file the Renta; they use the Modelo 210 instead.
What the Renta Is
The "Renta" is Spain's annual personal income tax return, the way residents reconcile their IRPF (Impuesto sobre la Renta de las Personas Físicas — personal income tax) for the year. Through the year, tax may already have been withheld at source on Spanish salaries and some income; the Renta brings everything together, applies your allowances and reliefs, and works out whether you owe more or are due a refund. For most employees with only Spanish salary it's relatively routine; for expats with foreign pensions, overseas income, investments and treaty considerations, it's the document where the complexity lives.
Crucially, the Renta is for residents. If you're tax resident in Spain — broadly, more than 183 days a year or your main interests here — you report your worldwide income on it. If you're a non-resident, you don't file the Renta at all; instead you deal with Spanish-source income (like rent from a Spanish property or the imputed income on a holiday home) through the separate non-resident tax return, Modelo 210. Knowing which side of that line you're on is the first question, because it determines the entire shape of your Spanish tax obligations — and our tax residency guide explains how the line is drawn.
Who Must File
Not every resident has to file — there are income thresholds below which filing isn't compulsory (for example, employees with a single employer and modest income often aren't required to). But for expats, the situations that do require a return are common:
- Multiple income sources — e.g. a pension plus rental income, or income from more than one payer above the lower threshold that applies in that case.
- Foreign income — pensions, rent, dividends or gains from abroad generally bring you into filing.
- Self-employment / autónomo — anyone with self-employed activity files.
- Capital gains — selling property, shares or other assets at a gain.
- To claim a refund or relief — even where not strictly obliged, filing may recover over-withheld tax or claim deductions.
Because most expats have foreign pensions or income, the practical reality is that the great majority of resident expats need to file the Renta each year. There's also a strategic angle: even when filing isn't compulsory, doing so can be worthwhile to claim a refund or apply deductions you'd otherwise lose. We assess each client's position to confirm whether filing is obligatory, beneficial, or both.
Residents report worldwide income
As a Spanish resident, the Renta covers everything you earn anywhere — not just Spanish income. Foreign pensions, overseas rent, global investment income and gains all belong on it, with treaty relief preventing double taxation. Leaving foreign income off because "it's already taxed abroad" is a common and risky error.
What Income Is Included
The Renta gathers all your income into two broad "boxes," which are taxed on different scales:
| Box | What goes in it | Taxed on |
|---|---|---|
| General income | Employment, pensions, self-employment, rental income | The progressive general scale (state + regional) |
| Savings income | Interest, dividends, capital gains on investments and property | The lower savings scale (~19%–28%) |
This split matters because savings income is taxed more lightly than general income — investment returns and capital gains top out around 28%, whereas general income (salary, pensions) can be taxed at much higher marginal rates. For expats, the typical contents are a foreign pension (general income), perhaps some rental income (general), and interest/dividends/gains from investments (savings). Foreign income is converted to euros, reported in the right box, and any tax paid abroad is relieved under the relevant double-taxation treaty so it isn't taxed twice. Getting income into the correct box — and applying the right treaty treatment — is a core part of preparing an accurate return.
The IRPF Rates
Spanish income tax is progressive and partly regional: the rate you pay is a combination of a state scale and your autonomous community's scale, so the exact rates differ by region. As an indication, the combined general scale runs roughly:
| General income (indicative, combined) | Approx. rate |
|---|---|
| First band (up to ~€12,450) | ~19% |
| ~€12,450–€20,200 | ~24% |
| ~€20,200–€35,200 | ~30% |
| ~€35,200–€60,000 | ~37% |
| ~€60,000–€300,000 | ~45% |
| Above ~€300,000 | ~47%+ (region-dependent) |
These are indicative combined figures — your region adds its own scale on top of the state portion, so the top rate varies (some regions exceed others). Savings income sits on its own separate, lower scale (roughly 19% to 28% across bands), which is why investment income and capital gains are taxed more gently than salary and pensions. The progressivity means the marginal rate on your top slice of income can be high, but personal and family allowances (below) reduce the effective rate, especially at lower incomes. The takeaway for planning is that the type and region of your income materially affect the bill — not just the total.
Allowances & Deductions
The headline rates aren't what you actually pay, because a series of allowances and deductions come off first:
- Personal allowance (mínimo personal) — a tax-free personal minimum, increased for taxpayers over 65 and over 75.
- Family allowances — additional minimums for dependent children and dependent elderly relatives living with you.
- Joint vs separate filing — married couples can choose to file jointly or separately, and which is better depends on the income split — worth modelling each year.
- Regional deductions — many regions offer their own deductions (for example for rent, children, education or certain investments), which vary by community.
- Pension contributions and other reliefs — qualifying contributions and specific reliefs reduce the taxable base.
For retirees, the age-related increases to the personal allowance are particularly valuable, and the over-65 reliefs interact with the capital gains rules too. For families, the child and dependent allowances and the joint-vs-separate choice can swing the result meaningfully. Many expats overpay simply by not claiming the regional deductions they're entitled to or by filing separately when jointly would be cheaper (or vice versa). Capturing every allowance you qualify for is one of the clearest ways a properly prepared return saves money over a rushed or default one.
Deadlines & the Process
The Renta campaign for a given year runs the following spring, with the filing window typically opening around April and closing at the end of June (with an earlier cut-off if you're paying by direct debit). The process, in outline:
Gather your data
Spanish income data is pre-populated in a draft (borrador), but foreign income, gains and reliefs must be added — the draft is rarely complete or correct for expats.
Build the return
Add worldwide income, apply treaty relief, claim allowances and deductions, and place income in the correct boxes.
Review the result
Check whether you owe (a pagar) or are due a refund (a devolver), and whether joint or separate filing is better.
File and pay/collect
Submit within the window; pay any tax (it can often be split into two instalments) or receive your refund.
The biggest trap is the borrador (draft). Spain helpfully pre-fills a draft from the data it holds — but it only knows about Spanish-source income. For an expat with a foreign pension, overseas rent or investments abroad, the draft is incomplete, and simply accepting it would mean under-declaring (a compliance risk) and missing reliefs. The draft is a starting point, not the answer, which is exactly why expat returns need proper preparation rather than one-click acceptance.
Your First Year
The first Renta after becoming resident is the most important — and the most error-prone. Several things happen at once: your worldwide income comes into scope for the first time, you may need to make treaty claims (such as getting UK or US pensions paid gross — see our UK pension and US pension guides), and if you have foreign assets over the thresholds, your first Modelo 720 reporting falls due too. There can also be questions about split-year treatment and exactly when in the year you became resident, which affect what's taxable in Spain versus your old country for that first year.
Get the first year right and the following years are largely a repeatable rhythm; get it wrong — by under-declaring foreign income, missing treaty relief, or overlooking Modelo 720 — and you can create problems that compound. This is why we put particular care into the first resident return, setting up the treaty claims and reporting correctly so everything is on a clean footing from the start. If you're newly resident, it's the single most valuable return to have professionally prepared.
How We Help
We prepare and file the Declaración de la Renta for resident expats — turning a borrador that only knows your Spanish income into a complete, accurate, optimised return. We gather and convert your worldwide income, place it in the correct boxes, apply treaty relief on foreign pensions and income, claim every allowance and regional deduction you qualify for, and model joint vs separate filing. We give special attention to your first resident year and coordinate with Modelo 720, wealth tax and capital gains where relevant. It's the backbone of our expat tax service, in plain English on a clear quote. Book a consultation ahead of the filing season.
Related Guides
Savings & Investment Income Tax
How interest, dividends and gains are taxed within the return.
Savings & investment tax →Frequently Asked Questions
It's Spain's annual personal income tax return (Modelo 100) for tax residents, reconciling your IRPF for the year. It brings together your worldwide income — salary, pensions, rent, interest, dividends and gains — applies your allowances and reliefs, and works out whether you owe more tax or are due a refund. It's filed in the spring/early summer for the previous calendar year.
If you're a Spanish tax resident, very likely yes. There are income thresholds below which filing isn't compulsory, but most expats are caught — by having foreign pensions or income, multiple income sources, self-employment, or capital gains. Even where filing isn't obligatory, it can be worthwhile to claim a refund or deductions. Non-residents don't file the Renta; they use Modelo 210 instead.
Yes. As a resident you report worldwide income on the Renta — foreign pensions, overseas rent, global dividends and gains all belong on it, converted to euros. Tax paid abroad is relieved under the relevant double-taxation treaty so the same income isn't taxed twice. Leaving foreign income off because it's already taxed abroad is a common and risky mistake — the relief is claimed through the return, not by omission.
IRPF is progressive and partly regional. The combined general scale (state plus your region) runs from around 19% on the first band up to roughly 47% or more at the top, varying by region. Savings income — interest, dividends and capital gains — is taxed on a separate, lower scale of about 19% to 28%. Personal and family allowances reduce the effective rate, especially at lower incomes.
The Renta campaign runs the spring after the tax year, with the window typically opening around April and closing at the end of June (earlier if paying by direct debit). You file for the previous calendar year. Any tax due can often be split into two instalments. Missing the deadline brings surcharges and interest, so it's worth preparing ahead of the season rather than at the last minute.
Usually not, if you're an expat. The borrador is pre-filled only from Spanish-source data Spain already holds — it doesn't know about your foreign pension, overseas rent or investments abroad. Accepting it would mean under-declaring worldwide income (a compliance risk) and missing reliefs and deductions. The draft is a starting point, not the answer; expat returns need proper preparation.
It depends on your income split. Married couples can choose joint or separate filing, and joint filing offers an allowance that can help where one spouse has little income, while separate can be better where both have substantial income. The right choice changes year to year with your circumstances, so it's worth modelling both each time rather than defaulting to one.
Because several things start at once: your worldwide income comes into scope, treaty claims (like getting UK/US pensions paid gross) need setting up, your first Modelo 720 reporting may fall due, and split-year questions about when you became resident affect what's taxable. Getting the first return right puts everything on a clean footing; getting it wrong can create compounding problems. It's the most valuable return to have professionally prepared.