Earning income from both countries? Spain and the UK have a tax treaty to prevent you being taxed twice on the same income. Understand tie-breaker rules for pensions, employment, and property income. Tax credits, relief mechanisms, and filing obligations clarified for UK expats in Spain.
If you're a British expat in Spain earning income from both countries, you face the risk of double taxation. Fortunately, Spain and the UK signed a comprehensive tax treaty (Convention for the Avoidance of Double Taxation, signed in 1972, effective from 12 June 2014) that allocates taxing rights and provides relief mechanisms. The treaty doesn't eliminate all tax—both countries may tax the same income—but it ensures one country gets "primary" taxing rights and the other provides relief (usually via the credit method, called deducción por doble imposición internacional in Spanish tax law). Understanding the treaty's tie-breaker rules is critical for pensions (government vs. private), employment income, and rental or capital gains on property. Post-Brexit, the treaty applies unchanged; however, the UK is now a third country, so EU-specific provisions don't apply. The treaty is enforced through the Spanish Agencia Tributaria (tax authority, AEAT) and HMRC in the UK.
The Spain–UK tax treaty operates on a straightforward principle: each country allocates "taxing rights" for different types of income. For most income types, ONE country gets primary taxing rights (the right to tax first), and the other provides relief to prevent double taxation. The treaty framework applies to residents of Spain and residents of the UK; tax residency is determined using a five-step tie-breaker test (permanent home, centre of vital interests, habitual abode, nationality, mutual agreement). Once you're established as resident in one country, you apply treaty provisions to all income—whether sourced domestically or abroad. Relief mechanisms include:
One country fully exempts the income; the other taxes it exclusively. Used for employment income and business income. Example: Spain taxes a UK expat's Spanish employment; the UK exempts it. No double tax paid.
Both countries may tax the income, but you claim a credit (deducción por doble imposición) in your resident country for taxes paid in the source country. Used for pensions, investment income, rental income. Limited to the lesser of foreign tax paid or resident-country tax due.
One country allows the other country's tax as a deduction from income (not as direct credit). Rare and less favorable than credit; rarely used in UK–Spain treaty context.
The treaty allocates taxing rights systematically. Understanding which income type applies to your situation is crucial for calculating both Spanish IRPF and UK tax obligations. Below is a summary of Articles 14–18 and key provisions:
| Income Type | Treaty Article | Primary Taxing Right | Relief in Secondary Country |
|---|---|---|---|
| Employment (rendimientos del trabajo) | Art. 14 | Where work performed (usually Spain for Spain-based work) | Tax credit in UK |
| Directors' fees (honorarios de consejero) | Art. 15 | Resident country; source country may tax if 183+ days presence | Exemption or credit |
| Business/Self-Employment | Art. 7 | Resident country (Spain if resident there) | Exemption in source country |
| UK Government Pensions (civil service, NHS, armed forces, teachers, police) | Art. 18 | UK taxes exclusively (with exception) | Spain exempts (no credit applicable) |
| Private Pensions (company pensions, SIPPs, occupational) | Art. 17 | Resident country (Spain if resident there) | Tax credit in source country |
| UK State Pension (Old Age Pension) | Art. 17 (private pension treatment) | UK; Spain as resident grants credit | Credit in Spain on Modelo 100 |
| Real estate rental income (rendimientos inmobiliarios) | Art. 6 | Where property situated (Spain for Spanish property) | Tax credit in UK |
| Capital gains on property (ganancias patrimoniales) | Art. 13 | Where property situated (Spain) | Tax credit in UK (if applicable) |
| Capital gains on shares/securities | Art. 13 | Generally resident country | Relief in source country |
| Dividends (dividendos) | Art. 10 | Resident country; source withholding up to 10–15% | Credit for withholding in resident country |
| Interest (intereses) | Art. 11 | Resident country; 0% source withholding | No withholding; resident state taxes |
| Royalties (cánones) | Art. 12 | Resident country; source may withhold 10% | Credit for withholding |
If you have a permanent home in both countries (or neither), the treaty applies a five-step tie-breaker test (Article 4(2)) to determine your tax residence:
For most UK expats moving to Spain, you'll be classified as Spanish resident if you have a permanent home there (step 1) or spend 183+ days there annually (step 3). Once Spanish resident, you're taxed on worldwide income under Spanish IRPF rules, but treaty relief applies to UK-source income.
Article 14 of the treaty allocates employment income to the country where work is performed. The critical test is whether you perform work in Spain. If you work for a Spanish employer in a Spanish office, Spain has primary taxing rights. If you work remotely for a UK employer (no Spanish office), the analysis is complex: Spain may still claim rights if you perform work in Spanish territory, even for a foreign employer. The 183-day rule applies as a threshold: if you're physically present in Spain for 183+ days in any 12-month period and performing employment, Spain typically asserts taxing rights. The UK then grants relief via tax credit. A critical nuance: the location of the employer matters less than the location where the work is physically performed.
One of the treaty's most important distinctions is between government (public sector) pensions and private pensions. Article 18 allocates government pensions (pensión pública) exclusively to the source country. For UK government pensions (including NHS, police, armed forces, civil service, and teacher pensions), the UK taxes the pension, and Spain exempts it (no credit applies). This is favorable compared to private pensions, which are taxed by the resident country (Spain if you're resident there).
However, Article 17 treats UK state pensions (Old Age Pensions, National Insurance pensions) as private pensions for treaty purposes. This means: the UK taxes the state pension (its source country), but Spain, as your resident country, also claims tax on worldwide income. Spain allows a credit for UK tax paid. You declare the UK state pension in Spanish Modelo 100 (IRPF) and claim a credit for any UK tax withheld.
Private pensions (company pensions, SIPPs, occupational schemes) follow the resident-country rule: if you're resident in Spain, Spain taxes the pension. The UK grants relief via treaty credit or exemption depending on the pension type.
The treaty treats UK state pensions (pensión estatal) as private pensions under Article 17. The UK has primary taxing rights because state pensions originate from the UK's social security system. If you're a Spanish tax resident, Spain also claims tax on worldwide income (including the UK pension), but grants a credit for any UK tax paid. The filing process works as follows:
Example scenario: British retiree, age 70, receiving £12,000 annual UK state pension, Spanish resident. UK withholds £0 (below personal allowance). Spain calculates IRPF at 20% = €2,400 tax due. Spain allows a credit of £0 (no UK tax paid), so you owe Spain €2,400. The pension is not double-taxed (UK withholds nothing), but you do pay Spanish tax.
Government pensions (pensión pública) from the UK civil service, NHS, armed forces, teachers, police, and similar public sector schemes are treated differently under Article 18. These pensions are taxed exclusively by the UK; Spain exempts them (no Spanish tax, no credit). This is the most favorable treatment and a key advantage of government pensions.
However, Article 18 contains a critical exception: if you're both a UK tax resident and a Spanish tax resident AND you're a Spanish national (or naturalized Spanish citizen), Spain may assert taxing rights over your government pension. For most British nationals who retire to Spain, this exception doesn't apply, and you enjoy full exemption. File your UK Self Assessment (if the pension is your only income, you may not need to); Spain doesn't tax the pension.
Private pensions (pensión privada u ocupacional) from company schemes, self-invested personal pensions (SIPPs), and occupational schemes follow the resident-country rule under Article 17. If you're resident in Spain, Spain has primary taxing rights and taxes the pension under IRPF rules. The UK grants relief via treaty credit or exemption.
Key points: UK tax is not usually withheld from private pension withdrawals (unlike state pensions). When you draw a SIPP or company pension as a Spanish resident, the full amount is Spanish-taxable income. Declare it in Modelo 100 at its gross amount. Spain taxes at your marginal IRPF rate (potentially 20–45% depending on your total income). The UK doesn't tax it (UK exemption), so no credit applies. This is less favorable than state pensions.
Many UK pension schemes allow a lump sum withdrawal (up to 25% of the fund) tax-free under UK rules. However, Spain does not recognize this UK tax exemption. If you take a lump sum from a UK pension after becoming Spanish resident, Spain taxes the entire lump sum as Spanish income. Timing is critical: if possible, crystallize and withdraw the lump sum BEFORE establishing Spanish residency to avoid Spanish tax. If you're already Spanish resident, the lump sum is Spanish-taxable.
Example: British expat, Spanish resident, draws £40,000 lump sum from SIPP (25% tax-free under UK rules). UK: £0 tax. Spain: declares £40,000 as income, taxed at marginal IRPF rate (say 25%) = €10,000 Spanish tax. The UK exemption doesn't apply to Spain—the entire lump sum is taxable.
Some UK expats transfer UK pensions to Qualifying Recognized Overseas Pensions (QROPs) in countries like Spain or Portugal to reduce tax. Treaty relief for QROP distributions depends on the QROP's structure. If the QROP is treated as a foreign pension plan, it may be taxable in Spain as the resident country. However, if the QROP distributes funds in a lump sum (rather than ongoing pension payments), Spain may apply different rules. Consult a tax specialist before establishing a QROP; the tax efficiency is not always clear under the UK–Spain treaty.
UK ISAs are famously tax-free in the UK (no income tax, capital gains tax, or dividend tax on ISA growth). However, as a Spanish resident, the income, dividends, and capital gains within the ISA become subject to Spanish tax (IRPF). This is a major disadvantage often overlooked by expats moving to Spain.
Why? The treaty doesn't carve out ISA income as exempt. Spain, as your resident country, claims tax on worldwide income, including ISA distributions and gains. Dividends within an ISA are Spanish-taxable; capital gains on ISA shares are Spanish-taxable; interest within an ISA is Spanish-taxable. The UK ISA wrapper (tax shelter) provides no relief in Spain. Treat ISA income as regular investment income on your Modelo 100.
Example: British expat has £50,000 in a UK ISA earning 4% = £2,000 annual dividend income. As Spanish resident, Spain taxes this £2,000 dividend at your marginal IRPF rate (say 20%) = €400 Spanish tax. The ISA tax-free status in the UK is ignored. To mitigate, some expats move ISA funds to more tax-efficient accounts or invest in instruments that defer distribution (growth funds rather than dividend-paying funds).
UK Premium Bond winnings and UK lottery prizes are tax-free in the UK. However, as a Spanish resident, prize winnings are Spanish-taxable. Declare UK Premium Bond or lottery wins in your Modelo 100 as Spanish-source income (or world income), and pay Spanish tax. The UK tax exemption doesn't apply in Spain.
If you work for a Spanish company or a UK company with a Spanish workplace, Spain has primary taxing rights under Article 14 of the treaty. You owe Spanish IRPF on the salary (rendimientos del trabajo). The UK grants relief via exemption—UK HMRC doesn't tax the Spanish employment income. Your Spanish employer deducts Spanish IRPF at source (progressive rates from 19% to 45% depending on salary level). You file an annual Spanish Modelo 100 (IRPF return) to finalize Spanish tax. You're unlikely to owe UK income tax, provided you're not UK resident.
Remote work presents the most contentious issue in UK–Spain tax planning. If you work remotely for a UK company from a Spanish office (or your home in Spain), the treaty allocation depends on where the work is performed:
UK salary withdrawn from Spanish employer account: If your UK employer deposits salary to your Spanish bank account, Spain has compelling evidence that the work is Spanish-sourced. Spain taxes the full salary as IRPF. The UK grants exemption (no UK income tax on the Spanish-sourced employment).
The critical tax authority positions: AEAT (Spanish tax authority) asserts that work performed by a Spanish resident, even remotely for a foreign employer, is Spanish-source and subject to IRPF. HMRC (UK tax authority) generally respects that Spain has primary taxing rights if the work is performed in Spain. Both authorities acknowledge treaty relief via exemption method: Spain taxes; UK exempts.
Directors' fees (honorarios de consejero) are allocated under Article 15. If you're a director of a UK company and resident in Spain, the allocation is complex. Generally: if the director services are performed in Spain (attending board meetings in Spain, managing the UK company from Spain), Spain may claim taxing rights. However, if the company is UK-registered and all board activities are conducted in the UK, the UK has primary rights. Most UK–Spain treaty applications treat directors' fees as employment-like income taxed where the work is performed. If you're a Spanish resident director of a UK firm, assume Spain taxes the fees unless the company is entirely non-Spanish-source.
The treaty grants the UK primary taxing rights over UK rental income under Article 6. If you're a Spanish tax resident, the UK taxes the rental income first; Spain then allows a credit for UK tax paid. The filing process:
Example: British expat, Spanish resident, earns £12,000 annual net UK rental income (after expenses). UK calculates tax at 20% = £2,400. Spain calculates tax at 25% = €3,000. Spain allows a credit of £2,400 (UK tax paid), so you owe Spain €600 (€3,000 – €2,400). Total tax: UK £2,400 + Spain €600.
The UK deduction benefit: The UK's detailed rental deduction rules (mortgage interest, maintenance, council tax, insurance) reduce your UK taxable base before UK tax is calculated. This reduced UK tax figure becomes the credit you claim in Spain, potentially reducing double taxation. Maximize UK deductions to minimize the overhang.
The UK taxes capital gains on UK property under Article 13. For UK residential property, capital gains tax (CGT) is 0% (main residence exemption); for investment property, CGT is 20% for higher earners. If you're Spanish resident, the UK taxes the gain; Spain allows a credit.
Filing: Report the gain in UK Self Assessment. Spain asks for the gain in Modelo 100 and allows a credit for UK CGT paid. Spain generally respects that UK property gains are UK-taxable (treaty gives exclusive rights to UK), so little or no additional Spanish tax applies—Spain's credit fully offsets Spanish tax owed.
Key point: If the UK property was your main residence (primary dwelling) when sold, you're eligible for UK main residence exemption (no CGT on the gain). Declare this in your UK return. Spain usually accepts that no UK tax is due, so no credit applies, and Spain may also not tax the gain (residence country exemption under the treaty for gains on principal residence). However, if the property was investment (second home or buy-to-let), UK CGT applies, and Spain allows a credit.
As a Spanish resident, you're taxed on Spanish rental income (rendimientos de la actividad inmobiliaria) under Spanish IRPF rules. Spain has primary taxing rights (it's Spanish-source). The UK has no taxing rights (treaty exemption for UK residents on Spanish-source income). Report the income in Modelo 100, claiming deductions for expenses (mortgage interest, maintenance, property tax, insurance, management fees). Tax rates are 19–45% depending on your total income and autonomous region (Catalonia, Madrid, etc. have variations). No UK tax; no credit mechanism applies.
Spain taxes capital gains on Spanish property under Article 13 and Spanish tax law (ganancias patrimoniales). As a Spanish resident, you owe Spanish capital gains tax on appreciation from acquisition to sale. If the property was a primary residence, Spain may offer a partial exemption (depende del tiempo de tenencia y si fue residencia habitual). Investment property: capital gains are fully taxable at your marginal IRPF rate or capital gains rates (19–27% depending on holding period and amount). The UK has no taxing rights; treaty exemption applies. No UK tax; no credit.
If you're UK resident (not Spanish resident) but own Spanish property, Spain has primary taxing rights. Spain taxes rental income at non-resident rates (around 19–21% on gross income, no deductions allowed for basic non-residents) and capital gains at non-resident rates. You file Spanish Modelo 210 (rental income) or report capital gains via Agencia Tributaria. The UK may also tax the Spanish property income under UK residency rules; check with a UK adviser. The treaty exemption for UK residents on foreign-source income doesn't fully apply to Spanish property (treaty grants Spain exclusive rights on real estate).
Margaret, age 72, British national, moved to Spain as a tax resident in 2022. She receives a UK state pension (£14,000 p.a.) and a UK private company pension (£8,000 p.a.). Total annual income: £22,000.
Tax treatment: UK state pension: the UK taxes at standard rates (under personal allowance, £0 UK tax). Spain taxes as resident income at marginal IRPF rate (approximately 20% on first bracket) = €2,800 Spanish tax. UK private pension: UK doesn't tax (exemption under treaty). Spain taxes as resident income (also 20%) = €1,600 Spanish tax. Total Spanish IRPF: €4,400. Total tax paid: €4,400 (no UK tax; Spain taxes both pensions but at reasonable rates because personal allowance reduces UK burden). Margaret files Spanish Modelo 100 declaring both pensions and pays €4,400 annually.
David, age 65, former NHS consultant, retired to Spain as a tax resident in 2023. He receives an NHS pension (£25,000 p.a.) and buys rental property in Madrid earning €4,000 p.a. net rental income.
Tax treatment: NHS pension: UK government pension, exclusive UK taxing rights under Article 18. UK taxes at standard rates (£0 to £4,000 depending on personal allowance); Spain exempts entirely. No tax in Spain. Spanish rental income: Spain taxes at marginal IRPF rate (say 30%) = €1,200. Total Spanish tax: €1,200. Total UK tax: £0 (below personal allowance). David files UK Self Assessment (if required by HMRC) reporting NHS pension; files Spanish Modelo 100 reporting rental income. Major advantage: NHS pension is fully protected from Spanish tax.
Paul, age 58, British expat, works remotely for a UK tech firm from Barcelona but maintains UK residence (family in London). He earns £50,000 p.a. remote salary and owns four UK rental properties earning £18,000 net p.a. combined. Paul is a UK tax resident (physical presence, family ties, permanent home in UK) but spends 4 months yearly in Barcelona.
Tax treatment: Paul is UK resident for tax purposes (despite months in Spain), so Spain doesn't fully tax him. His remote UK salary is UK-taxable (the remote work is performed from an EU-resident location, but he's UK resident, so UK taxes the worldwide income). UK tax on £50,000 salary at 20% = £10,000. UK rental income at 20% = £3,600. Total UK tax: £13,600. Spain's position: Paul is non-resident in Spain (UK ties, permanent home in UK), so Spain doesn't claim Spanish income tax on UK salary or UK rental (treaty exemption for non-residents on foreign-source income). However, any Spanish-source income (if he earned it) would be Spanish-taxable. Paul files UK Self Assessment reporting all income; no Spanish Modelo 100 required. Cost: £13,600 UK tax; Spain has no claim.
Sophie, age 35, British national, accepts a remote role working for a UK fintech firm (£60,000 p.a. salary, paid to her Spanish bank account). She moves to Barcelona and establishes Spanish tax residency. She spends 200+ days yearly in Spain.
Tax treatment: Sophie is Spanish resident (183+ days, permanent home). Spain claims primary taxing rights on the remote UK salary (Article 14: work performed in Spain). Spain taxes the full £60,000 salary as IRPF at marginal rates (say 25% for first bracket) = €15,000 Spanish tax. UK exempts the income (treaty relief: Spain taxes, UK exempts). Sophie files Spanish Modelo 100 reporting the remote UK salary. She may also be required to file UK Self Assessment to notify HMRC of non-residency; UK tax is £0 (treaty exemption). Cost: €15,000 Spanish IRPF. No UK tax. This is standard for remote UK workers who move to Spain.
James, age 50, runs a sole-trader consulting business from the UK, earning £80,000 p.a. He moves to Spain, becomes Spanish resident, and continues servicing UK clients remotely (business remains UK-registered).
Tax treatment: Self-employment income (Article 7): resident country has primary taxing rights. Spain taxes James's consulting income as IRPF rendimientos de actividad económica (self-employed income) at marginal rates (25%+ for higher earners) = €20,000+ Spanish tax. UK exempts (treaty relief). James files Spanish Modelo 100 (annual IRPF) and Modelo 130 (quarterly VAT and estimated tax payments, if applicable). He may also register with Spanish tax authorities as autónomo (self-employed) and pay social security contributions. Cost: Spanish IRPF on full business profit; UK exemption; Spanish social security contributions (around 20% of profits). This is less favorable than being UK-resident (lower UK self-employed rates) but unavoidable if he's Spanish resident.
Emma, age 45, has a £100,000 UK Stocks and Shares ISA earning 3% annual dividend income (£3,000 p.a., tax-free in UK). She moves to Spain, becomes Spanish resident, and holds the ISA.
Tax treatment: ISA income is not protected by the treaty. Spain taxes the £3,000 annual dividend as Spanish investment income (rendimientos del capital) at 20% = €600 Spanish tax annually. Emma reports the ISA dividend in Modelo 100. The UK tax-free ISA wrapper is ignored in Spain. To mitigate, some expats move ISA funds before moving or invest in non-distributing funds (accumulation funds) that defer taxation. Cost: €600 annual Spanish tax on ISA dividends; the tax-free UK status provides no relief.
Below are eight frequent mistakes UK expats make with the UK–Spain tax treaty:
ISAs are tax-free in the UK but fully taxable in Spain as investment income. Declare ISA dividends and gains in Spanish Modelo 100. Mitigation: hold growth funds (no distributions) or move ISA funds before establishing Spanish residency.
UK government pensions (NHS, civil service, armed forces, police, teachers) are exempt from Spanish tax under Article 18. Don't declare them in Spanish Modelo 100. If you do, you'll overpay Spanish tax, and amendments can be slow. Clarify your pension type before moving.
The UK allows 25% of a pension fund to be drawn tax-free. Spain doesn't recognize this exemption. If you take the lump sum after becoming Spanish resident, Spain taxes the entire amount. Crystallize pension tax-free cash BEFORE moving to Spain if possible. If already resident, consult a tax specialist on timing.
To claim treaty relief on certain income (e.g., UK-source investment income), you may need to provide HMRC a Certificate of Tax Residency (Form DT-Spain-Individual) to UK payers. Without it, UK payers withhold tax at default rates (20% on dividends). Request the certificate from HMRC before leaving the UK; updates are issued annually.
Modelo 210 is for non-residents with Spanish rental income (withholding at 19–21% on gross). If you're a Spanish tax resident, you file Modelo 100 (annual IRPF) reporting rental income with deductions. Filing both or the wrong form creates confusion with AEAT. Know your residency status before filing.
If Spain taxes your UK-source income (rental, pension, employment), you can claim a credit for UK tax paid in your Spanish Modelo 100. Many expats declare the income but forget to claim the credit, overpaying Spanish tax. Ensure the credit is calculated and applied annually.
If you claim a tax credit in Spain for UK tax paid, you can't also claim the same UK tax as a deduction in UK Self Assessment. The credit is the relief mechanism; don't double-dip. Coordinate your filings in both countries.
When you move to Spain and become non-UK resident for tax purposes, file a UK tax return declaring the move. Failure to notify HMRC can result in continued UK tax assessments on worldwide income. Use UK Self Assessment or letter to clarify your exit date and non-residency.
Understanding how to formally claim treaty relief is essential for both UK and Spanish compliance. The mechanisms differ depending on the relief type:
If you're a Spanish resident earning UK-source income (rental, pension, employment), you declare the income in Modelo 100 (IRPF annual return) and claim a credit for any UK tax withheld. Steps:
If you're a UK resident earning Spanish-source income (rare, as most expats become non-residents), you declare the income in UK Self Assessment and claim treaty relief. Steps:
For certain treaty relief claims (especially on investment income like dividends), Spanish authorities or UK payers may request proof of UK residency (or Spanish residency if you're applying for relief on UK-source income). HMRC issues a Certificate of Tax Residency (Certificado de Residencia Fiscal). Steps:
Some UK expats in Spain use Modelo 151 (Beckham Law) to elect non-resident tax status for high-income employment or business income (special 24% flat-rate regime for qualifying new residents). However, Beckham Law interacts with the treaty differently than standard resident taxation. If you're a Beckham Law election filer, treaty relief still applies to certain income types (e.g., UK pensions are still taxed under treaty rules). Consult a tax specialist to coordinate Beckham Law elections with treaty relief claims.
For UK–US dual nationals or US expats in Spain, a parallel treaty landscape exists. The US–Spain tax treaty (signed 1990, effective 1991) operates similarly to the UK–Spain treaty but with critical differences, particularly regarding US citizenship-based taxation.
The US taxes citizens on worldwide income regardless of residency (unique among major tax jurisdictions). A US–Spain resident is taxed by both countries unless treaty relief or the Foreign Earned Income Exclusion (FEIE) applies. The FEIE excludes approximately $126,500 (2023 limit, adjusted annually) of foreign-earned income from US taxation. A US expat in Spain earning €100,000 can exclude ~$126,500 (converted to EUR) from US tax; Spain taxes the full amount under its residency rules.
US expats can claim a Foreign Tax Credit (FTC) on Form 1118 for foreign taxes paid (including Spanish IRPF). The FTC is limited to US tax owed on foreign income (FTC limitation = US tax owed on worldwide income × foreign-source income / worldwide income). Unlike Spain's credit method, the US FTC can result in "excess FTC" if foreign tax exceeds US tax due—excess cannot be refunded but can be carried back 1 year or forward 10 years.
US citizens living abroad who've not filed US tax returns can use the Streamlined Filing Compliance Procedures (SFCP) to catch up on back filings without penalties (if using the Streamlined Foreign Offshore Procedure). This requires filing 3 years of tax returns, 6 years of FBAR (financial account reports), and certifying non-willful compliance. The SFCP applies to US citizens in Spain earning foreign income; the US–Spain treaty FEIE or FTC can reduce/eliminate US tax owed.
US citizens and US tax residents must report foreign financial accounts (FBAR if total > $10,000) and file FATCA Form 8938. Spanish banks are required to report US account holders to the US IRS (FATCA intergovernmental agreement). US expats in Spain must comply with both FBAR (FinCEN) and FATCA (IRS) requirements or face significant penalties.
For US–Spain expat planning, engage a specialist familiar with US–Spain treaty provisions, FEIE limits, and FATCA reporting. The treaty relief differs from UK–Spain provisions, and US citizenship taxation adds complexity.
Spain's tax system allows autonomous communities (regions) to set supplementary income tax rates and certain deductions. Catalonia, Madrid, Basque Country, and others have different IRPF rates, reducing-rate regimes (joven emprendedor, new resident incentives in some regions), and wealth tax provisions. These regional variations can affect net tax paid, even with treaty relief.
Example: A Catalan resident may pay IRPF at slightly different rates than a Madrid resident on the same income. When claiming treaty credit in Spain, ensure calculations account for regional rates. Some autonomous communities offer special regimes for new residents or certain industries (tech, startup founders), which may provide additional relief. Consult local tax advisers to optimize your regional position.
Spain's wealth tax (net worth tax on assets > €600,000) is not covered by the UK–Spain tax treaty. If you're Spanish resident with worldwide assets exceeding the threshold, you owe Spanish wealth tax on all assets (Spanish and foreign property, investments, bank accounts). The treaty doesn't provide relief—UK assets are Spanish-taxable. File annual Modelo 720 (foreign asset declaration) and Modelo 100 (wealth tax calculation). Wealth tax planning (legal restructuring, residency analysis) is essential for high-net-worth expats.
When leaving the UK as a resident or leaving Spain as a resident, tax authorities assess "exit tax" or crystallization of unrealized gains.
The UK rarely imposes exit tax on non-residents. However, if you dispose of UK assets after becoming non-resident, the UK may assess CGT under "temporary non-resident" rules if you were UK resident within 5 years. Plan disposal timing carefully if you've recently moved to Spain.
Spain assesses exit tax on unrealised gains when a resident ceases to be Spanish resident or transfers assets abroad. If net unrealised gains exceed €4 million, Spain can tax the unrealised appreciation on departure. This applies to securities, foreign property, and investment portfolios. To mitigate, consider crystallizing gains before Spanish residency or just after establishment (lock in low base cost). Planning is essential for high-net-worth expats.
Don't overpay tax by filing poorly in both countries. Our expert team coordinates your UK and Spanish tax positions, maximizes treaty relief, and ensures both tax authorities accept your filings. Fixed-fee consultations available.