Inheritance in Spain · English-Speaking Solicitors

Inheritance in Spain — Probate, Tax
and Asset Transfer Handled End-to-End

When someone dies leaving assets in Spain, the clock starts immediately. You have six months to declare and pay Spanish inheritance tax before surcharges begin, accounts are frozen until the estate is formally accepted, and property cannot be sold or mortgaged until it is registered in the heirs' names. We handle the entire process — from death certificate through to the Land Registry — in English, and from wherever in the world you happen to be.

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Inheritance in Spain is a sequence of deadlines, documents and offices — the notary, the central wills registry in Madrid, the regional tax office, the Land Registry, and each Spanish bank the deceased held accounts with. None of them coordinate automatically. Each one has its own form, its own evidentiary requirement, and its own pace. For a family abroad, trying to navigate that sequence in a second language while also grieving, dealing with a home-country estate, and meeting a tax deadline they didn't even know existed is exactly the kind of situation we were built to take over.

The Spanish system is not forgiving about late declarations. Inheritance tax in Spain (Impuesto sobre Sucesiones y Donaciones) is due within six months of the date of death. If the tax return isn't filed on time, surcharges start at 5% and climb to 20%, with interest on top. Banks won't release funds until the tax has been paid and a formal acceptance of inheritance is signed. Property stays locked in the deceased's name until the same conditions are met. Families who wait "until everything else is sorted" are the families who arrive at our door nine months later facing penalties that were entirely avoidable.

Who this page is for

This is the hub for every inheritance service we provide in Spain. We've written it for families, executors and beneficiaries dealing with a Spanish estate — whether the deceased was a British expat who retired to the Costa del Sol, an American who owned a holiday apartment in Barcelona, an Irish couple who spent winters in Alicante, or any non-Spanish national whose death left Spanish assets behind.

If you already know the service you need — probate administration, an inheritance tax declaration, forced heirship advice, cross-border coordination with a UK solicitor or a US attorney — jump down to the services grid. If you're earlier in the process and still trying to understand what actually has to happen, keep reading. The next sections walk through the Spanish probate sequence step by step, explain how inheritance tax really works across Spain's seventeen regions, and set out what trips families up most often.

What "probate" means in Spain — it's not what you think

There is no single "probate" process in Spain in the way the English and American systems imagine it. There is no court-supervised grant of representation, no executor sworn in by a judge, no public probate registry. Instead, Spanish inheritance is notarial: it runs through a Spanish notary who documents the acceptance of the inheritance (the aceptación y adjudicación de herencia) as a public deed, and it runs through the regional tax authority which assesses the inheritance tax on each heir's share.

That means the work shifts from "getting a grant" to "assembling the file." The notary doesn't investigate anything. They simply need the right documents in front of them: death certificate, Spanish wills certificate, any existing Spanish will, the home-country grant of probate (translated and apostilled), the inventory of assets with valuations, identification for every heir, and evidence of tax residency. The hard work is the preparation. Once the file is complete, the notary appointment itself is straightforward.

The Spanish inheritance process is document-heavy rather than court-heavy. Our job is to build the file correctly, meet the six-month tax deadline, and hand your family a clean set of deeds and a Land Registry entry in their name — not a pile of Spanish forms to translate.

Spanish inheritance tax — why the region matters more than the national rule

Spain has a national inheritance tax framework, but the real tax bill is decided at regional level. Each of Spain's seventeen comunidades autónomas has substantial power to reduce, rebate or effectively eliminate inheritance tax through regional allowances. The same estate, inherited by the same child, can attract wildly different tax outcomes depending on whether the deceased was last tax-resident in Andalusia, Valencia, Madrid, Catalonia, Murcia, the Balearics, or the Canaries.

In Andalusia and Madrid the effective tax for spouses and children is close to zero on most estates, because near-total regional rebates apply. In Valencia and Murcia, generous allowances also apply for close family. In Catalonia the picture is more nuanced, with sliding reliefs. For the Balearic and Canary Islands, the treatment is again favourable for direct relatives. The practical upshot: a badly-timed residency status, or missing a regional relief because the claim wasn't made correctly, can cost a family tens of thousands of euros on an estate that should have paid almost nothing.

For non-residents inheriting Spanish assets, the treatment used to be materially worse than for residents — a discrimination that the EU Court of Justice struck down in 2014. Since then, non-resident EU heirs have been entitled to the same regional reliefs as residents. Post-Brexit rulings have extended this equal treatment to non-EU heirs too, including British heirs. Getting the regional relief correctly claimed on the non-resident return is one of the most valuable pieces of work we do on inheritance files.

Forced heirship — the legítima and how Brussels IV sidesteps it

Spanish civil law includes a concept of forced heirship known as the legítima. Under domestic Spanish law, children are entitled to a reserved share of their parent's estate (typically two-thirds), and a testator cannot simply disinherit them. This rule has caught out foreign estates repeatedly, usually in situations where a second spouse was meant to inherit ahead of children from a first marriage, or where one child was deliberately excluded.

For foreign nationals who made a Brussels IV election in their Spanish will (choosing the law of their nationality to govern their succession), the Spanish legítima does not apply. English and American succession law both recognise testamentary freedom. For foreign nationals who did not make that election, or who died without a Spanish will at all, Spanish forced heirship can and does apply. A large part of our inheritance work involves navigating this question on files where the Brussels IV position was never clearly set, and our team includes estate planning specialists who handle this analysis regularly.

What We Handle

Our Spanish Inheritance Services

Every part of a Spanish inheritance handled under one roof — from the first steps after a death through to the final Land Registry entry in the heirs' names, tax declarations filed on time, and any cross-border coordination with solicitors in the UK, Ireland or the US.

Core Service

Spanish Probate Administration

End-to-end administration of a Spanish estate — document gathering, notary acceptance deed, tax declarations, bank release, property transfer and Land Registry entry. One point of contact throughout.

See the service
Tax

Spanish Inheritance Tax

Declaration and payment of Impuesto de Sucesiones within the six-month window, with full use of regional allowances and non-resident reliefs to keep the bill as low as lawfully possible.

Tax service
Succession Law

Forced Heirship (Legítima)

How the Spanish legítima interacts with foreign wills, and how the Brussels IV election can lawfully disapply it. Advice, analysis and where needed, contentious representation.

Understand legítima
Cross-Border

UK – Spain Cross-Border

Coordinated administration of UK and Spanish estates in parallel — grant of probate in England, acceptance deed in Spain, double tax relief, asset transfer across both jurisdictions.

Cross-border service
Cross-Border

US – Spain Cross-Border

For American estates with Spanish assets, or Spanish estates with US heirs. State-level probate coordinated with Spanish acceptance, federal and Spanish tax positions reconciled.

US cross-border
Property

Inheriting Property in Spain

The full sequence for inherited real estate — valuation, tax declaration, notary acceptance, Land Registry transfer, Plusvalía, and the future position for resale or retention by the heirs.

Property inheritance
Property

Selling Inherited Property

Once registered in the heirs' names, an inherited Spanish property can be sold — but capital gains tax base, non-resident withholding and the 3% retention all behave differently. We handle the conveyance.

Selling the estate
No Will

Dying Without a Spanish Will

Where the deceased left no Spanish will, Spanish intestacy rules (or the home-country equivalent, if properly evidenced) determine the heirs. A declaration of heirs has to be obtained before anything else.

Intestate process
Repudiation

Renouncing a Spanish Inheritance

Where the estate is heavily indebted, or where accepting would trigger a tax charge the heir can't fund, a formal renunciation before a notary is the cleanest exit — but it is irrevocable.

Renounce an estate
Inheritance tax by region

Spanish inheritance tax is decided regionally, not nationally.

The effective tax on the same estate can vary by tens of thousands of euros depending on the region of the deceased's last residence. Below are our dedicated regional guides — each sets out the current allowances, rebates and calculation rules for that comunidad autónoma.

Catalunya, Asturias, Galicia, Aragon, Castilla y León, Basque Country, Castilla-La Mancha, Extremadura, Navarre, La Rioja, Cantabria, Ceuta and Melilla guides are in active build.

Read the full Spanish inheritance tax guide →

How a Spanish inheritance actually unfolds

The work splits into four phases. On a typical estate with a Spanish will and a residential property, the whole sequence runs between three and five months, comfortably inside the six-month tax deadline. On more complex estates — multiple properties, business interests, heirs in different countries — we start earlier and run the phases in parallel to stay within the window.

1. Post-death documentation

First, the certificado literal de defunción (full death certificate) is obtained, followed by the certificado de últimas voluntades from Madrid's central wills registry (confirming whether a Spanish will was registered) and the certificado de seguros (evidence of any life insurance). If there is a Spanish will, the notary who holds the protocol issues a certified copy. If the deceased was foreign with no Spanish will, the home-country grant of probate (or equivalent) is obtained, translated by a sworn translator and apostilled. NIE numbers are checked for every heir. Bank balances are requested as at the date of death. Property valuations are instructed. This phase is entirely document-gathering and typically takes four to six weeks.

2. The acceptance deed before a Spanish notary

Once the file is complete, we book a notary appointment for the escritura de aceptación y adjudicación de herencia — the public deed in which the heirs formally accept the inheritance and the estate is divided between them in accordance with the will (or the intestacy rules). Heirs who cannot attend in person sign a Spanish power of attorney that lets us represent them at the notary. The deed records the assets, the valuations and the allocation between heirs. It is the master document that every subsequent office will ask for.

3. Inheritance tax declaration and payment

With the deed signed, we prepare and file the inheritance tax return (Modelo 650 for residents, Modelo 652 where partition has not yet occurred, and the non-resident equivalent where relevant) with the correct regional tax office. All applicable reliefs are claimed — spousal and descendant allowances, regional multipliers, habitual-residence reliefs on the family home, business continuity reliefs where the deceased held a Spanish SL. Tax is paid; stamped returns are issued. If the deceased owned real estate in a municipality, the Plusvalía (municipal capital gain on urban land) is also filed within the same window.

4. Asset transfer and Land Registry

With the acceptance deed and the paid tax returns in hand, the heirs' new ownership is registered. Banks release the accounts once presented with the deed and the stamped tax return; balances are transferred to the heirs' own accounts or liquidated. Real estate is filed at the Land Registry (Registro de la Propiedad) for the property's district, which takes a few weeks to process and produces a fresh nota simple showing the heir as owner. Vehicles are re-titled with the DGT. Shares in a Spanish company are re-noted in the corporate books. The estate is closed.

The tax deadline — and why we treat it as non-negotiable

Spanish inheritance tax is due within six months of the date of death. A one-time extension of a further six months can be requested within the first five months of that period, but it carries interest from the original due date. Miss the deadline without an extension and the surcharge system begins: 5% in the first three months late, 10% between three and six months, 15% between six and twelve, and 20% plus late-payment interest after twelve months. On a moderate estate, that conversion of a zero-tax position (after regional reliefs) into a four- or five-figure surcharge is entirely avoidable — but we see it every month on files we take over from families who waited.

What pushes an inheritance file up in complexity

  • Non-resident deceased or heirs. Additional documentation, sworn translations, and apostilles add three to four weeks to the timeline.
  • No Spanish will. A declaration of heirs needs to be obtained by notary act or judicial process before the rest can move.
  • Forced heirship disputes. Where a will conflicts with Spanish legítima and no Brussels IV election exists, a legal analysis and sometimes a contested position is needed.
  • Business or cross-border assets. Shares in a Spanish SL, an autónomo practice, or property held through a non-Spanish company each need bespoke treatment.
  • Estranged or uncontactable heirs. Procedures exist to proceed where an heir cannot be located, but they extend the timeline.
Why It Matters

Why Getting a Spanish Inheritance Right Matters

The cost of a mishandled Spanish estate is rarely the headline tax figure. It is the surcharges, the frozen accounts, the blocked properties, and the family relationships that erode while a file drags on for a year longer than it should.

The six-month tax window is firm

Families who wait "until everything in the UK is finished" routinely cross the deadline. The surcharge is not theoretical — it is automatic, and it compounds. Our first job on any file is to secure the tax position within the window, even where the rest of the administration will take longer.

Regional allowances dwarf the national rules

Claiming the right regional rebate on the right return can be the difference between a near-zero tax bill and a six-figure one. Those reliefs are self-assessed; they are not applied automatically. Missing a relief is not corrected by the tax office — it has to be claimed on time, in the right form, with the right evidence.

Bank accounts stay frozen until accepted

Spanish banks freeze accounts on notification of death and will not release funds to heirs until the acceptance deed is signed and the tax return is stamped. Families who urgently need access to estate funds for funeral costs, mortgage payments or outstanding bills depend on the file moving quickly.

Property can't move until it is registered

Until an inherited property is registered in the heirs' names at the Land Registry, it cannot be sold, mortgaged or meaningfully rented. Heirs who want to list an inherited apartment on the open market cannot proceed until the file is closed. The inheritance file is the prerequisite for everything that follows.

Handling a Spanish estate from anywhere in the world

Most of our inheritance clients never fly back to Spain. With a Spanish power of attorney in place, we represent the heirs at the notary, the tax office, the banks and the Land Registry — keeping the family informed in English at each stage.

Arrange a Call
Frequent Problems

Common Mistakes on Spanish Inheritance Files

Every one of these we see on files we take over from families who tried to handle Spain themselves, or who instructed someone who didn't specialise in expat inheritance.

Waiting for the UK or US estate to finish first

The Spanish tax clock does not pause while the home estate works through its own probate. Both have to run in parallel, with the Spanish deadline treated as the controlling one.

Assuming a UK grant of probate automatically works in Spain

It doesn't. A UK grant must be apostilled and translated by a sworn translator before a Spanish notary will accept it. Sending a raw grant to Spain and waiting for acceptance wastes weeks.

Missing the regional inheritance tax relief

Each region's relief has specific conditions — habitual residence, relationship to deceased, holding period, form of election. Getting the paperwork wrong means paying tax that the legislation would otherwise have waived.

Accepting an insolvent estate without thinking

A standard acceptance deed makes heirs personally liable for estate debts, including unknown ones. On an uncertain estate, acceptance a beneficio de inventario or outright renunciation may be the right call — but the choice is made at the notary and is hard to undo.

Forgetting the Plusvalía

Municipal Plusvalía on inherited urban property is a separate municipal tax with its own six-month deadline. It's not folded into the main inheritance tax return and is often missed entirely by families administering alone.

Overlooking the Brussels IV position

If the deceased was foreign but did not elect their national law in a Spanish will, Spanish forced heirship may apply to the Spanish estate. That can override what the home-country will said — and the time to fix it has passed.

Who We Help

Families We Regularly Act For

The deceased's nationality, where the heirs live, whether there's a Spanish will — these variables change the approach but not the outcome. A clean closed estate is what the file is for.

British families inheriting from a UK expat in Spain

Retirees who bought on the Costa del Sol or Costa Blanca, children in the UK, grant of probate in England, Spanish inheritance run in parallel. Our most common file profile.

American heirs of a US national with Spanish property

State-level probate in the US, Spanish acceptance deed, reconciling the federal estate position with the Spanish regional tax — coordinated through one English-speaking team.

Irish families with a holiday home estate

A Spanish apartment that sat in the background of the family's life for years, now inherited. Low-value estates still need full Spanish administration — and our fees scale down for them.

Mixed-nationality couples where one partner has died

Surviving spouse inheriting under a Spanish will, often with children from previous relationships, Brussels IV election to be relied on. Sensitive files we handle every week.

Non-resident heirs of a Spanish-resident expat

Where children or beneficiaries live outside Spain and cannot easily travel, we use Spanish powers of attorney to represent them across the entire process.

Families facing an estate with unknown assets

Where the deceased's Spanish paperwork has been lost, we trace Spanish accounts, property, pension interests and investment holdings through the official registries before building the file.

Glossary

Spanish Inheritance Terms Explained

The legal vocabulary around a Spanish inheritance is unavoidable. Here are the terms that appear most often on files, in plain English.

Aceptación de herencia

The public deed signed before a Spanish notary by which the heirs formally accept the inheritance. The master document that unlocks the rest of the process.

Impuesto de Sucesiones

Spanish inheritance tax. Due within six months of death, assessed per heir, with regional allowances that often eliminate most of the bill for close family.

Legítima

Spanish forced heirship — the reserved share owed to children under domestic Spanish succession law. Disapplied where a valid Brussels IV election exists.

Plusvalía Municipal

A municipal tax on the increase in urban land value since the previous transfer. Triggered by inheritance as well as sale. Separate deadline, separate form.

Certificado de Últimas Voluntades

Certificate from the central wills registry in Madrid confirming whether the deceased left a Spanish will and, if so, which notary holds it.

Declaración de herederos

A formal declaration of heirs, needed where no Spanish will exists. Obtained by notarial act for close relatives, by judicial process for more distant ones.

Aceptación a beneficio de inventario

Acceptance of an inheritance limited to the value of the assets — protecting the heir from personal liability for estate debts. Strictly procedural; has to be done at the notary.

Brussels IV / Regulation 650/2012

The EU Succession Regulation allowing foreign nationals in Spain to elect the law of their nationality to govern their succession, overriding Spanish forced heirship.

Modelo 650 / 652

The Spanish inheritance tax return forms. Modelo 650 for full declarations after partition; Modelo 652 for provisional declarations where partition is deferred.

Nota simple

Official extract from the Land Registry showing the current owner and charges on a property. The first document we pull on any inherited Spanish real estate.

Frequently Asked Questions

Inheritance in Spain — Answered

The questions we answer most often on first calls with families dealing with a Spanish estate.

How long does a Spanish inheritance take from start to finish?
A typical file with a Spanish will, one property and cooperative heirs closes in three to five months from instruction. More complex estates — multiple jurisdictions, no Spanish will, contested forced heirship, or business assets — can take nine to twelve months. The six-month tax deadline sits inside that window and is non-negotiable, so we structure the work to meet the tax first and close the rest in sequence.
Do the heirs have to travel to Spain?
No. With a Spanish power of attorney, we represent each heir at the notary, the tax office, the banks and the Land Registry. The POA is signed at a Spanish consulate abroad, or at a notary in the heir's home country with a Hague Apostille. Most of our inheritance clients never set foot in Spain during the administration.
What happens if the deceased left no Spanish will?
A declaration of heirs has to be obtained before the inheritance can be accepted. For close family (spouse, descendants, ascendants) this is done by notarial act and takes around four weeks. For more distant heirs it requires a judicial procedure, which is slower. We handle both, and we ensure the home-country intestacy rules or the home-country grant of administration are properly recognised where Brussels IV applies.
How much is Spanish inheritance tax, really?
It depends primarily on the region of the deceased's last residence, the heir's relationship to the deceased, and the estate value. For spouses and children in Andalusia, Madrid, Murcia and Valencia, the effective tax is often near zero thanks to regional rebates of 99% or more. For more distant relatives or larger estates, the national scale applies with regional modifiers. We model the exact position on every file before anything is filed.
What if we miss the six-month deadline?
Surcharges begin automatically: 5% between months 7 and 9 after death, 10% between months 9 and 12, 15% between months 12 and 18, and 20% beyond that, plus late-payment interest. A one-time six-month extension can be requested during the first five months, but it must be applied for; it is not granted on late filings. If you suspect the deadline is approaching without a clear plan, call us immediately.
Do non-residents pay more Spanish inheritance tax than residents?
They used to. Since the European Court of Justice ruling in 2014 and subsequent Spanish case law, non-resident EU heirs are entitled to the same regional reliefs as residents. Post-Brexit Supreme Court rulings have extended equal treatment to non-EU heirs, including British ones. The relief has to be claimed correctly on the non-resident return — it is not applied automatically.
Can we use the UK grant of probate directly in Spain?
Not directly. A UK grant must be apostilled (at the Foreign Office in Milton Keynes or online via the FCDO service) and then translated into Spanish by an official sworn translator recognised by the Spanish Ministry of Foreign Affairs. Only then will a Spanish notary accept it as proof of entitlement. We manage that entire chain on UK – Spain files.
What is the Plusvalía and who pays it?
The Plusvalía Municipal is a local tax on the theoretical increase in the urban land value of a property since its last transfer. It is paid by the acquirer — in an inheritance, by the heirs. It has its own six-month deadline, its own municipal form, and is completely separate from the national inheritance tax. After the Constitutional Court ruling in 2021, sellers and heirs can now contest Plusvalía assessments where no real gain has occurred, and we routinely do so where appropriate.
Can we sell the property before the inheritance is registered?
Not cleanly. Until the property is registered in the heirs' names at the Land Registry, it cannot be sold to a third party. A buyer's solicitor will refuse to exchange on a property still titled to the deceased. Some heirs choose to accept and register first and only then list for sale — we often run the inheritance file and the subsequent conveyance for the same family as a single engagement.
What if the estate is insolvent or has debts we don't know about?
Spanish law allows acceptance a beneficio de inventario — accepting the inheritance limited to the value of its assets, so the heirs are not personally liable for unknown debts. The election is made at the notary. Alternatively, heirs can renounce entirely (an irrevocable act). Where the debt picture is unclear, we always advise on the protected form of acceptance.
Does a surviving spouse automatically inherit everything?
No. Under Spanish civil law a surviving spouse has a usufruct right over part of the estate, but the children retain the bare ownership of the forced heirship share. Under a proper Brussels IV election to English or US law, the testator's own wishes govern, and a spouse can inherit outright if the will says so. Which rule applies on your file depends entirely on the will (or lack of it) and the elected law.
What happens to Spanish bank accounts when someone dies?
Banks freeze them on notification of death. Direct debits (mortgage, utilities, community fees) may continue to be honoured for a short period, or may be blocked immediately depending on the bank. Funds are released only once the bank is presented with the acceptance deed and the stamped inheritance tax return, and the balances are transferred to the heirs' personal accounts or liquidated.
Can we avoid Spanish inheritance tax by gifting assets before death?
Lifetime gifting of Spanish assets triggers gift tax (Impuesto sobre Donaciones), which runs on the same regional system as inheritance tax. In several regions gift tax is generously relieved for close family, making lifetime transfer of certain assets attractive. It is a planning conversation rather than an answer — we assess each family's position individually. Our estate planning team handles this work alongside the wills side.
How do we find out what the deceased actually owned in Spain?
The certificado de últimas voluntades confirms any Spanish will. The tax office database can be queried with a POA for declared assets. The Land Registry can be searched nationally. Spanish banks have a central register that can be accessed by legal representatives of an estate. Vehicles are traced through the DGT. On files where the Spanish paperwork is lost, we run this full trace before anything else.
Will I be taxed twice — in Spain and in the UK / US?
Possibly, but relief exists. The UK has no formal inheritance tax treaty with Spain but applies a unilateral credit for foreign inheritance tax paid. The US has a treaty with Spain covering certain estate tax matters. In practice, the Spanish tax paid on Spanish assets is typically credited against the home-country position, avoiding true double taxation. Coordinating the two returns is part of our cross-border service.

When the clock is already running, move fast

If someone has died leaving Spanish assets, the six-month tax window has already started. Book a call and we will lay out exactly what the next eight weeks need to look like.

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