Yes — buying in Spain is safe when you instruct an independent lawyer and complete proper due diligence before you commit money. Most problems come from skipping checks, trusting the seller's or agent's lawyer, or paying deposits before anything is verified. Here are the real risks and how to remove them.
Buying property in Spain is safe — provided you do two things: instruct a lawyer who acts only for you, and complete proper due diligence before you hand over any money you cannot get back. The Spanish system itself is sound. There is a public Land Registry, a notary at every completion, and a clear legal process. What makes a purchase risky is not the country; it is skipping the checks, relying on the seller's or agent's lawyer, or paying deposits before anyone has verified what you are buying.
Almost every horror story you read about buying in Spain traces back to one of those omissions. The buyer who inherited a previous owner's debts had no proper title search. The buyer stuck with an illegal extension never had the build checked against the planning record. The buyer who lost a deposit paid it into the wrong hands before a contract was reviewed. None of these are inherent to Spain — they are the predictable result of buying without the protection a good independent lawyer and a thorough due diligence provide. Get those right, and a Spanish purchase is as safe as one at home.
Most problems fall into a handful of recognisable categories. Knowing them is the first step to making sure none of them happens to you.
In Spain, debts and mortgages can attach to the property itself. Buy without a proper title search and you can inherit a previous owner's outstanding mortgage, embargo or unpaid taxes along with the keys.
Extensions, pools or even whole properties built without the right licences, or that do not match the Land Registry description, can be unsaleable, unmortgageable, or subject to demolition orders. This is a frequent problem in rural and coastal areas.
A property on land not classified for residential use, or lacking a licence of first occupation, can leave you unable to register, insure or resell it properly. Planning status is checked, not assumed.
Pay staged deposits to a developer who goes under and you can lose the lot — unless your payments are protected by a bank guarantee, which the law requires but which is sometimes missing or unverified.
Paying a reservation or deposit to the wrong party, before a contract is reviewed and an account verified, is how money disappears. Genuine purchases never need a rushed transfer to an unverified account.
An unexpected tax bill from the valor de referencia exceeding your price, or inherited debts to the community of owners, can turn a clean-looking purchase costly after the event.
One feature of Spanish property law surprises foreign buyers more than any other: certain debts and charges attach to the property itself rather than only to the person who owes them. A mortgage registered against the property, an embargo placed on it by a creditor, unpaid IBI local taxes, and arrears owed to the community of owners can all pass to the new owner if they are not identified and cleared before completion. You can buy a beautiful apartment and discover you have also bought the previous owner's debt.
This is exactly why the title search is the backbone of a safe purchase. The nota simple from the Land Registry shows who legally owns the property and what charges are registered against it, and a proper due diligence goes further — checking for community arrears, confirming local taxes are paid, and ensuring nothing is outstanding that would carry over. Far from being a reason to fear buying in Spain, this is straightforward to manage: it simply has to be checked, and any debts cleared by the seller out of the sale proceeds at completion. The danger arises only when nobody looks.
Spain's public Land Registry is one of the reasons buying there can be very safe. Every registered property has an entry recording its legal owner, its description, and any charges against it — mortgages, embargoes, easements and the like. A nota simple, the registry extract, can be obtained for any property and is the starting point of every responsible purchase, because it tells you whether the person selling actually owns what they are selling, and what is registered against it.
But a nota simple is a starting point, not the whole story. It will not, by itself, tell you whether an extension was built with a licence, whether the property matches its registered description on the ground, whether there are community debts, or whether the seller's title is caught up in an unresolved inheritance. A safe purchase reads the registry and then goes beyond it — comparing the registered description to the physical property, checking planning and licences with the town hall, confirming the community of owners status, and verifying taxes are paid. The registry protects buyers who use it properly; the risk is in treating it as the finish line rather than the first step.
Most purchases that go badly send up warning signs that, with a little knowledge, are easy to spot. None of these is automatically fatal — some have innocent explanations — but each is a reason to slow down and have your lawyer dig deeper before any money moves. Treat them as prompts to investigate, not necessarily reasons to walk away.
Everything above points to the same conclusion: a Spanish purchase is made safe not by luck or by the property being in a "good area", but by a sequence of deliberate steps taken in the right order, before money is committed. Follow these and the great majority of risks simply never arise.
Our entire role in a purchase is to remove risk before it can cost you. We act only for the buyer — never the seller, agent or developer — so there is no conflict of interest and our only job is protecting you. Before you commit any money, we run a full due diligence: the title search and nota simple, checks for debts, charges and embargoes, verification that the build is legal and matches its registered description, confirmation of planning and licences, the community of owners' status, and the tax position including the valor de referencia.
We review the reservation, arras and private purchase contracts before you sign them, confirm where deposits should go so your money is never at risk, verify off-plan bank guarantees and developer contracts where relevant, and handle completion and registration so your ownership is properly secured. We explain everything in plain English at each stage, and where we find a problem we tell you honestly — including when our advice is not to proceed. Our fees are quoted clearly and upfront before any work begins, and where additional checks are needed we explain what is involved and quote for them. Extras may apply depending on the complexity of the property.
Yes, when you instruct an independent lawyer and complete proper due diligence before committing money. The Spanish system — a public Land Registry, a notary at completion, a clear process — is sound. Most problems come from skipping checks, trusting the seller's or agent's lawyer, or paying deposits before anything is verified, not from the country itself.
The main risks are debts or charges attaching to the property, illegal or unregistered builds, planning and licence problems, off-plan developer failure, deposit and payment scams, and unexpected tax or community-debt surprises. Each is identifiable and avoidable with a proper title search and due diligence before you commit.
You can if they are not identified and cleared before completion. In Spain, certain debts and charges — a registered mortgage, an embargo, unpaid IBI, community arrears — attach to the property and can pass to the new owner. A proper title search and due diligence finds them so the seller clears them out of the sale proceeds at completion.
Only partly. The notary is a neutral public official who confirms the deed is properly executed and identities are correct. They do not act for you, do not run due diligence, and do not check the property is free of debts or built legally. For that protection you need your own independent lawyer.
No. The estate agent works for the seller, and a lawyer they recommend may not be acting independently for you. You should instruct your own lawyer, who acts solely for you and is accountable to you alone. Removing that independent protection to save a fee is the most expensive economy a buyer can make.
The nota simple is an extract from the public Land Registry showing the legal owner, the property's description, and any charges registered against it. It is the starting point of every safe purchase, confirming the seller owns what they are selling. But a safe purchase goes beyond it — checking planning, licences, community status and the physical property against its registered description.
Never pay a reservation or deposit into an unverified account, and never under pressure, before your lawyer has reviewed the contract and confirmed where the money should go. Genuine purchases never require a rushed transfer to an unverified account. Letting your lawyer check the reservation or arras contract first is the key safeguard.
It can be. Spanish law requires a developer taking deposits for an unbuilt home to protect those payments with a bank guarantee or insurance, so you can recover them if the project fails. But the protection only works if the guarantee genuinely exists, covers your payments and is verified by your lawyer — alongside checking the developer's track record and reviewing the contract before you commit.
Watch for pressure to pay a deposit fast into an unverified account, the seller or agent steering you to "their" lawyer or offering "free" legal services, a property that does not match its registered description, a price that looks too good, vague or missing paperwork, and rural or off-plan purchases with no verified guarantees. Each is a prompt to pause and have your lawyer investigate.
It is often wise, particularly for older properties or when buying remotely. The legal due diligence checks ownership, debts and legality, but it does not assess the physical condition of the building. An independent survey or architect's inspection covers that, and is the remote buyer's substitute for inspecting the property in person.
An independent lawyer acts only for you, with no conflict of interest. They run the title search and full due diligence, review the contracts before you sign, confirm where deposits should go, verify off-plan guarantees, and handle completion and registration. Their duty runs to you alone, which is why they are the single most important safeguard in a Spanish purchase.
We act only for the buyer and run a full due diligence before you commit money — title search, debts and charges, legality of the build, planning and licences, community status and the tax position. We review the contracts, confirm where deposits go, verify off-plan guarantees, and handle completion and registration, explaining everything in plain English. We quote our fees clearly upfront, and extras may apply depending on the property.
We act only for the buyer and run full due diligence before you commit a euro — title, debts, legality, planning and tax. The checks that turn a risky purchase into a safe one, explained in plain English.
The information on this page is general guidance only and does not constitute legal advice. The risks involved in buying property in Spain, and the protections available, depend on the specific property, its history and location, and the law as it applies at the time. Always obtain advice on your specific transaction before acting. Platinum Legal Spain is an independent English-speaking legal practice — a team of bar-registered solicitors and legal specialists — serving clients across Spain, and we quote our fees clearly before any work begins.
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