Independent English-speaking property solicitors and legal experts for buyers, sellers and investors in La Manga del Mar Menor — covering the northern strip (Veneziola, Puerto Bello, Puerto Mayor), central La Manga (Zoco, Plaza Bohemia, Eurovosa, El Pedruchillo), the southern peninsula (Cavanna, Galúa, Monte Blanco) and the surrounding Cabo de Palos, Playa Honda and Mar de Cristal markets. We handle apartment conveyancing, community statutes, tourist-rental licensing, coastal-protection rules, NIE applications, Power of Attorney, tax registration and Land Registry formalities — all in plain English.
La Manga is a unique dual-sea peninsula apartment market — a thin strip of land separating the Mediterranean from the Mar Menor lagoon, driven by second homes, holiday lets, rental investors and international buyers. It is not a city like Cartagena, not a golf resort like La Manga Club, and not a retiree town like Los Alcázares — the legal focus is apartments, community fees, rental licensing and coastal-protection rules.
Speak to an independent English-speaking property solicitor in La Manga before you sign, pay a deposit or commit — especially on apartment community statutes, tourist-rental position, coastal-protection rules and front-line property where the legal review materially affects ownership and rental yield.
La Manga del Mar Menor is one of the most distinctive property markets in Spain — a 21-kilometre sandbar peninsula running north from Cabo de Palos, with the Mediterranean Sea on one side and the warm, shallow Mar Menor lagoon on the other. The market is overwhelmingly apartment-led: high-rise blocks, mid-rise developments, penthouses and a smaller number of villas, almost all within walking distance of two beaches. As your English-speaking property lawyer in La Manga, the typical file is a second-home or holiday-home apartment purchase, often with rental income in mind — a fundamentally different legal profile from the rural, golf-resort or city markets elsewhere in the region.
The buyer ecosystem is dominated by second-home owners, holiday-home buyers, rental investors and international purchasers — British, Irish, French, Belgian, Dutch, Scandinavian and a growing Eastern-European and Spanish-domestic cohort. Most owners are non-resident; most properties operate as holiday homes or holiday lets; the majority of transactions involve foreign-resident buyers and sellers using bilingual Power of Attorney. From reservation through Arras contract, NIE issue, due diligence, notary completion and Land Registry registration, we manage the full conveyancing process in La Manga end-to-end.
The La Manga legal terrain is apartment-and-coastal rather than rural or resort. There are no AFO / DAFO complications, no rustic-land issues, no golf-membership questions and no heritage-zone rules. Instead the review centres on apartment-block community statutes, tourist-rental licensing, coastal-protection (Ley de Costas) position for front-line property, older-block maintenance and non-resident ownership tax setup.
Six structural drivers consistently bring international buyers to La Manga rather than alternative Mar Menor or Mediterranean coastal markets.
The defining feature: two seas, two beaches, often within a five-minute walk of each other. The Mediterranean side offers open-sea swimming and watersports; the Mar Menor side offers the warm, calm, shallow lagoon water that has made La Manga famous for decades.
No other Spanish property market sits on a thin sandbar between two seas. Almost every apartment has a sea view of one or both waters; the geography itself is the product, and it is impossible to replicate elsewhere.
La Manga is one of the strongest holiday-rental markets in the Region of Murcia — high summer demand, a long shoulder season driven by the mild climate, and consistent year-round visitor flow. For rental investors the occupancy fundamentals are durable.
Murcia-Corvera Airport is roughly 40 minutes; Alicante-Elche Airport roughly 90 minutes. Direct flights to UK regional airports and Northern European cities make La Manga genuinely practical for owners flying in regularly.
Apartment ownership in managed community blocks suits the lock-up-and-leave second-home model perfectly — community security, common-area maintenance and minimal individual upkeep mean owners can leave the property for months at a time without concern.
Comparable beachfront apartments in La Manga transact materially below equivalent Costa del Sol stock at the same level of sea-view and beach proximity. For buyers wanting dual-sea beachfront ownership at value-led pricing, the differential is significant.
Quick context for international buyers comparing La Manga to other Mar Menor and Mediterranean coastal options.
La Manga legal risk is apartment-and-coastal. AFO / DAFO, rustic land, golf memberships and heritage zones don’t apply here. Five issues drive most pre-purchase reviews.
Most La Manga property sits in apartment-block Comunidades de Propietarios. Statutes govern holiday-let permission, pet rules, alterations rights, common-area use and community-fee allocation. Critically for rental investors, some blocks restrict or prohibit short-let — we review the statutes pre-purchase.
La Manga’s thin geography means many properties sit close to the coastline. The Spanish Ley de Costas imposes specific rules on front-line property and the maritime-terrestrial public domain zone — affecting alterations, terraces and, for the closest properties, long-term tenure questions. Site-specific check for any front-line purchase.
Holiday letting in La Manga requires registration under the Murcia regional tourist-rental regime plus community-statute permission. Both conditions must be met. We confirm the position pre-purchase for any rental-focused acquisition. See our holiday let vs long-term rental guide.
La Manga developed intensively from the 1960s through the 1990s. Older blocks face periodic capital expense — lift modernisation under EU safety rules, façade repairs (salt-air corrosion is significant on the peninsula), structural derramas and communal-pool refurbishment. AGM-minute review identifies upcoming major works.
Most La Manga owners are non-resident foreign owners and must file annual Modelo 210 returns even on un-let property, plus quarterly Modelo 210 on rental income. Wealth Tax exposure is rare on standard apartment stock but relevant for higher-value penthouse and multiple-property buyers. Set up at purchase.
Buying for rental income in La Manga? The community-statute + tourist-licence + coastal-position review pre-purchase is the single most valuable legal step — it tells you whether your rental plan will actually work.
Book a Pre-Purchase ReviewOur standard pre-purchase due diligence for La Manga property.
La Manga runs north to south along the sandbar. The sub-markets where we run files most often, plus the surrounding Mar Menor and Cabo de Palos communities.
La Manga is fundamentally an apartment market — the single largest category in our peninsula caseload. As your apartment lawyer in La Manga, the legal review centres on the building as much as the unit: community statutes, AGM minutes, derrama exposure, coastal position and short-let rules. See our broader Buying an Apartment in Spain guide for the underlying framework.
The dominant La Manga stock. High-rise and mid-rise blocks from the 1960s through post-2000, with communal pools, gardens and (in many) direct beach access. Build era materially affects the upcoming-maintenance picture; we document it for every file.
Top-floor penthouses with large terraces and dual-sea panoramic views are the premium La Manga product. Higher value brings Wealth Tax into scope on the most expensive units; terrace and roof-rights documentation is a specific pre-purchase check.
Mediterranean-view, Mar Menor-view and dual-sea-view apartments each carry different price profiles. View positions on the peninsula are largely protected by the existing built environment; we confirm the view position is as described and not at risk from pending development.
Apartments at Puerto Bello, Puerto Mayor and Veneziola with mooring access or marina frontage carry additional considerations — mooring rights, marina-community fees and waterside-maintenance obligations. Reviewed pre-purchase where relevant.
Most La Manga blocks have communal pools with associated maintenance obligations and seasonal running costs. We review the pool’s condition, recent works and any pending refurbishment derrama as part of the community review.
La Manga parking is genuinely tight, particularly in the central zones in summer. Apartments with allocated parking (community garage, dedicated spot or private garaje) sell at a premium. Confirmed pre-purchase — included, separately allocated or street-only.
Most apartments include or have access to a community-allocated storage room — useful for beach equipment, bikes and seasonal items. We confirm allocation, registration and any associated community fees.
The community holds building insurance for structure, common areas and lifts; individual owners are responsible for unit-internal and contents cover. Salt-air and coastal exposure make adequate building cover particularly important. Standard pre-purchase confirmation.
La Manga and the surrounding Mar Menor coast see periodic new apartment development — off-plan beachfront blocks, new mid-rise schemes and redevelopment of older sites. As your new build lawyer in La Manga and off-plan property solicitor, the legal framework for new-build purchases is fundamentally different from resale conveyancing.
Beachfront and near-beach off-plan apartments are sold before or during construction. Buyers commit to a unit on plan, pay in stages through the build and complete at handover. The legal protections around that staged commitment are the centre of the review.
The off-plan contract is drafted by the developer’s lawyers and reflects the developer’s commercial position. Standard items for buyer-side review: stage-payment schedule, completion-date warranties, snagging procedure, finish specification, common-area handover and termination rights.
Spanish Law 38/1999 requires off-plan developers to secure buyer stage payments through individual bank guarantees or insurance bonds. If the developer fails to complete, the guarantee returns your money. Verification that valid guarantees are in place is a non-negotiable pre-payment check.
Reservation, planning-approval milestone, build-milestone payments, completion balance at handover. Each stage payment is itself a legal commitment we review and document before funds move.
Off-plan and new-build attract IVA (10% residential) plus AJD (Murcia stamp duty 1.5%) instead of the resale ITP. Total transaction costs typically 12–14% vs 11–13% for resale — worth factoring into the budget early.
At completion the buyer (or an independent surveyor) inspects the finished unit against the contracted specification — the snagging list — with developer obligations to remedy defects. The contractual snagging procedure protects buyers against substandard delivery.
The Licencia de Primera Ocupación confirms the completed building is fit for habitation and is required for utility connection and onward resale. We confirm the licence is issued (or contractually guaranteed) before completion.
Off-plan completion dates can slip. The contract should specify the consequences of delay — penalty interest, buyer termination rights, deposit return. We review the delay provisions so you know your position if the build runs late.
Buying off-plan in La Manga? Bank-guarantee verification and stage-payment review pre-deposit are the two highest-leverage protections you can secure.
Book an Off-Plan Pre-Purchase ReviewLa Manga has a surprisingly strong premium apartment market — dual-sea penthouses, large-terrace units and marina-front apartments that attract foreign cash buyers and command a clear price premium. The legal review on these higher-value units adds a few specific considerations.
Top-floor penthouses with panoramic views of both the Mediterranean and the Mar Menor are the flagship La Manga product. Terrace and roof-rights documentation, and confirmation that the view position is protected, are specific pre-purchase checks.
Premium units carry large private terraces — sometimes wrapping the building. Terrace ownership, community-rules on terrace use and any registered terrace-area discrepancies (Catastro vs Registry) are reviewed.
Apartments at Tomás Maestre, Puerto Bello and Veneziola with marina frontage or mooring access carry additional considerations — mooring rights, marina-community fees and waterside-maintenance obligations. Reviewed where relevant.
The premium La Manga segment is genuinely sea-view-led — the value sits in the view and the terrace. We confirm the registered description matches the physical unit and that no pending development threatens the view.
Much of the premium La Manga market is foreign cash buyers — no mortgage, faster completion. We run the same full due diligence regardless of financing; a cash purchase is not a reason to shortcut the legal review.
For the most expensive penthouse and multiple-property purchases, Spanish Wealth Tax (Patrimonio) can come into scope above the €700,000 state allowance plus €300,000 main-home allowance. Relevant for higher-value buyers; we flag where planning is worthwhile.
La Manga is one of the strongest holiday-rental markets in the Region of Murcia. For buyers acquiring with rental income in mind — to offset ownership costs or as primary investment — the licensing, community-statute and tax framework determines whether the rental plan actually works. This is the most important section on the page for investor buyers.
Short-let platforms drive the bulk of La Manga holiday-rental activity. To list legally you need a Murcia regional tourist-rental registration and the registration number must appear on every listing. Platforms increasingly require proof of registration to list at all.
The Region of Murcia operates its own tourist-rental registration regime (distinct from the Andalusian VFT). Registration requires the licence of first occupation, energy certificate and minimum-standard compliance. We handle the registration as a standalone service or as part of the purchase.
La Manga’s strong summer demand and long shoulder season support competitive holiday-rental yields by Spanish coastal standards. Specific yields depend on property type, location, view and condition; we don’t guarantee yields, but the underlying demand fundamentals are durable.
The decisive factor: the apartment-block community statutes can prohibit or restrict short-let by owner vote. Some La Manga blocks permit short-let freely; others restrict it; others have voted to prohibit. The statutes — not the agent’s assurances — control. We confirm the position pre-purchase for any rental plan.
Ongoing compliance beyond the licence: guest registration with the authorities within 24 hours of arrival, complaint book, minimum equipment standards and the registration number on all advertising. Most owners delegate this to a local property-management firm.
Non-resident owners declare rental income quarterly on Modelo 210 at 19% (EU/EEA) or 24% (other non-residents). Resident owners declare annually on IRPF with full deductions. We set up the appropriate filing cycle as standard.
Buying La Manga property as a rental investment? The community-statute + tourist-licence + Modelo 210 setup run together is the standard investment-buyer onboarding pack.
Book an Investment Pre-Purchase CallSelling a La Manga apartment, penthouse or villa follows the standard six-stage Spanish sale framework. Most La Manga sellers are foreign-resident owners selling remotely, and inherited-apartment sales are increasingly common as the original generation of holiday-home buyers ages.
3% non-resident retention. Foreign-resident sellers: the buyer retains 3% of the gross sale price and pays it to Hacienda via Modelo 211. Reclaim the difference via Modelo 210 within four months. See our full guide.
Capital gains tax. 19% (EU/EEA) or 24% (other non-residents); acquisition costs deductible.
Plusvalía. Municipal capital-gains-on-urban-land tax. Filed within 30 days.
Inherited apartments. Common in older La Manga stock. We coordinate Spanish inheritance acceptance + Land Registry update + sale conveyancing as one workflow for foreign-resident heirs.
Community certificate. The apartment-block administrator issues a certificate of no outstanding fees, required at notary.
Non-resident sellers. The standard La Manga seller profile. Bilingual notarised Power of Attorney covers the full sale workflow — no travel required.
The majority of La Manga buyers are non-resident and complete their purchase without travelling to Spain. The remote-purchase workflow is our standard model, not an exception — here is how it works for UK, Irish, US and Northern European buyers.
The largest La Manga buyer group. We complete UK-buyer purchases entirely remotely under bilingual notarised Power of Attorney — the POA executed at a UK notary with FCDO apostille, couriered to our Spanish office and used on your behalf throughout.
Substantial Irish ownership on the peninsula. Same remote workflow — Irish-notarised POA with apostille, used in Spain for the full purchase including notary completion.
A growing American cohort. US-notarised POA with apostille plus sworn translation, used for the Spanish completion. We coordinate US-Spain tax-treaty and FATCA considerations alongside the conveyancing.
The bilingual notarised Power of Attorney is the mechanism that makes remote purchase possible. It covers offer, Arras contract, NIE, bank account, notary signing, ITP filing and Land Registry registration — drafted to a tight transaction-specific scope.
We obtain your NIE and open a Spanish bank account on your behalf under the POA — both required to complete and to set up ongoing ownership (community fees, utilities, IBI, Modelo 210).
The entire purchase — from reservation to keys — can be completed without you setting foot in Spain. Many buyers visit once to view, then complete remotely. The legal workflow is built around exactly this profile.
Buying from abroad? A short remote-purchase planning call sets up the POA, NIE and banking so the rest of the transaction runs without travel.
Book a Remote-Purchase CallThe single most important question on any La Manga purchase: who is your lawyer actually working for?
The estate agent’s preferred lawyer has an ongoing commercial relationship and an interest in transactions completing — particularly relevant where a community short-let restriction could quietly break your rental plan.
For any new-build La Manga purchase, the developer’s legal team represents the developer. Independent buyer-side representation is the protection.
We do not receive referral commissions from estate agents, developers, mortgage brokers or property-management firms.
On a specific transaction we act for buyer or seller, not both.
All work quoted as fixed fees in writing before we start. No hourly billing. No surprises at completion.
If a La Manga apartment has a community short-let prohibition that breaks your investment plan, undisclosed community debt, coastal-zone tenure issues or other red flags, our advice is that you walk or renegotiate.
Six markers clients consistently cite when choosing us for La Manga work.
Daily apartment files across La Manga, Cabo de Palos, Playa Honda, Mar de Cristal and the wider Mar Menor coast. Real volume on coastal-apartment work, not occasional dabbling.
Murcia tourist-rental registration, community short-let review and ongoing Modelo 210 rental filings. We handle the full rental-investment workflow under one fixed-fee model.
Ley de Costas review for front-line La Manga property — maritime-zone position, alteration rights and tenure questions for the closest properties.
Bilingual notarised Power of Attorney covering the full La Manga workflow. Standard for the international buyer-and-seller profile; no travel required.
Fixed-fee La Manga conveyancing agreed in writing before we start. Cost known upfront.
Coordinated cross-border planning for the international ownership base — UK-Spain, Ireland-Spain, French-Spain, Northern European. EU 650/2012 election of national law for inheritance.
The two main Mar Menor property markets offer distinctly different propositions. The comparison below is the one we walk new clients through when they’re weighing both.
| Feature | La Manga | Los Alcázares |
|---|---|---|
| Property type | Apartments (high-rise + mid-rise) | Villas + apartments |
| Rental demand | Higher (intensive holiday-let market) | Strong (mixed holiday + long-stay) |
| Year-round population | Lower (second-home / seasonal) | Higher (working town + retirees) |
| Retirement appeal | Good | Excellent |
| Holiday-home appeal | Excellent | Good |
| Beach access | Exceptional (dual-sea, both within walking distance) | Excellent (Mar Menor frontage) |
| Best-fit buyer | Holiday-home + rental investor | Retiree + relocation + beach lifestyle |
In short: La Manga tends to suit holiday-home buyers and rental investors who want apartment ownership with exceptional dual-sea beach access and strong rental yield. Los Alcázares tends to suit retirees and relocation buyers who want a working year-round town with villas as well as apartments and an excellent retirement-lifestyle profile.
For the Los Alcázares analysis: Property Solicitors Los Alcázares →
Apartment conveyancing, tourist-rental licensing, coastal-protection review, holiday-home purchases and inherited-apartment estate sales — all handled in plain English on a fixed-fee basis. Book a 30-minute video consultation with no obligation to proceed.
Other Platinum Legal Spain services La Manga property buyers and sellers most often need.
Yes — beachfront and near-beachfront apartments are the core of the La Manga market, with frontage on the Mediterranean, the Mar Menor or (on the narrowest stretches) both. For true front-line property the Ley de Costas coastal-protection rules apply, so a front-line purchase carries a specific pre-purchase check on the maritime-zone position. We confirm it before you commit.
No. There are no nationality restrictions on foreigners buying residential property in La Manga or anywhere in Spain. British, Irish, French, Belgian, Dutch, Scandinavian and other international buyers form the majority of the market. You need a Spanish NIE and a Spanish bank account; Brexit did not change British buyers’ right to purchase.
Yes — and inherited-apartment transactions are increasingly common as the original generation of La Manga holiday-home buyers ages. We coordinate the full inheritance workflow for foreign-resident heirs: Spanish inheritance acceptance, Land Registry update (often outstanding), Murcia regional inheritance tax, and — where the family decides to sell — the onward sale conveyancing under one fixed-fee instruction. See our wills & inheritance service.
If the community statutes prohibit short-let, you cannot legally run the apartment as a holiday rental — a tourist licence alone is not enough, the community statutes override it. This is exactly why the pre-purchase community-statute review matters so much for investor buyers: discovering a short-let ban after completion can undermine the entire investment case. We confirm the community’s short-let position before you pay a deposit, so your rental plan is built on solid ground rather than an assumption.
Practically yes. The Spanish notary confirms the deed but does not review apartment community statutes, tourist-rental position, coastal-protection rules or derrama exposure. An independent English-speaking property solicitor in La Manga protects against undisclosed community debt, short-let prohibitions that break your rental plan, coastal-zone issues and title problems.
Yes. No restriction on foreign ownership. You need a Spanish NIE before signing at notary, a Spanish bank account, and (for non-residents) an annual Modelo 210 tax filing. The majority of La Manga owners are non-resident foreign buyers.
Only if two conditions are met: (1) the property is registered under the Murcia regional tourist-rental regime with the registration number on every listing; (2) the apartment-block community statutes permit short-let. Some La Manga blocks have voted to restrict or prohibit short-let, so confirming the statutes pre-purchase is essential for any rental plan.
For many investors yes — La Manga is one of the strongest holiday-rental markets in the Region of Murcia, with high summer demand, a long shoulder season and durable year-round visitor flow. The key is the pre-purchase legal review: the community statutes must permit short-let and the tourist licence must be obtainable. Get those right and the rental fundamentals are strong.
The Spanish Ley de Costas governs the maritime-terrestrial public domain zone along the coastline. La Manga’s thin geography means some front-line properties sit close to or within the relevant zone, which affects alterations, terraces and, for the closest properties, long-term tenure questions. Most apartments are set back enough not to be affected; front-line property requires a specific pre-purchase check.
For a resale property budget 11–13% on top of the purchase price for total transaction costs: ITP (Murcia regional rate, currently 8%), notary, Land Registry, gestoría, legal fees and contingency. For new build: 12–14% (IVA 10% + AJD 1.5% replace ITP).
Typical La Manga community fees: €50–€120/month for older blocks with basic services; €120–€250/month for blocks with communal pool, lift, gardens or security. Front-line and larger developments can run higher. Always confirmed for the specific block, with 24-month history, pre-purchase.
Yes. The NIE is required for any La Manga property purchase. Obtainable through your home-country Spanish consulate, in person in Spain, or under Power of Attorney. See our NIE service page.
Yes — standard for the international La Manga buyer profile. Bilingual notarised Power of Attorney covers offer, Arras contract, NIE, bank account, notary signing, ITP filing and Land Registry registration. No travel required.
La Manga developed intensively from the 1960s through the 1990s, so much of the stock is older — with periodic capital expense for lift modernisation, façade repair (salt-air corrosion is significant) and structural derramas. Newer post-2000 stock exists too. We review the building age, maintenance history and upcoming-works risk for every apartment file.
Yes — increasingly common as the original generation of holiday-home buyers ages. We coordinate Spanish inheritance acceptance, Land Registry update (often outstanding), Murcia regional IHT, sale conveyancing, 3% non-resident retention, capital gains and plusvalía — fully managed for foreign-resident heirs.
A standard resale La Manga apartment transaction takes 6–10 weeks from accepted offer to notary signing — generally fast coastal-apartment conveyancing, with community-statute and tourist-rental review the main pre-purchase variables. Off-plan and new-build follow developer schedules.
Yes. Bilingual notarised POAs covering offer, Arras, NIE, banking, notary signing, ITP filing and Land Registry registration. Standard for our remote-buyer and remote-seller La Manga caseload.
Depends on priorities. La Manga suits holiday-home buyers and rental investors wanting apartments with exceptional dual-sea beach access. Los Alcázares suits retirees and relocation buyers wanting a year-round town with villas and apartments. See the full comparison table.
Speak to an independent English-speaking property solicitor in La Manga before you sign, pay a deposit or commit — especially on community statutes, tourist-rental position and coastal-protection questions. Fixed fees agreed in writing; consultations available by video call.