Independent English-speaking property solicitors and legal experts for buyers, sellers and relocating retirees in San Pedro del Pinatar, Lo Pagán, Villananitos, El Mojón, Las Salinas and the Marina de las Salinas. We handle coastal-property conveyancing, apartment and villa due diligence, community statutes, marina berth and mooring rights, tourist-rental licensing, coastal-protection (Ley de Costas) checks, NIE applications, Power of Attorney, tax registration and Land Registry formalities — all in plain English.
San Pedro del Pinatar is the northern tip of the Murcia coast — a genuine year-round Spanish town with two seas, a marina, the famous Lo Pagán mud baths and the Salinas y Arenales regional park. It is a different market from the holiday peninsula of La Manga, the beach town of Los Alcázares and the residential hub of San Javier — a relocation, retirement, wellness and marina market.
Speak to an independent English-speaking property solicitor before you sign, pay a deposit or commit — especially on Lo Pagán seafront apartments, marina property with berth rights, front-line homes affected by the Ley de Costas, or rental-investment purchases.
San Pedro del Pinatar sits at the northern edge of the Region of Murcia, where the Mar Menor lagoon meets the open Mediterranean and the coast borders Alicante province. It is one of the most distinctive markets on the whole Mar Menor: a working, year-round Spanish town with full services, plus the seafront district of Lo Pagán, the Salinas y Arenales de San Pedro regional park, two separate coastlines and a marina. Where La Manga is a holiday peninsula and Los Alcázares a beach town, San Pedro is a place people live — weighted heavily toward retirees, relocators, year-round residents and wellness and marina buyers.
As your English-speaking property solicitor in San Pedro del Pinatar, we manage the full conveyancing process from reservation and Arras contract through NIE, due diligence, notary completion and Land Registry registration. The legal terrain here is more varied than at San Javier: extensive beachfront ownership brings coastal-protection considerations into play, marina property carries berth and mooring rights that are often registered separately from the home, and the strong Lo Pagán rental market makes tourist-licence and community-statute review central for investors.
There are no rural AFO / DAFO issues and no golf-resort statutes here. Instead, the review focuses on apartment-community statutes, the Ley de Costas position for front-line property, marina berth/mooring registration, tourist-rental licensing, new-build guarantees and the standard non-resident tax setup for a large foreign-owner base.
San Pedro’s appeal is year-round living, wellness and the marina — not seasonal holiday rental. Seven drivers stand out.
The Lo Pagán mud baths (Las Charcas) are a genuine draw, anchoring a year-round wellness-tourism economy that few coastal towns can match — and a meaningful driver of rental demand and resilience.
San Pedro has both the warm, shallow Mar Menor lagoon (Lo Pagán, Villananitos) and the open Mediterranean (El Mojón) — a genuinely unusual combination on one municipality’s coastline.
The Marina de las Salinas adds a boat-owner market and higher-value waterside stock — a lifestyle dimension absent from most Mar Menor towns.
Murcia-Corvera International Airport is around 35–40 minutes and Alicante-Elche around 45 — practical for owners and relocators flying home regularly.
A flat, walkable town with healthcare, year-round services, a long promenade and a settled resident community makes San Pedro one of the best practical retirement bases on the coast.
Prices sit below comparable Costa Blanca South stock just over the provincial border, while offering the same Mediterranean access — a core part of the relocation argument.
San Pedro is a real working town, not a seasonal resort — full services, schools and shops open all year, with a genuine winter community.
Quick context for buyers comparing San Pedro to the other Mar Menor towns.
San Pedro’s legal profile is more varied than San Javier’s — beachfront ownership and marina property add issues the inland towns do not face. Six drive most reviews.
Most purchases are apartments in Comunidades de Propietarios — especially in Lo Pagán and Villananitos. The statutes govern short-let, alterations, fees and common-area use. Standard pre-purchase review.
Important in Lo Pagán, where wellness and beach tourism drive short-let demand. Registration under the Murcia tourist regime plus community permission both need checking.
The distinctive San Pedro issue: a berth or mooring may be registered separately from the apartment, held as an administrative concession, or carry transfer restrictions. We confirm exactly what comes with the property — see the marina section below.
More relevant here than at San Javier because of extensive front-line ownership at Lo Pagán, Villananitos and El Mojón. The Ley de Costas affects terraces, alterations and, for the closest property, tenure. Site-specific check.
San Pedro has seen significant recent development. Off-plan and new-build require developer-contract review, bank guarantees and stage-payment protection.
A large foreign-owner base means ongoing Modelo 210 obligations on ownership and rental income, set up at purchase.
Buying a Lo Pagán apartment or marina home? The community-statute + coastal-zone + berth-registration review pre-purchase confirms exactly what you are buying — and what comes with it.
Book a Pre-Purchase ReviewOur standard pre-purchase due diligence for San Pedro del Pinatar property.
The sub-markets where we run files most often — across the town, both coastlines and the marina.
Lo Pagán is the seafront heart of San Pedro — a Mar Menor promenade town built around the famous mud baths and a year-round wellness-tourism economy. For many buyers, buying property near the mud baths in Lo Pagán is the whole reason they look at San Pedro at all.
The Lo Pagán mud baths draw wellness visitors year-round, well beyond the summer beach season — the engine behind the area’s rental resilience. Apartments within walking distance command a premium.
Apartments fronting the Lo Pagán paseo and the Mar Menor command a clear premium for the seafront position and lagoon views. We confirm the registered description matches the unit.
The combination of mud baths, calm swimming and the promenade supports a long, stable short-let and long-stay rental season — strong for investors, subject to the statutes and licensing.
Front-line Lo Pagán property may sit close to the maritime-terrestrial public domain. The Ley de Costas check is specific and important here.
Some seafront stock dates from earlier decades, with periodic capital expense for façade and salt-air repair, lift modernisation and structural derramas. AGM-minute review identifies upcoming works.
Lo Pagán stays active through the winter thanks to the wellness economy and resident community — a key difference from purely seasonal resorts.
Marina property is San Pedro’s most distinctive legal segment — and the one where independent review matters most, because a berth or mooring is rarely as simple as it looks on the listing.
A berth or mooring may be sold with the apartment or entirely separately. We confirm precisely what right is being transferred — freehold-style ownership, a long lease, a transferable use right, or an administrative concession over public maritime domain.
Berths are frequently registered separately from the home, with their own Nota Simple, fees and rules. We check the registration, any charges and whether the berth genuinely conveys with the property.
Where a berth sits on public maritime-terrestrial domain, it is typically a time-limited concession rather than outright ownership. We confirm the remaining term, renewal position and what happens at expiry.
Some berths can only be transferred with marina or authority consent, or only to the apartment’s owner. We confirm any restriction before you assume the berth is yours to keep or sell on.
Marina-community and berth-maintenance fees are separate from the apartment community. We confirm the current charges, the rules and any arrears.
Marina apartments are the premium San Pedro product. Getting the berth position right is what protects that premium — on purchase and on a future resale.
Buying a marina apartment with a berth? Confirming exactly what berth right transfers — and on what tenure — is the single most important check on a Marina de las Salinas purchase.
Book a Marina Pre-Purchase ReviewSan Pedro offers both apartments — the dominant seafront and town product — and villas, especially on the Mediterranean side at El Mojón. The legal review adapts to the type.
Lo Pagán and Villananitos promenade and near-seafront apartments — the premium rental product, covered in the Lo Pagán section. See our Buying an Apartment in Spain guide.
San Pedro town-centre apartments and townhouses — value-led, walk-everywhere, year-round. The standard apartment-community review applies.
Mediterranean-side detached villas and townhouses. We verify plot boundaries, pool and extension licensing, and utility connections. See our Buying a Villa in Spain guide.
Property adjoining the Salinas regional park carries protected-outlook value — we confirm the planning and any environmental-zone considerations.
The premium waterside product, with berth considerations — covered in the marina section.
Recent off-plan and new-build apartments and villas — the off-plan framework is covered in the new-build section.
San Pedro — and Lo Pagán in particular — has a strong rental market, driven by wellness, beach and year-round demand. The licensing and community position determines what is possible.
Short-let requires registration under the Murcia regional tourist-rental regime, with the registration number on every listing. We handle registration as a standalone service or as part of the purchase.
The Lo Pagán mud baths and Mar Menor beaches support a longer, more resilient rental season than purely summer markets — a genuine investor advantage.
Apartment-block statutes can permit, restrict or prohibit short-let. The statutes — not the agent — control. Confirmed pre-purchase.
San Pedro’s year-round, working-town character also supports stable long-term residential letting — lower-management than holiday-let. See our holiday-let vs long-term guide.
Listings must display the Murcia tourist-registration number; ongoing compliance covers guest registration and minimum standards.
Non-resident owners declare rental income quarterly on Modelo 210 — 19% (EU/EEA) or 24% (other) — with an annual return due even when un-let.
San Pedro has seen significant recent development, so off-plan and new-build are a real part of the market. Off-plan is a different legal animal from resale.
Buyer-side review of the off-plan contract — stage-payment schedule, completion warranties, snagging, finish specification and termination rights — before you sign.
Stage payments must be secured by individual bank guarantees or insurance. Verification before any payment is non-negotiable.
Reservation, build-milestone payments and completion balance — each documented and tied to verified construction progress.
New build attracts IVA (10% residential) plus AJD (Murcia 1.5%) instead of resale ITP — total costs typically 12–14%.
We confirm the build licence and the route to the first-occupation licence — required for utilities, habitation and resale.
Independent snagging at handover, plus the statutory 10-year structural, 3-year build-quality and 1-year finish warranties.
Selling a San Pedro apartment, villa or marina home follows the standard Spanish sale framework, with extra care around coastal documentation, marina berths and community certificates. Many sellers are foreign owners selling remotely.
3% non-resident retention. Foreign-resident sellers have 3% of the price withheld by the buyer and paid to Hacienda, reclaimable via Modelo 210. See our full guide.
Capital gains tax. 19% (EU/EEA) or 24% (other non-residents); acquisition costs deductible.
Plusvalía. Municipal land-value tax, filed after the sale.
Community certificate. A certificate of no outstanding community (and, for marina property, berth) fees is required at notary.
Marina berth transfer. Where a berth conveys with the home, we coordinate its registration and any required marina or authority consent.
Inherited property. We coordinate Spanish inheritance acceptance, Land Registry update and sale as one workflow for foreign-resident heirs.
Power of Attorney. Remote sellers complete without travelling to Spain under a bilingual notarised Power of Attorney.
The single most important question on any purchase: who is your lawyer actually working for?
The estate agent’s preferred lawyer has a commercial relationship with the agent. We act for you.
For new-build purchases, the developer’s legal team represents the developer. Independent buyer-side review is the protection.
We are an independent law firm — not owned by, tied to, or operated by any estate agency, developer or property-management company. We act for you alone.
On a specific transaction we act for buyer or seller, never both.
All work quoted in writing before we start. No hourly billing.
If the coastal-zone position, a marina berth’s tenure, the community rules or title break the deal, we say so clearly.
Six markers clients consistently cite when choosing us for San Pedro work.
Daily files across San Pedro, San Javier, Los Alcázares, La Manga and the wider Mar Menor coast. Real volume on northern-lagoon work.
Berth and mooring registration, concession tenure and transfer rules — the marina-property review most firms skim.
Front-line and near-front-line coastal-zone checks where required — essential on a town with this much beachfront ownership.
Purchase coordinated with NLV or DNV residency, healthcare and tax setup for full-time movers.
Bilingual notarised Power of Attorney for buyers and sellers abroad. No travel required.
Fixed-fee San Pedro conveyancing agreed in writing before we start.
The two northern Mar Menor towns both suit retirees — but the lifestyle and property mix differ. The comparison below is the one we walk new clients through.
| Feature | San Pedro del Pinatar | Los Alcázares |
|---|---|---|
| Character | Working town + marina + wellness | Year-round beach town |
| Retirement appeal | Excellent | Excellent |
| Marina | Strong (Marina de las Salinas) | Limited |
| Wellness tourism | Major factor (mud baths) | Minor |
| Seas | Two — Mar Menor + Mediterranean | Mar Menor only |
| Property mix | Apartments + villas + marina | Villas + apartments |
| Best fit | Retirees, relocators, marina buyers | Retirees, beach-lifestyle buyers |
In short: San Pedro suits retirees and relocators who want a working Spanish town with wellness, two seas and the marina; Los Alcázares suits retirees and beach-lifestyle buyers wanting an established Mar Menor beach town with more villas. Both are excellent year-round options.
Lo Pagán seafront and town apartment conveyancing, El Mojón villas, marina property with berth rights, new-build review and full relocation support — all handled in plain English on a fixed-fee basis.
Other Platinum Legal Spain services San Pedro buyers and sellers most often need.
Yes — it is one of the best practical retirement bases on the Mar Menor. It is a flat, walkable, year-round working town with healthcare, full services, a long promenade, the Lo Pagán mud baths and two coastlines, with Murcia-Corvera airport around 35–40 minutes for family visits. It suits retirees who want a real Spanish town rather than a seasonal resort.
Yes — Lo Pagán has a strong apartment market within walking distance of the mud baths (Las Charcas), and those positions command a premium for the wellness and rental appeal. Front-line seafront property carries a coastal-protection (Ley de Costas) check, which we run pre-purchase.
Yes. There is no restriction on foreign ownership. You need a Spanish NIE, a Spanish bank account and (for non-residents) an annual Modelo 210 tax filing. San Pedro has a large, established foreign-owner community.
For many buyers yes — the mud baths and Mar Menor beaches support a longer, more resilient rental season than purely summer markets. The key checks are Murcia tourist-rental registration, community-statute permission and realistic management costs, all of which we review pre-purchase.
It depends on the berth. A mooring or berth at the Marina de las Salinas may be sold with the apartment or separately, and may be outright ownership, a long lease, a transferable use right or a time-limited administrative concession over public maritime domain. We confirm exactly what right transfers, its tenure, any transfer restrictions and the separate fees before you commit. See the marina section above.
For resale property, budget roughly 11–13% on top of the purchase price: Murcia ITP (currently 7.75%), notary, Land Registry, gestoría, legal fees and contingency. New build usually runs 12–14% (IVA 10% + AJD 1.5% replace ITP).
Often yes, but it depends on the statutes. Short-let requires registration under the Murcia tourist-rental regime, and the apartment-community statutes must permit it. The listing must display the registration number. We confirm both before you buy.
Different strengths. San Pedro adds a marina, the mud baths / wellness economy and two coastlines to a working year-round town. Los Alcázares is an established Mar Menor beach town with more villas. Both are excellent for retirees — see the full comparison table.
Yes. The NIE is required for any San Pedro property purchase. Obtainable through your home-country consulate, in person in Spain, or under Power of Attorney. See our NIE service page.
Yes. We routinely complete San Pedro purchases under bilingual notarised Power of Attorney for clients abroad — common for the area’s retirement and relocation buyers. No travel required.
Speak to an independent English-speaking property solicitor before you sign, pay a deposit or commit — whether it’s a Lo Pagán seafront apartment, a marina home with a berth or an El Mojón villa. Fixed fees agreed in writing.