Property Solicitors · Torre de la Horadada

Property Solicitors in Torre de la Horadada

Independent English-speaking property solicitors and legal experts for buyers, sellers and investors in Torre de la Horadada — the marina-and-beach town of the southern Costa Blanca. We specialise in seafront and beachfront apartment conveyancing, Ley de Costas coastal-protection checks, villa due diligence, holiday-rental licensing, new-build review, NIE applications, Power of Attorney and non-resident tax — all in plain English.

Torre de la Horadada is the coastal jewel of the Pilar de la Horadada municipality — a relaxed marina town with Blue-Flag beaches, a working harbour and a strong seafront-apartment market. It draws Spanish summer owners from Madrid alongside British and Northern European buyers, and its beachfront stock makes the coastal-zone legal review especially important. It sits in the Valencia region, so resale tax is 10%.

Buying a beachfront apartment in Torre de la Horadada?

Speak to an independent English-speaking property solicitor before you sign or pay a deposit — front-line coastal property needs a site-specific Ley de Costas and community-statute review that a standard purchase often skips.

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Section 1

Buying property in Torre de la Horadada

Torre de la Horadada — “Torre” to locals — is the seafront town of the Pilar de la Horadada municipality, at the very southern tip of the Costa Blanca. Built around a historic watchtower, a sport marina and a string of Blue-Flag beaches, it is a relaxed, family-oriented resort with an unusually strong Spanish ownership base alongside its international buyers. The property market is dominated by apartments — many seafront or a short walk from the sand — with villas on the streets behind and around the marina.

As your English-speaking property solicitor in Torre de la Horadada, we manage the full conveyancing process from reservation and Arras contract through NIE, due diligence, notary completion, tax filing and Land Registry registration. Because so much of the stock is beachfront, the legal work here leans heavily on two things most buyers underestimate: the coastal-protection (Ley de Costas) position of front-line property, and the community statutes that govern seafront apartment blocks and their short-let rights.

Torre de la Horadada is in the Valencia region, so resale property is taxed at the Valencian ITP rate of 10%. For wider municipality context — the town, golf and inland urbanisations — see our Pilar de la Horadada hub page.

Why Torre de la Horadada

Why buyers choose Torre de la Horadada

Torre’s appeal is pure coast — marina, beaches and seafront living at the quieter southern end of the Costa Blanca. Six drivers stand out.

Blue-Flag beaches

A run of clean, family beaches — Playa del Conde, Las Higuericas and Mil Palmeras nearby — right on the doorstep of the town.

The marina

A working sport marina with berths, restaurants and a promenade — the social and visual heart of the town.

Seafront apartments

A deep market of beachfront and near-beach apartments — the classic Torre purchase, strong for both lifestyle and rental.

Spanish & international mix

A genuine Spanish summer crowd (many from Madrid) alongside British and Northern European owners — lively in season, settled out of it.

Relaxed & family-friendly

A calmer, more residential feel than the big resort strips — a deliberate draw for families and retirees.

Rental demand

Beach-and-marina appeal drives a strong summer holiday-rental market for owners who want their home to earn.

Torre de la Horadada at a glance

The marina-and-beach town of the southern Costa Blanca

Quick context for buyers focused on the seafront.

  • Coastal town of the Pilar de la Horadada municipality
  • Sport marina + Blue-Flag beaches
  • Apartment-dominated seafront market
  • Villas around the marina & streets behind
  • Strong Spanish (Madrid) + international ownership
  • Family-friendly & relaxed
  • Strong summer holiday-rental demand
  • Ley de Costas review — key for front-line stock
  • Valencia region — resale ITP 10%
  • Minutes from the Murcia border & San Pedro del Pinatar
Legal risk picture

Why Torre de la Horadada property needs careful legal checks

Torre legal risk is coastal-apartment risk — concentrated on the shore and the community. Six issues drive most reviews.

Coastal protection (Ley de Costas)

The defining Torre check. Front-line and near-front property can be affected by the Ley de Costas — tenure, terraces and alterations. We run a site-specific coastal-zone review.

Community statutes

Seafront apartment blocks are Comunidades de Propietarios — statutes govern short-let, alterations, pools, parking and fees. Critical for rental plans.

Tourist-rental licensing

Short-let requires a Valencian tourist-rental registration (vivienda turística) — and the community statutes must allow it. We confirm both.

New-build & off-plan

For newer beach apartments, developer contracts, bank guarantees, stage payments and completion licences all need checking before you pay.

Terraces & alterations

Enclosed terraces, solariums and extensions are common on coastal apartments — we confirm they were licensed and registered.

Non-resident tax

Foreign owners file annual Modelo 210 even when un-let, plus quarterly Modelo 210 on rental income. Set up at purchase.

Coastal specialism

Beachfront property & the Ley de Costas at Torre de la Horadada

Buying on the front line is the dream Torre purchase — and the one that most needs specialist coastal due diligence. Here is what we check, and why it matters.

Coastal-zone position

We establish where the property sits relative to the public maritime-terrestrial domain and its protection (servidumbre) zones — the foundation of any front-line purchase.

Tenure & concessions

Where coastal law affects a property, we confirm the legal position and any concession status before you commit — not after.

Terraces & sea-facing alterations

Sea-facing terraces and enclosures are a frequent informality. We confirm what is licensed, registered and safe to buy.

Future-works limits

Coastal rules can restrict what you may later change. We tell you what the property allows before you build your plans around it.

Resale impact

An unresolved coastal-zone or licensing issue affects your future resale. We flag it now so it never becomes your problem to inherit.

Honest verdict

If a beachfront property’s coastal-zone position cannot be made safe, we tell you plainly — before any money is at risk.

Eyeing a front-line apartment in Torre? The Ley de Costas + community-statute review is the single most important step on a beachfront purchase — it confirms exactly what you can own, use and let.

Book a Coastal Pre-Purchase Review
Pre-purchase checklist

What we check before you buy in Torre de la Horadada

Our standard pre-purchase due diligence for Torre de la Horadada property.

  • Nota Simple — current Land Registry extract
  • Ownership chain — title and seller authority
  • Debts & charges — mortgages, embargoes, liens
  • IBI — municipal property tax arrears
  • Coastal-zone positionLey de Costas
  • Community fees & statutes — short-let, alterations
  • Terraces & enclosures — licensed and registered
  • Developer contract & bank guarantees — off-plan
  • Build & first-occupation licences
  • Catastro reconciliation — surface and description
  • Tourist-rental position — Valencian regime
  • Tax position — ITP 10% (Valencia), plusvalía, Modelo 210
Geographic coverage

Beaches & areas we cover in & around Torre de la Horadada

The seafront sub-markets where we run files most often — plus the nearby coast.

The marina & promenadeThe heart of town — marina-side apartments and the social hub.
Playa del CondeA central town beach — prime seafront apartment territory.
Las HiguericasA Blue-Flag beach with seafront and near-seafront property.
Mil PalmerasThe adjoining beach resort — apartments and strong rental demand.
Streets behind the frontVillas and townhouses a short walk from the sand — quieter, often better value.
Pilar de la Horadada townThe municipal centre & golf inland. See Pilar de la Horadada solicitors.
San Pedro del PinatarThe Murcia neighbour over the border. See San Pedro del Pinatar solicitors.
Orihuela CostaThe resort coast to the north. See La Zenia & Cabo Roig.
Property types

Property types in Torre de la Horadada

Torre is an apartment town with villas behind — the legal review adapts to the type.

Beachfront apartments

The classic Torre purchase — front-line and near-beach apartments. Coastal-zone and community-statute review front and centre. See our Buying an Apartment in Spain guide.

Marina-side property

Apartments and townhouses around the marina — prime location with community and (where relevant) coastal considerations.

Villas

Detached villas on the streets behind the front. We verify boundaries, pool and terrace licensing and utilities. See our Buying a Villa in Spain guide.

New-build apartments

Newer beach releases — the off-plan framework (bank guarantees, IVA 10% + AJD 1.4%, snagging) applies. Independent buyer-side review is essential.

Rental investment

Holiday letting & rental yield in Torre de la Horadada

The marina and Blue-Flag beaches make Torre a genuinely strong summer holiday-rental market — done legally.

Valencian tourist licence

Short-let requires registration as a vivienda turística under the Valencian regime, with the number on every listing.

Community permission

Seafront apartment statutes can restrict short-let. We confirm the position before purchase — the make-or-break check for a rental buyer.

Strong summer demand

Beach-and-marina appeal drives high summer occupancy — the core of the Torre rental case. We are property lawyers, not letting agents; we confirm what is permitted, not project returns.

Long-term rental

The year-round community supports stable long-term letting too. See our holiday-let vs long-term guide.

Airbnb & Booking.com

Listings must display the tourist-registration number and meet guest-registration rules.

Rental income tax

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.

Seller representation

Selling property in Torre de la Horadada

Selling a Torre de la Horadada apartment or villa follows the standard Spanish sale framework — with extra care on coastal documentation.

Coastal documentation. For front-line property, we prepare the coastal-zone and licensing documentation a buyer’s lawyer will scrutinise — a frequent cause of delay if left to the last minute.

3% non-resident retention. Applies to foreign-resident sellers — 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. Required at notary for apartment sales.

Power of Attorney. Remote sellers complete without travelling to Spain under a bilingual notarised Power of Attorney.

Why independent

Why use an independent property solicitor in Torre de la Horadada?

On beachfront property especially: who is your lawyer actually working for?

Not the agent’s lawyer

The estate agent’s preferred lawyer has a commercial relationship with the agent. We act for you.

Coastal due diligence on your side

On front-line property, an independent lawyer is what stands between you and a coastal-zone or licensing problem. We check the shore, not the brochure.

Independent of estate agents

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.

One-side representation

On a specific transaction we act for buyer or seller, never both.

Fixed fees

All work quoted in writing before we start. No hourly billing.

We will tell you to walk away

If a beachfront property’s coastal position or licensing cannot be made safe, we say so plainly.

E-E-A-T · coastal expertise

Why buyers trust our Torre de la Horadada property lawyers

Six markers clients consistently cite when choosing us for Torre de la Horadada work.

Beachfront specialism

Ley de Costas review, terrace and enclosure legality, seafront community statutes — the coastal-apartment expertise Torre needs.

Costa Blanca South coverage

Daily files across Torre de la Horadada, Pilar de la Horadada and the Murcia border coast — with the correct Valencian tax handling.

Rental-investor focus

Tourist-licence and statute review so buyers know exactly what they can legally let before they buy.

Remote purchases & sales

Bilingual notarised Power of Attorney for buyers and sellers abroad.

Fixed fees

Fixed-fee conveyancing agreed in writing before we start.

Cross-border tax & inheritance

UK-Spain, Ireland-Spain and Northern European ownership and inheritance planning.

FAQs

Frequently asked questions — property solicitors Torre de la Horadada

Is Torre de la Horadada a good place to buy?

For beach-and-marina buyers, yes — it offers Blue-Flag beaches, a sport marina and a strong seafront-apartment market with a relaxed, family feel and good rental demand. The key is the coastal-zone and community-statute review on front-line property, which is exactly where we focus.

Do I need a Ley de Costas check on a beachfront apartment?

Yes. Front-line and near-front property in Torre can be affected by Spain's coastal law (Ley de Costas), which governs tenure, terraces and alterations near the shore. We run a site-specific coastal-zone review before you commit — it is the single most important check on a beachfront purchase.

What tax do I pay buying in Torre de la Horadada?

Torre de la Horadada is in the Valencia region, so resale property is taxed at the Valencian ITP rate of 9% (to €1M; 11% above €1M, from 1 June 2026). New build attracts IVA 10% + AJD 1.4%. Budget roughly 11–13% all-in on top of the price.

What is the difference between Torre de la Horadada and Pilar de la Horadada?

Torre de la Horadada is the coastal, marina-and-beach town; Pilar de la Horadada is the municipality and its inland town, which also covers golf and the Pinar de Campoverde urbanisation. Choose Torre for the seafront; see our Pilar de la Horadada page for the wider area.

Can I rent out my apartment in Torre de la Horadada?

Often yes, and many owners do — but it depends on the community statutes. Short-let requires a Valencian tourist registration (vivienda turística) and the seafront block's statutes must permit it. We confirm both before you buy.

Can foreigners buy property in Torre de la Horadada?

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. Torre has a strong international community alongside its Spanish owners.

Can I buy property remotely?

Yes. We routinely complete Torre de la Horadada purchases under bilingual notarised Power of Attorney for clients abroad. No travel required.

Do I need an NIE number?

Yes. The NIE is required for any Torre de la Horadada property purchase. Obtainable through your home-country consulate, in person in Spain, or under Power of Attorney. See our NIE service page.

Why owners choose Platinum Legal Spain
Independent English-speaking property solicitors
Buyer & seller representation
Remote purchases via Power of Attorney
Property, tax & immigration support
New-build, resale & resort-property experience
Murcia, Costa Blanca & Almería coverage
Get property legal help

Buying or selling in Torre de la Horadada?

Speak to an independent English-speaking property solicitor before you sign, pay a deposit or commit — especially on a beachfront apartment where the Ley de Costas and community-statute review is everything. Fixed fees agreed in writing.