MUNDO Research Team · Vetted by Costa del Sol property professionals
Published February 2026 · Updated February 2026 · 15 min read
What Is a Spanish SL (Sociedad Limitada)?
A Sociedad Limitada — commonly abbreviated to SL — is Spain's equivalent of a UK private limited company. It is the most common corporate structure used in Spain, and in recent years it has become an increasingly popular vehicle for foreign property investors, particularly those from the UK who face a less favourable personal tax regime after Brexit.
The concept is straightforward: instead of buying a Spanish property in your personal name, you incorporate a Spanish limited company and the company purchases the property. You own the shares in the company, and the company owns the bricks and mortar. This seemingly simple structural change can have profound implications for how you are taxed on rental income, capital gains, and inheritance — and in many cases, those implications are significantly more favourable than personal ownership.
But an SL is not a magic bullet. It comes with formation costs, ongoing compliance obligations, and annual running expenses that make it uneconomical for certain types of buyers. This guide sets out exactly when an SL makes financial sense, when it does not, and the real numbers behind the decision.
Important: This guide provides general information based on Spanish tax law as of 2026. Tax rules change, and individual circumstances vary. Always consult a qualified Spanish tax adviser (asesor fiscal) and a UK tax adviser before structuring a property purchase through a company. Nothing in this article constitutes tax advice.
Formation Costs: What It Takes to Set Up an SL
Setting up a Spanish SL is a well-trodden path, but it is not cheap, and it is not instant. Expect the process to take 4-8 weeks from start to finish, and budget for the following costs:
| Cost Item | Amount | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Minimum share capital | €3,000 | Must be deposited in a Spanish bank account before incorporation. This money belongs to the company and can be used for business purposes after formation |
| Notary fees | €400-€700 | For the deed of incorporation (escritura de constitución) |
| Commercial Registry | €150-€300 | Registration with the Registro Mercantil |
| Company name reservation | €15-€20 | Certificate from the Central Mercantile Registry confirming the name is available |
| Legal and advisory fees | €1,500-€3,000 | Lawyer/gestor to draft articles of association, handle filings, and coordinate the process |
| CIF (tax ID) application | €0 | Free, but must be obtained from the Spanish tax authority (AEAT) before the company can operate |
| Bank account opening | €0-€100 | Some banks charge an account opening fee; others waive it. The account is needed to deposit share capital |
| Total formation cost | €5,065-€7,120 | Including the €3,000 share capital |
The €3,000 minimum share capital is not a sunk cost — it remains in the company and can be used to fund the property purchase or cover expenses. However, you should think of the €2,065-€4,120 in fees as the true cost of formation.
Practical Steps to Incorporate
- Obtain your NIE — As a director and shareholder, you need a Spanish tax identification number. If you already have one from a previous property purchase, it is still valid
- Reserve the company name — Apply to the Registro Mercantil Central for a Certificado Negativo de Denominación Social. This confirms no other company uses your chosen name. The certificate is valid for 6 months
- Open a Spanish bank account — Deposit the €3,000 minimum share capital. The bank issues a certificate of deposit (certificado de ingreso) needed for the notary
- Draft the articles of association — Your lawyer prepares the estatutos sociales, which define the company's purpose (should include property investment/management), governance structure, and share distribution
- Sign before a notary — The founders (you, or you and your spouse) sign the deed of incorporation. If you cannot attend in person, a Spanish-registered power of attorney works
- Register with the Commercial Registry — Your lawyer files the escritura with the local Registro Mercantil. This takes 1-3 weeks
- Apply for the CIF — The company's tax identification number, obtained from the Agencia Tributaria. This is the company's equivalent of your personal NIE
- Register for IAE — The Impuesto sobre Actividades Económicas registration, declaring the company's business activity. For property investment, the relevant heading is typically 8612 (alquiler de locales industriales y otros alquileres) or 8611
Annual Running Costs
An SL is not a "set and forget" structure. Spanish law requires active compliance, and the annual running costs are significant enough to affect your investment return calculations.
| Obligation | Annual Cost | Frequency |
|---|---|---|
| Accounting and bookkeeping | €1,200-€2,400 | Monthly |
| Corporation tax filing (Impuesto de Sociedades, Model 200) | €300-€600 | Annual (July 25 deadline) |
| VAT returns (if applicable) | €200-€500 | Quarterly |
| Annual accounts filing | €200-€400 | Annual (must be filed within 30 days of approval) |
| Legalization of accounting books | €50-€100 | Annual |
| Bank charges | €100-€300 | Annual |
| Registered office | €0-€600 | Annual (if using a virtual office; free if using the property address) |
| Total annual cost | €2,050-€4,900 |
At the lower end, you are looking at around €170/month. At the upper end, with VAT obligations and a virtual office, closer to €410/month. This is the baseline cost of keeping the SL alive and compliant, before any property-related expenses.
Tax Comparison: Personal Ownership vs SL Ownership
This is where the decision gets interesting. The tax treatment of Spanish property income differs dramatically depending on whether you hold personally or through an SL — and the differences have become more pronounced for UK nationals since Brexit.
Rental Income
The most compelling advantage of SL ownership is the treatment of rental income. Here is how the numbers compare:
| Factor | Personal Ownership (Non-Resident) | SL Ownership |
|---|---|---|
| Tax rate on rental income | 19% (EU/EEA residents) or 24% (non-EU — includes UK post-Brexit) | 25% corporation tax |
| Deductible expenses | EU/EEA residents: can deduct proportional expenses. Non-EU (UK): NO deductions allowed | ALL legitimate expenses deductible: mortgage interest, insurance, management fees, maintenance, repairs, community charges, IBI, depreciation, utilities, professional fees |
| Depreciation deduction | Not available for non-EU individuals | 3% annual depreciation on the construction value (excluding land). On a €500k property where construction = 70%, that is €10,500/year deduction |
| Net effective tax rate | 24% on gross rental income (UK individuals) | 25% on net profit after all deductions — often 5-15% effective rate on gross income |
The inability to deduct expenses as a non-EU individual is the single biggest tax disadvantage UK property owners face in Spain post-Brexit. If you earn €30,000/year in rental income and have €18,000 in legitimate expenses (mortgage interest, management, maintenance, depreciation), the comparison is stark:
Worked Example: €500,000 Property, €30,000 Annual Rental Income
Let us walk through a concrete scenario. You purchase a property for €500,000 in Marbella and generate €30,000/year in rental income from holiday lets.
Personal ownership (UK non-resident):
- Gross rental income: €30,000
- Deductible expenses: €0 (non-EU individuals cannot deduct expenses)
- Taxable income: €30,000
- Tax rate: 24%
- Tax payable: €7,200
- Net income after tax: €22,800
- Net yield: 4.56%
SL ownership:
- Gross rental income: €30,000
- Deductible expenses:
- Mortgage interest: €8,000
- Property management: €3,600
- Maintenance and repairs: €2,000
- Insurance: €800
- Community charges: €1,800
- IBI (council tax): €1,200
- Depreciation (3% of €350,000 construction value): €10,500
- Accounting fees: €1,800
- Total deductions: €29,700
- Taxable profit: €300
- Corporation tax at 25%: €75
- Net income after tax: €29,925 (before reinvesting or distributing)
- Effective tax rate on gross income: 0.25%
The difference: In this worked example, the SL saves €7,125 per year in Spanish tax on the same rental income. Over a 10-year hold period, that is €71,250 — far exceeding the cumulative cost of formation and annual compliance (€25,000-€55,000 over 10 years). The key driver is the depreciation deduction, which shelters €10,500 annually despite not being an actual cash outflow.
It is worth noting that if you withdraw profits from the SL as dividends, there is a further tax layer. Spain withholds 19% on dividends paid to non-residents. However, the UK-Spain double taxation treaty may reduce this, and careful planning around timing of distributions can optimise the overall position. Many investors choose to retain profits within the SL and reinvest in further property, deferring the dividend tax indefinitely.
Capital Gains on Sale
When you sell, the tax treatment also differs between personal and SL ownership:
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| Factor | Personal Ownership | SL Ownership |
|---|---|---|
| Tax rate on gains | 19% (first €6,000), 21% (€6,001-€50,000), 23% (over €50,000), 27% (over €200,000), 28% (over €300,000) | 25% flat rate (corporation tax) |
| Acquisition cost adjustments | Purchase costs, improvements (with invoices) | Same, plus accumulated depreciation reduces the base cost (meaning higher taxable gain) |
| Retention by buyer | 3% retention on sale price (non-resident vendor) | No retention if the company is Spanish tax resident |
| Selling shares instead | Not applicable | Possible — buyer acquires shares, not property. Different tax treatment, no property transfer tax |
For modest gains, personal ownership may actually be slightly more favourable (the 19% rate on the first €6,000 and 21% on the next €44,000 are below the SL's flat 25%). For larger gains — say, €200,000+ — the SL's 25% rate can be competitive or even favourable compared to the individual's blended rate of 23-28%.
The real capital gains advantage of an SL is the option to sell shares rather than the property itself. This is explored in the exit strategies section below.
Inheritance: The Strongest Argument for an SL
For many UK buyers, inheritance planning is the most compelling reason to use an SL. Spanish inheritance rules are complex, expensive, and can create significant problems for heirs — particularly after Brexit removed certain protections.
Personal Ownership: The Problem
When a non-resident individual dies owning Spanish property:
- A new escritura (title deed) must be executed to transfer the property to the heirs
- Spanish inheritance tax (Impuesto de Sucesiones) applies — rates vary by autonomous community but can reach 34% in some regions, with limited allowances for non-resident heirs
- The process requires a Spanish grant of probate or recognition of a UK grant — a slow and expensive legal process
- Plusvalía municipal (local capital gains tax on land value increase) is payable
- The entire process can take 6-18 months and cost €10,000-€30,000 in fees, depending on property value and complexity
SL Ownership: The Solution
When the shareholder of an SL dies:
- The property does not change ownership — it still belongs to the company
- Only the shares in the SL transfer to the heirs, which is governed by the shareholder's country of residence (UK law, not Spanish law)
- No new escritura is needed — no notary fees, no Land Registry re-registration, no property transfer tax
- Plusvalía municipal does not apply (the property has not been transferred)
- The share transfer can often be completed under UK probate rules alone, which are faster and cheaper
- Spanish inheritance tax may still apply to the shares (as they relate to a Spanish asset), but the process is far simpler and the valuations more controllable
For high-value properties or those intended to be held long-term and passed to the next generation, this inheritance advantage alone can justify the annual SL running costs many times over.
VAT Recovery on Tourist-Let and Commercial Properties
If you purchase a new-build property (directly from a developer) through an SL, and the property will be used for commercial purposes — including tourist lets with a licence — the SL can recover the 10% IVA (VAT) paid on the purchase price. On a €500,000 property, that is a €50,000 recovery. This is not available to individual buyers.
The conditions are strict: the property must be used exclusively for business purposes, the SL must be registered for VAT, and you must file quarterly VAT returns. However, for genuine rental investment properties, particularly in areas with tourist licence frameworks (Costa del Sol, Costa Blanca, Balearics), VAT recovery is a significant financial benefit.
When an SL Does NOT Make Sense
Despite the tax advantages, there are clear scenarios where an SL is the wrong choice:
- Single holiday home with no rental income: If you buy a €300,000 apartment for personal use only and do not let it out, the SL's annual running costs (€2,000-€5,000) are a pure expense with no tax benefit to offset them. You are paying €20,000-€50,000 over 10 years for no return
- Low rental income (under €10,000/year): If deductible expenses are modest and rental income is low, the tax savings through an SL may not cover the annual compliance costs
- Short hold period (under 5 years): The formation costs and annual running costs need time to be recouped through tax savings. If you plan to sell within 3-5 years, the SL is unlikely to break even
- Simple ownership, single heir: If inheritance planning is straightforward (one property, one heir, no complicating factors), the additional complexity of an SL may not be worth it
- Properties in regions with generous inheritance tax allowances: Andalucía, for example, has a €1,000,000 per-heir allowance for close relatives, which significantly reduces the inheritance tax argument for properties under this value
Break-Even Analysis
As a rough rule of thumb: if your property generates over €15,000/year in gross rental income AND you plan to hold for at least 7-10 years, an SL is likely to be financially beneficial. Below €15,000 or with a short hold period, run the specific numbers with your tax adviser before committing.
Exit Strategies: Selling the Property, Selling the Shares, or Liquidating
When the time comes to sell, an SL gives you three options that personal ownership does not:
Option 1: The Company Sells the Property
The SL sells the property in the normal way — escritura, notary, Land Registry. The company pays corporation tax at 25% on the gain. You then extract the net proceeds as a dividend (19% withholding for non-residents) or liquidate the company. This is the simplest option but results in double taxation: corporate tax on the gain, then dividend tax on the distribution.
Option 2: You Sell the Shares
Instead of selling the property, you sell your shares in the SL to the buyer. The property stays in the company; only the ownership of the company changes. Benefits:
- No property transfer tax (ITP) for the buyer — this saves 6-10% of the property value, making your property more attractive to buyers
- No notary or Land Registry costs for the property transfer
- You pay capital gains tax in the UK (or Spain, depending on your tax residency) on the gain in the share value
- The buyer inherits the company's tax base, including any accumulated depreciation deductions
The catch: sophisticated buyers and their lawyers scrutinise the company carefully, checking for hidden liabilities, tax debts, or legal issues. Due diligence on a share sale is more complex than on a straightforward property purchase.
Option 3: Liquidate the Company
Sell the property, settle all debts and tax obligations, and dissolve the SL. The remaining assets are distributed to shareholders as a liquidation dividend. This is the cleanest exit but involves corporation tax on the property sale gain plus income tax on the liquidation distribution. The process takes 3-6 months.
Practical Considerations and Common Pitfalls
Mortgage Complications
Some Spanish banks are reluctant to lend to SLs for property purchases, particularly newly formed companies with no trading history. Expect to face:
- Higher interest rates (0.5-1% above personal mortgage rates)
- Lower loan-to-value ratios (50-60% rather than 70% for non-resident individuals)
- Requirements for personal guarantees from the shareholders
- More extensive documentation requirements
If mortgage finance is essential to your purchase, confirm with your broker that SL lending is available before committing to the company structure.
Imputed Income Tax
If the SL owns a property that is not rented out (or is partially used by the shareholders), Spanish tax law imputes a notional rental income of 1.1-2% of the cadastral value. The SL must pay corporation tax on this imputed income even though no actual rent is received. This is another reason why SLs are unsuitable for pure holiday homes.
Transfer Pricing
If you rent the property from your own SL (for personal use), the rental must be at market rate. The Spanish tax authority (AEAT) can and does challenge below-market-rate transactions between a company and its shareholders.
Summary: Who Should Consider an SL?
The SL structure is most beneficial for:
- UK investors generating significant rental income — The inability to deduct expenses as a non-EU individual makes personal ownership punitive for active rental properties
- Long-term holders planning to pass property to heirs — The inheritance advantages are substantial and grow more valuable with higher property values
- Portfolio investors — If you plan to own multiple Spanish properties, a single SL can hold them all, simplifying administration and maximising expense deductions
- Commercial or tourist-let properties — VAT recovery on new-build purchases and full expense deductibility make the SL particularly attractive
It is not suitable for occasional-use holiday homes, low-income rental properties, or short-term holds. The annual running costs are a fixed burden regardless of income, so the property needs to generate enough rental revenue to justify them.
Use our property cost calculator to model the purchase costs and ongoing expenses for your specific scenario. For a broader overview of taxes and fees, see our complete costs and taxes guide. And if you are just beginning to explore the Spanish property market as a UK buyer, our UK buyers hub is the best starting point.
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Disclaimer
This guide is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal, tax, or financial advice. Property laws and tax regulations change frequently — always consult a qualified Spanish lawyer and tax advisor before making any property purchase decisions. Data sourced from Spanish Land Registry, Idealista, and MUNDO partner network. Last verified: March 2026.