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Expat Financial Planning: Moving to Spain from the UK

Expat Financial Planning: Moving to Spain from the UK

Plan your finances before moving to Spain from the UK. Covers pensions, ISAs, tax residency, double taxation, healthcare, banking, and wills for British expats in 2026.

Last updated: February 2026

M

MUNDO Research Team · Vetted by Costa del Sol property professionals

Published February 2026 · Updated February 2026 · 23 min read

Why Financial Planning Before You Move Matters More Than Ever

Moving to Spain from the UK is no longer just a lifestyle decision — it is a complex financial restructuring exercise. Brexit fundamentally changed the tax, pension, healthcare, and residency landscape for British nationals relocating to the EU. Decisions you make in the 12 months before your move can save or cost you tens of thousands of pounds over the following decade.

The stakes are high because several financial events are irreversible or very difficult to undo once you become Spanish tax resident. Your ISA tax-free wrapper disappears. Your UK pension access rules change. Your capital gains tax position on UK property shifts. Your inheritance arrangements may need a complete overhaul. And you have a narrow window — often measured in months rather than years — to optimise your position before the Spanish tax net closes around your worldwide income.

This guide provides a comprehensive, practical financial planning framework for UK nationals moving to Spain in 2026. It is not a substitute for professional advice (and we strongly recommend engaging both a UK-qualified financial adviser with expat experience and a Spanish asesor fiscal), but it gives you the roadmap so you know what questions to ask and what decisions to prioritise.

Note: This guide focuses on permanent or semi-permanent moves where you will become Spanish tax resident. If you are spending fewer than 183 days per year in Spain and maintaining your primary home and economic interests in the UK, you may remain UK tax resident — but the rules are more nuanced than a simple day count. Consult a cross-border tax specialist if your situation is borderline.

The 12-Month Pre-Move Financial Checklist

Ideally, your financial preparation begins a full year before you plan to move. Some actions take months to implement, and others need to be completed before you leave the UK to be fully effective.

12 Months Before the Move

  • Engage a cross-border financial adviser — Find an adviser regulated in the UK (FCA-authorised) with specific experience advising clients relocating to Spain. Ideally, they should also understand the Spanish tax system or work with a Spanish counterpart. Expect to pay £1,500-£4,000 for a comprehensive relocation financial plan
  • Consolidate UK pensions — If you have multiple workplace pensions from different employers, consider consolidating them into a single SIPP (Self-Invested Personal Pension). This simplifies administration, reduces fees, and makes it easier to manage from abroad. Be cautious with defined benefit (final salary) pensions — transferring out is rarely advisable and requires mandatory advice for transfers over £30,000
  • Review your ISA strategy — ISAs lose their tax-free status once you become Spanish tax resident. Spain will tax interest, dividends, and gains within ISAs just like any other investment. You have two strategies: (a) draw down ISA holdings before moving and realise gains while still UK tax resident (using your annual CGT allowance), or (b) accept that Spain will tax ISA income and keep the investments if they are performing well. There is no "right" answer — it depends on your total gain position and the size of your ISA portfolio
  • Maximise UK pension contributions — If you have unused annual allowance from the current or previous three tax years, consider making additional pension contributions while still UK tax resident and receiving UK tax relief. Once you are Spanish tax resident, UK pension contributions no longer attract UK tax relief
  • Get a UK State Pension forecast — Check your National Insurance record on the gov.uk website. If you have gaps, you may be able to make voluntary Class 3 contributions to fill them. You need 35 qualifying years for the full new State Pension (£221.20/week in 2025/26). Each missing year costs roughly £17.45 in voluntary contributions but adds approximately £6.30/week to your pension — an excellent return
  • Set up currency hedging — If you will be receiving income in sterling (pension, rental income from UK property) but spending in euros, exchange rate fluctuations will directly affect your purchasing power. A forward contract with a currency broker can lock in a rate for up to 2 years, removing uncertainty. Consider this especially if GBP/EUR is at a favourable level

6 Months Before the Move

  • Decide on UK property — If you own property in the UK, you need to decide: sell, let, or keep empty. Each has different tax implications (covered in detail below). This decision often takes months to implement, so start early
  • Open a Spanish bank account — You can open a non-resident account before you move. CaixaBank, Santander, and BBVA all offer this facility, sometimes remotely. Having an account ready means you can transfer funds, set up direct debits, and hit the ground running
  • Research multi-currency accounts — Services like Wise (formerly TransferWise), Revolut, and CurrencyFair offer multi-currency accounts that hold both GBP and EUR, with low-cost transfers between them. These are not replacements for a Spanish bank account (you need a Spanish IBAN for many local transactions) but they are excellent for managing ongoing currency exposure
  • Get private health insurance quotes — You will need private health insurance for your Spanish residency application (unless you qualify for an S1 form — see healthcare section). Costs range from €60-€200/month per person depending on age and coverage level. Apply before you move, as some insurers require a medical exam that is easier to arrange in the UK
  • Make a Spanish will — This is separate from your UK will and covers your Spanish assets. A Spanish will dramatically simplifies the inheritance process for your heirs and avoids the need for them to have your UK will translated, apostilled, and recognised in Spain — a process that can take months and cost thousands

3 Months Before the Move

  • Apply for your visa — Unless you have EU citizenship, you need a visa to live in Spain for more than 90 days. The most common routes for UK retirees and remote workers are the Non-Lucrative Visa (no work permitted, proof of income/savings required) and the Digital Nomad Visa (for remote workers employed by or contracting to non-Spanish companies). Processing takes 4-8 weeks
  • Notify HMRC of your departure — Complete form P85 if you are leaving the UK permanently and will not be returning to employment there. This ensures you are correctly treated as a non-resident for UK tax purposes from your departure date
  • Gather financial documentation — Spain requires extensive documentation for residency applications, bank account upgrades, and your first Spanish tax return. Collect: P60s, pension statements, bank statements (6 months), investment valuations, UK property rental agreements, insurance policies, and a certificate of UK tax residency (from HMRC, form RES1)
  • Review direct debits and subscriptions — Some UK services (streaming, insurance, financial platforms) restrict access from abroad. Cancel or restructure as needed. Ensure essential UK direct debits (mortgage, council tax if letting, insurance) will continue from your UK account

Move Day and First 3 Months in Spain

  • Register with the local ayuntamiento — The padrón (municipal register) is your proof of address in Spain and is required for almost everything: health card, schooling, driving licence exchange, tax registration
  • Apply for your NIE and TIE — The NIE (tax identification number) and TIE (foreigner's identity card) are essential for all financial and legal transactions in Spain
  • Register with the Spanish tax authority — File form 030 (alta censal) with the Agencia Tributaria to register as a tax resident. This triggers your obligation to declare worldwide income to Spain from the date of residency
  • Upgrade your bank account — Convert your non-resident Spanish bank account to a resident account, which typically offers better conditions and access to more products
  • Engage a gestor fiscal — A Spanish tax adviser who will prepare and file your annual tax return (Declaración de la Renta). Expect to pay €150-€500 for a standard return, more if you have complex international income. Engage one early so they can advise on your first partial-year return

UK Pension in Spain: What You Need to Know

UK State Pension

The good news: your UK State Pension is payable worldwide and is indexed (increases each year) under the UK-Spain social security agreement. Unlike pensioners in some countries (Australia, Canada), British expats in Spain receive the annual triple-lock increase. You can have it paid directly to a Spanish bank account in euros, though you will be exposed to exchange rate fluctuations.

Important points:

  • The State Pension is taxable in Spain, not the UK (under the double taxation treaty)
  • You can continue to make voluntary NI contributions from abroad to build up entitlement, though the rules on how long you can do this are complex
  • If you have not yet reached State Pension age, check whether your move affects your entitlement — you need a minimum of 10 qualifying NI years for any State Pension at all

Private and Workplace Pensions

UK private pensions (SIPPs, personal pensions, workplace defined contribution schemes) can generally remain in the UK and be drawn from Spain. However, there are important considerations:

  • Tax-free lump sum: Under UK rules, you can take 25% of your pension pot tax-free as a Pension Commencement Lump Sum (PCLS). This remains available even if you are Spanish tax resident, but Spain may tax the lump sum as income. This is a contested area — some advisers argue the UK-Spain treaty exempts it, others say Spain taxes it. Get specific advice on your situation before drawing any lump sum
  • Drawdown income: Pension income drawn in the UK is taxed in Spain under the double taxation treaty. The UK should not withhold tax (you can apply for relief via HMRC form DT-Individual), though some pension providers withhold anyway and you must reclaim
  • QROPS: A Qualifying Recognised Overseas Pension Scheme allows you to transfer your UK pension to a scheme in another jurisdiction (e.g., Malta, Gibraltar). This was more popular pre-2017, but the 25% overseas transfer charge introduced in 2017 makes it unattractive unless there is a specific planning reason. For most people moving to Spain, keeping the pension in the UK is simpler and cheaper

The Beckham Law (Régimen Especial de Trabajadores Desplazados)

If you are moving to Spain for employment (not retirement), you may qualify for the Beckham Law — a special tax regime that allows you to be taxed as a non-resident for up to 6 years, even though you live in Spain. Under this regime, you pay a flat 24% on Spanish-source income (instead of progressive rates up to 47%) and are not taxed on foreign income except employment income. This can be extremely valuable for high earners. To qualify, you must not have been Spanish tax resident in the previous 5 years, and you must be moving for a genuine employment contract or as a company director.

ISA Treatment: The Unwelcome Surprise

For many UK expats, the treatment of ISAs is the most painful financial discovery of the move. The UK's Individual Savings Account wrapper is a purely British tax concept. Spain does not recognise it. From the day you become Spanish tax resident:

  • Interest earned within Cash ISAs is taxable Spanish income (at 19-28% depending on the amount)
  • Dividends within Stocks and Shares ISAs are taxable
  • Capital gains realised within ISAs are taxable
  • You cannot make new ISA contributions (you lose UK resident status)

Your strategic options:

  1. Draw down before moving: Sell ISA holdings while still UK tax resident, using your annual CGT allowance (£3,000 in 2025/26) to crystallise gains tax-free over multiple tax years. If your ISA portfolio has minimal gains, this may be straightforward. If gains are substantial, you may need to spread disposals over 2-3 years before your move
  2. Keep and accept Spanish taxation: If your ISAs are in low-yield cash or tracker funds with minimal unrealised gains, it may be simpler to keep them and declare the income on your Spanish tax return. The administrative hassle of reporting foreign financial accounts to Spain (Modelo 720 for assets over €50,000) is the main downside
  3. Transfer to a Spanish-compliant wrapper: Some international investment platforms offer portfolio bonds or unit-linked insurance policies that are tax-efficient under Spanish law. Transferring ISA funds into such a wrapper can defer taxation on gains — but charges are typically higher than UK ISA platforms, so the benefit must be weighed against costs

UK Property: Sell, Let, or Keep?

If you own property in the UK, this is one of the biggest financial decisions of your move. Each option has distinct tax implications:

Selling Before You Leave

If the property is your main residence and you sell while still UK tax resident, Principal Private Residence Relief (PPR) exempts the gain from CGT entirely. This is often the cleanest and most tax-efficient option, especially if the property has significant unrealised gains.

If you sell after becoming Spanish tax resident, you lose full PPR (though partial relief is available for the period it was your main home, plus the final 9 months of ownership). Spain also taxes the gain as worldwide income, though the UK-Spain treaty prevents double taxation — the UK tax paid is credited against the Spanish liability.

Letting the Property

Many expats keep their UK property and let it out. The tax implications:

  • UK tax: You must register with HMRC as a Non-Resident Landlord (NRL scheme). Rental income is taxable in the UK (20% basic rate for most) with full expense deductions. Mortgage interest relief is restricted to a 20% tax credit
  • Spanish tax: You must also declare the UK rental income on your Spanish tax return (worldwide income obligation). However, you receive a credit for UK tax already paid, so there is no double taxation — you pay the higher of the two rates
  • 45-day reporting: If you sell a UK property as a non-resident, you must report the disposal to HMRC within 60 days (previously 30 days) and pay any CGT due. The rate is 18% (basic rate) or 24% (higher rate) on residential property for non-residents

Keeping It Empty

If you keep the property empty intending to return, be aware that you lose PPR relief after the final 9 months of ownership (assuming you lived there before leaving). Council tax may be charged at a premium for long-term empty properties (up to 300% in some councils). Insurance conditions change for unoccupied properties. And Spain may still impute a notional income on the property for Spanish tax purposes.

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Spanish Tax Residency: When Does It Trigger?

You become Spanish tax resident — and liable to declare worldwide income to Spain — if any one of the following applies:

  1. The 183-day rule: You spend more than 183 days in Spain during a calendar year (January to December). Days of entry and departure both count. Brief trips abroad do not "stop the clock" unless you can prove tax residency in another country during those periods
  2. Centre of economic interest: The core of your economic activities or interests is in Spain — for example, your business is based there, or the majority of your income derives from Spanish sources
  3. Family ties: Your spouse and/or minor children live in Spain, unless you can prove legal separation and that the family arrangement is not a means of avoiding Spanish tax residency

The 183-day rule is the most commonly cited, but Spanish tax authorities have successfully argued centre-of-economic-interest and family ties in cases where the day count was below 183. If you are planning to split time between the UK and Spain, get professional advice on your specific circumstances.

The UK-Spain Double Taxation Treaty

The double taxation treaty between the UK and Spain (the Convention for the Avoidance of Double Taxation, most recently updated in 2013) determines which country has the right to tax different types of income. Understanding this treaty is essential for avoiding double taxation and ensuring you only pay what is owed.

Income TypeTaxing Country (for Spanish Residents)Notes
UK employment incomeSpain (with UK credit for any UK tax paid)If you work remotely for a UK employer from Spain
UK State PensionSpain onlyNot taxable in the UK under Article 17
UK private pensionSpain onlyThe UK should not withhold; apply via DT-Individual form
UK Government pension (civil service, armed forces)UK onlyUnless you are also a Spanish national
UK rental incomeBoth — UK first, Spain credits UK tax paidNo double taxation; you pay the higher rate
UK dividendsSpain, with UK withholding limited to 10-15%Credit given in Spain for UK withholding
UK interestSpain only (no UK withholding)Declared on Spanish return
Capital gains on UK propertyBoth — UK first, Spain credits UK tax paidUK non-resident CGT at 18%/24%; Spain at 19-28%
Capital gains on UK sharesSpain onlyNot taxable in the UK for non-residents

To avoid double taxation on pension income, you must apply to HMRC for a certificate of residence (form RES1 or DT-Individual) and present it to your UK pension provider. Without this, many providers will continue to deduct UK tax, and you will need to reclaim it — a slow process.

Healthcare Transition

Healthcare access is a critical piece of the financial planning puzzle, not least because private health insurance is a visa requirement for most non-EU nationals moving to Spain.

UK State Pension Recipients: S1 Form

If you are receiving a UK State Pension, you can apply to HMRC for an S1 certificate (formerly E121). This entitles you to full access to the Spanish public healthcare system (Seguridad Social) at no cost, funded by the UK. This is the most cost-effective healthcare route for retirees. Apply before you leave the UK — processing takes 4-8 weeks.

Working-Age Expats: Private Insurance

If you are not yet pension age and not employed by a Spanish company (which would enrol you in Seguridad Social), you need private health insurance. This is also a requirement for the Non-Lucrative Visa application. Costs vary significantly:

Age RangeMonthly Cost (Per Person)Coverage Level
Under 40€60-€100Full cover, low copays
40-55€80-€140Full cover, moderate copays
55-65€120-€180Full cover, some exclusions
Over 65€150-€250+May exclude pre-existing conditions; copays higher

Major Spanish insurers include Sanitas (owned by Bupa), Adeslas, Asisa, and DKV. Some international insurers (Cigna Global, Allianz Care) also offer Spain-specific policies. Compare carefully — the cheapest policy may have significant copayments or exclusions that become expensive when you actually need care.

EHIC/GHIC Limitations

The UK Global Health Insurance Card (GHIC, which replaced the EHIC post-Brexit) covers emergency and medically necessary treatment during temporary stays in Spain. It does NOT cover you as a resident. Do not rely on it for ongoing healthcare needs — it is designed for tourists and short-term visitors.

Banking and Currency

Getting your banking right is one of the most practical aspects of the move. Poor currency management can cost you 2-4% on every transfer — which adds up quickly when you are moving a pension income, receiving UK rental payments, or transferring savings.

Keep Your UK Bank Account

You will need it for UK pension payments, HMRC refunds, rental income from UK property, and any remaining UK financial commitments. Most UK banks allow non-residents to hold current accounts, though some (notably Nationwide and some smaller building societies) may close your account when you notify them of a foreign address. HSBC, Barclays, and NatWest are generally accommodating.

Open a Spanish Account

Essential for daily life in Spain: rent, utilities, insurance, groceries, and local direct debits all require a Spanish IBAN. CaixaBank is the largest and has the best branch network; Santander and BBVA also serve expats well. Expect to pay €5-€15/month in account maintenance fees (free accounts exist but usually require direct salary deposits).

Multi-Currency Accounts

Wise, Revolut, and similar fintech platforms offer the best exchange rates for regular transfers between GBP and EUR — typically 0.3-0.5% above the interbank rate, compared to 2-4% at a traditional bank. For regular pension transfers, set up a monthly automated transfer through one of these platforms. For larger one-off transfers (property purchase, savings), use a specialist currency broker (TorFX, Currencies Direct, OFX) who can offer forward contracts and dedicated dealer service.

Wills and Inheritance Planning

Inheritance is one of the most complex and commonly overlooked aspects of expat financial planning. The interaction between UK and Spanish inheritance law, combined with Spain's forced heirship rules, requires careful attention.

You Need a Separate Spanish Will

A Spanish will (testamento) covers your Spanish assets and is processed through the Spanish legal system. Without one, your heirs must have your UK will translated, apostilled (legalised for use in Spain), and recognised by a Spanish court — a process that can take 6-18 months and cost €5,000-€15,000 in legal fees. A Spanish will typically costs €150-€300 to prepare and sign before a notary.

Your UK will should be updated to exclude Spanish assets (to avoid contradictions), and your Spanish will should only cover assets located in Spain. The two wills work in parallel, each dealing with assets in its jurisdiction.

Forced Heirship Rules

Spanish inheritance law includes "legítima" — forced heirship provisions that reserve a portion of the estate for certain heirs (children, and in some cases the surviving spouse). Under Spanish law, children are entitled to two-thirds of the estate, of which one-third must be divided equally and another third can be distributed unequally among them.

However, EU Succession Regulation 650/2012 (also known as Brussels IV) allows you to elect the law of your nationality to govern your estate rather than the law of your country of residence. As a UK national, you can specify in your Spanish will that English law (or Scots law) applies to your succession. This overrides Spanish forced heirship rules and gives you full testamentary freedom — critical if you want to leave your Spanish property to a surviving spouse or distribute assets differently from what Spanish law prescribes.

Critical action: Your Spanish will MUST include a clause specifying that your succession is governed by the law of England and Wales (or Scotland, or Northern Ireland, as applicable) pursuant to Article 22 of EU Regulation 650/2012. Without this clause, Spanish forced heirship rules apply by default. Post-Brexit, there is some legal debate about whether this election remains valid for UK nationals — the prevailing view is that it does, but ensure your lawyer is aware of the issue and drafts accordingly.

Spanish Inheritance Tax

Spanish inheritance tax (Impuesto de Sucesiones y Donaciones) varies enormously by autonomous community. Andalucía, for example, offers a €1,000,000 per-heir allowance for close relatives (spouse, children, parents), making most inheritances tax-free. Other regions are less generous. Non-resident heirs can claim the allowances of the community where the property is located (a right established by the European Court of Justice and confirmed by Spanish law reforms).

Timeline Summary: Your Financial Move Checklist

TimeframeActionEstimated Cost
12 months beforeEngage cross-border financial adviser£1,500-£4,000
12 months beforeConsolidate UK pensions (if applicable)£0-£500 (adviser fees)
12 months beforeReview and optimise ISA position£0 (adviser time included)
12 months beforeFill NI gaps for State Pension£824/year per missing year
12 months beforeSet up currency hedging / forward contracts£0 (built into exchange rate)
6 months beforeDecide on UK property (sell/let/keep)Varies
6 months beforeOpen Spanish bank account (non-resident)€0-€100
6 months beforeSet up multi-currency account (Wise/Revolut)£0
6 months beforeGet private health insurance quotes€60-€250/month per person
6 months beforeMake a Spanish will€150-€300
3 months beforeApply for Spanish visa€80 (visa fee) + €200-€500 (lawyer)
3 months beforeNotify HMRC (form P85)£0
3 months beforeGather financial documentation£0-£50 (certified copies)
First 3 monthsRegister padrón, NIE, TIE€12 (NIE fee)
First 3 monthsRegister with Spanish tax authority (form 030)€0
First 3 monthsEngage gestor fiscal€150-€500/year
First 3 monthsUpgrade bank account to resident€0
First yearFile Modelo 720 (foreign assets > €50,000)€100-€300 (gestor fee)
First yearFile first Spanish tax return (Declaración de la Renta)€150-€500 (gestor fee)

Cost Comparison: Professional Fees and Services

ServiceUK CostSpain CostNotes
Cross-border financial adviser£1,500-£4,000 (one-off)FCA-regulated, expat specialist
Gestor fiscal (tax adviser)€150-€500/yearPrepares and files your annual tax return
Spanish will€150-€300 (one-off)Covers Spanish assets only
UK will update£200-£500 (one-off)To exclude Spanish assets
Private health insurance€720-€3,000/year per personAge-dependent; required for visa
Currency transfers (ongoing)0.3-0.5% per transferVia Wise/Revolut; bank rates are 2-4%
Non-resident landlord compliance£200-£400/yearUK tax return for rental income
Modelo 720 filing€100-€300/yearForeign assets declaration; penalties for non-filing are severe

Common Mistakes to Avoid

Based on years of expat experience, these are the financial mistakes that cost British expats in Spain the most money:

  1. Not filing Modelo 720: Spain requires you to declare all foreign assets (bank accounts, investments, property, insurance) worth more than €50,000 per category. Although the European Court of Justice struck down the disproportionate penalties in 2022, the filing obligation remains. Non-compliance can trigger an audit of your worldwide income
  2. Ignoring the ISA problem: Continuing to treat ISAs as "tax-free" after becoming Spanish tax resident is a ticking time bomb. Spain will eventually ask about your foreign investment accounts, and undeclared income incurs penalties and interest
  3. Using bank exchange rates: Transferring pension income or savings through your UK or Spanish bank instead of a currency specialist costs 2-4% per transfer. On a £20,000/year pension, that is £400-£800 annually — or £4,000-£8,000 over a decade
  4. Not making a Spanish will: Dying without a Spanish will creates an administrative and legal nightmare for your heirs that can take over a year and cost thousands to resolve
  5. Failing to elect national law for succession: Without the Brussels IV election clause in your will, Spanish forced heirship rules override your wishes
  6. Drawing UK pension lump sum without advice: The tax treatment of the 25% tax-free lump sum for Spanish residents is ambiguous. Taking it without professional advice can result in an unexpected Spanish tax bill of thousands of euros
  7. Not registering as a non-resident landlord: If you let UK property without notifying HMRC and your tenant/agent, they are legally required to withhold 20% of gross rent and pay it directly to HMRC. Registering under the NRL scheme allows you to receive rent gross and self-assess

The financial aspects of moving to Spain from the UK are more complex than most people anticipate, but they are entirely manageable with proper planning and professional support. Start early, get the right advice, and make the big decisions (ISAs, property, pensions) while you still have the flexibility to optimise your position.

For more on the post-Brexit landscape for British expats, read our post-Brexit guide to living in Spain. To calculate the costs of purchasing Spanish property, try our property cost calculator. And for a broader overview of what the UK buyers' journey looks like, visit the UK buyers hub.

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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.

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