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First-Time Buying Abroad? Your Complete Checklist for Spain or Portugal

First-Time Buying Abroad? Your Complete Checklist for Spain or Portugal

A first time buying property abroad checklist covering budgets, legal teams, due diligence, and common mistakes — everything UK buyers need for Spain or Portugal.

Last updated: February 2026

M

MUNDO Research Team · Vetted by Costa del Sol property professionals

Published February 2026 · Updated February 2026 · 15 min read

Before You Start: The Mindset Shift

Buying property abroad for the first time is one of the most exciting — and most daunting — financial decisions you will make. The process in Spain or Portugal is fundamentally different from buying in the UK. There is no equivalent of Rightmove's seamless system, no standardised Law Society conveyancing protocol, and no assumption that things will move at the pace you expect. Legal systems differ. Language barriers are real. Timelines are unpredictable.

None of this should stop you. Hundreds of thousands of UK nationals own property in Spain and Portugal, and the vast majority had a straightforward experience. But the ones who had problems almost always share one thing in common: they rushed, skipped due diligence, or relied on the wrong people.

This guide is your checklist — every step, every decision point, every trap to avoid. Print it out, tick things off, and do not skip steps because someone tells you "it's fine, everyone does it this way."

Step 1: Define Your Budget (Including Hidden Costs)

Most first-time overseas buyers underestimate the total cost by 15-25%. The purchase price is just the starting point. Here is what you actually need to budget for:

Purchase Costs

CostSpainPortugal
Property priceYour budgetYour budget
Transfer tax (resale property)7-10% (varies by region; 7% in Andalusia)0-7.5% (IMT, sliding scale based on price)
VAT (new build only)10% IVA6% IVA
Stamp duty1-1.5% AJD (new build only)0.8% Imposto de Selo
Notary fees€600-€1,200€500-€1,000
Land Registry€400-€700€250-€500
Legal fees (lawyer)1-1.5% of price (min €1,500)1-1.5% of price (min €1,500)
Mortgage arrangement (if applicable)0.5-1% of loan + valuation (€300-€500)Similar
Currency exchange costs0.3-1.5% of total transferred0.3-1.5% of total transferred

Rule of thumb: Budget an additional 10-13% on top of the purchase price for a resale property in Spain, or 8-12% in Portugal. For new builds, budget 12-15% (Spain) or 8-10% (Portugal). Use the MUNDO cost calculator for a personalised estimate.

Ongoing Annual Costs

CostSpain (typical)Portugal (typical)
Property tax (IBI / IMI)€400-€1,500/year€200-€1,200/year
Community fees (apartments)€600-€3,600/year€300-€2,400/year
Home insurance€200-€600/year€150-€500/year
Non-resident income tax (deemed)€200-€600/year€150-€400/year
Utilities (water, electricity, gas, internet)€1,500-€3,000/year€1,200-€2,500/year
Maintenance and repairs€500-€2,000/year€500-€2,000/year

Step 2: Spain or Portugal? Making the Right Choice

Both countries are excellent choices for UK buyers, but they suit different priorities. Here is an honest comparison:

FactorSpainPortugal
Property pricesHigher on average (Costa del Sol, Balearics)Lower, especially Silver Coast and interior
ClimateHotter summers, Mediterranean coastMilder (west coast), hotter (Algarve)
Language barrierModerate — large expat communities in key areasMany Portuguese speak English, smaller expat bubble
Flight connections from UKExcellent (Malaga, Alicante, Barcelona, Palma)Good (Lisbon, Faro, Porto)
Healthcare qualityExcellent public and privateGood public, excellent private in Lisbon/Porto
Rental income potentialStrong (Costa del Sol, Balearics, Barcelona)Growing (Algarve, Lisbon coast)
BureaucracySlow but well-established processesSlightly faster, digital NIF available
Tax on non-residents24% on rental income (no deductions post-Brexit)25% on rental income (some deductions allowed)
Residency pathwayNon-lucrative visa (proof of income needed)D7 visa (passive income) or investment routes
Expat community sizeVery large (300,000+ UK nationals)Smaller but growing (50,000+ UK nationals)

For detailed buying processes, read our guides: Buying Process in Spain and Buying Property in Portugal.

Step 3: Assemble Your Team

You need four professionals before you start viewing properties. Not after. Not during. Before.

1. Independent Lawyer (Abogado / Advogado)

This is the most important hire you will make. Your lawyer must be:

  • Independent of the seller, the agent, and the developer. Never use a lawyer recommended by the person selling you the property. Their loyalty is divided at best, compromised at worst
  • Qualified in the country where you are buying. A UK solicitor cannot do conveyancing in Spain or Portugal. You need a local lawyer with property law expertise
  • English-speaking. You need to understand every document you sign. If your lawyer cannot explain things clearly in English, find one who can
  • Experienced with non-resident UK buyers. Post-Brexit buying involves specific tax, visa, and currency considerations that a lawyer who only works with local buyers may not handle well

Expect to pay €1,500-€3,000 in legal fees for a standard purchase. This is not a cost to minimise — it is an investment in protection.

2. Currency Broker

You will be transferring large sums from GBP to EUR. Using your high-street bank for international transfers is expensive — typically 2-4% above the mid-market exchange rate, plus transfer fees. A specialist currency broker (such as Currencies Direct, Wise, or Moneycorp) will save you 1-2% on every transfer, which on a €300,000 property is €3,000-€6,000.

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Key features to look for:

  • Forward contracts: lock in today's exchange rate for a future transfer, protecting your budget if the pound weakens
  • Rate alerts: get notified when the exchange rate hits your target
  • Dedicated dealer: a named person who handles your transfers, not a call centre
  • FCA regulation: essential for the protection of your funds

3. Real Estate Agent

In both Spain and Portugal, the agent typically works for the seller and is paid by the seller. As a buyer, you should not pay agent commission. However, you can and should find an agent who prioritises buyer service — someone who will show you properties that match your needs, not just properties they are desperate to sell.

Signs of a good overseas property agent:

  • They ask detailed questions about your requirements, budget, and lifestyle before showing properties
  • They show you properties from multiple developments and sellers, not just one
  • They provide factual information about areas, not just sales hype
  • They do not pressure you to make quick decisions or pay deposits on the spot
  • They are registered and licensed (API registration in Portugal; regional registration in Spain)

4. Surveyor / Architect

Unlike in the UK, property surveys are not standard practice in Spain or Portugal. Mortgage lenders require a valuation but this is a desktop or brief visual check — not a structural survey. For a property you plan to invest hundreds of thousands of pounds in, commissioning an independent survey is strongly recommended.

  • In Spain: hire an arquitecto técnico (technical architect) or aparejador for a structural survey. Cost: €300-€800
  • In Portugal: hire an engenheiro civil (civil engineer) or arquitecto. Cost: €300-€700

Step 4: Financing Your Purchase

Option A: Cash Purchase (Releasing UK Equity)

Many UK buyers fund overseas purchases by remortgaging their UK property or selling a UK asset. This avoids the complexity of obtaining a foreign mortgage. Consider:

  • UK mortgage rates may be lower than Spanish or Portuguese mortgage rates
  • You avoid foreign mortgage arrangement fees and the complexity of local banking
  • You have full ownership from day one — no foreign bank involved in your Spanish/Portuguese property
  • Currency risk remains — you are converting GBP to EUR at a point in time

Option B: Local Mortgage (Spain or Portugal)

Spanish and Portuguese banks lend to non-resident UK buyers, typically under these conditions:

  • Loan-to-value (LTV): maximum 60-70% for non-residents (vs 80%+ for residents)
  • Term: up to 20-25 years, but age-dependent (loan must typically be repaid by age 70-75)
  • Interest rates: variable rates from Euribor + 1-2%; fixed rates from 3-4.5% (2026 rates)
  • Income requirements: mortgage payments should not exceed 30-35% of net income
  • Documents needed: 2-3 years of UK tax returns, P60s, bank statements, proof of income, credit report

Step 5: The Due Diligence Checklist

This is the section you print out and work through methodically. Your lawyer should handle most of these, but you should understand what they are checking and ask for confirmation of each item.

Property Due Diligence Checklist

  • 1. Title verification (nota simple / certidão permanente): Confirm the seller is the legal owner, the property description matches reality, and identify all charges, mortgages, and encumbrances
  • 2. Planning compliance (licencia de obras / licença de utilização): Verify the property was built with proper planning permission and has a certificate of habitation. Illegal builds exist in both countries
  • 3. Cadastral check: Confirm the property boundaries and built area match the official cadastral record. Discrepancies can block mortgage approval and cause problems at resale
  • 4. Urban planning search: Check with the local town hall for any planned developments nearby — new roads, buildings, or infrastructure that could affect the property's value or your enjoyment
  • 5. Community debt check: Obtain a certificate from the community administrator confirming no outstanding community fees. Unpaid fees transfer to the new owner in both Spain and Portugal
  • 6. Property tax (IBI / IMI) check: Confirm all property taxes are paid up to date. Request receipts for the last 4 years
  • 7. Utility connections: Verify that water, electricity, and gas are legally connected and the contracts are in the seller's name. Illegal connections (particularly water) exist in rural areas
  • 8. Energy performance certificate (EPC): Required by law in both countries. Check the rating — anything below D may indicate poor insulation and high energy costs
  • 9. Structural survey: Commission an independent structural survey, especially for properties over 20 years old, rural properties, or anything with visible signs of damp, cracking, or settlement
  • 10. Coastal or flood risk check: For beachfront or riverside properties, check the property is not within a protected coastal zone (dominio público marítimo-terrestre in Spain, domínio público marítimo in Portugal) that could restrict future works or grant the government rights over the land
  • 11. Community statutes review: For apartments, read the community statutes. Check for restrictions on short-term rental, pet ownership, building modifications, and any pending special assessments (derramas)
  • 12. Seller's non-resident tax clearance: If the seller is a non-resident, check that the 3% retention (Spain) or 10% retention (Portugal) at completion is correctly applied. This protects you from the seller's unpaid capital gains tax
  • 13. Check for sitting tenants: Verify the property is vacant. Existing rental contracts may transfer to the new owner, and eviction in both countries is slow and expensive
  • 14. Money laundering compliance: Both countries require proof of the legitimate source of funds. Have bank statements and documentation ready for the notary
  • 15. Power of attorney (if not attending completion): If you cannot be present, grant a poder notarial to your lawyer to sign on your behalf. This must be done at a Spanish or Portuguese notary, or a UK notary with apostille

Step 6: Understanding the Timeline

Do not expect the speed you are used to in the UK. Here is a realistic timeline:

StageSpain (typical)Portugal (typical)
Obtain NIE/NIF2-6 weeks1-4 weeks (digital NIF available)
Property search1-4 weeks (visits)1-4 weeks (visits)
Offer and negotiation1-2 weeks1-2 weeks
Due diligence2-4 weeks2-4 weeks
Reservation/deposit contractImmediate once agreedImmediate once agreed
Mortgage approval (if applicable)4-8 weeks4-8 weeks
Completion at notary4-12 weeks after deposit4-12 weeks after CPCV
Land Registry registration1-3 months after completion1-2 months after completion

Total from first visit to keys in hand: typically 3-6 months. It can be faster for cash purchases of vacant properties, or slower if mortgage approval, planning issues, or inheritance complications arise.

Step 7: Common Mistakes to Avoid

Every experienced overseas property lawyer has a list of stories. These are the mistakes that come up repeatedly:

  1. Signing documents you do not fully understand. Never sign anything in Spanish or Portuguese that has not been translated or fully explained by your lawyer. "The agent said it's just a standard form" is not good enough
  2. Paying deposits directly to the seller or agent before legal checks. All deposits should go through your lawyer's client account or into a designated escrow arrangement. If the seller insists on direct payment before due diligence is complete, walk away
  3. Using the seller's lawyer. Their lawyer works for them, not you. Always appoint your own independent lawyer
  4. Skipping the survey because "the property looks fine." Hidden problems — subsidence, damp, illegal extensions, faulty wiring, asbestos, termites — are invisible to the untrained eye
  5. Underestimating ongoing costs. Community fees, property tax, non-resident income tax, insurance, and maintenance add up to €3,000-€8,000 per year even for a modest apartment
  6. Making emotional decisions under holiday conditions. You visit on a sunny day, drink wine at lunch, view a property with a sea view and bougainvillea on the terrace, and suddenly you are ready to sign. Come back for a second visit in different weather. Stay for a week. Walk the neighbourhood at night. Check the property in January, not just July
  7. Ignoring currency risk. A 10% swing in GBP/EUR (entirely normal over a 6-month period) on a €300,000 purchase is £30,000+. Use a forward contract to lock your rate
  8. Buying off-plan from an unlicensed developer. Verify the developer's licence, bank guarantee for deposits (required by law in Spain), and track record. Off-plan purchases carry risks that completed properties do not
  9. Not visiting in winter. Some holiday areas are ghost towns from November to March. If you plan to use the property year-round, you need to see it in the off-season
  10. Assuming rental income will cover all costs. In most locations, realistic net rental yield is 3-5% after all costs. Factor this conservatively, not optimistically

Step 8: Red Flags When Viewing Properties

Know what to look for during viewings. These issues should trigger further investigation or cause you to walk away:

  • Damp patches, mould, or musty smell: especially in ground-floor apartments and older buildings. This can indicate structural damp, poor ventilation, or plumbing leaks that are expensive to fix
  • Cracks in walls or ceilings: hairline cracks are normal (thermal movement). Diagonal cracks wider than 3mm, cracks around door frames, or cracks that are clearly recent may indicate subsidence or structural movement
  • Pressure to sign immediately: "There's another buyer coming tomorrow" is the oldest trick. Genuine urgency exists, but artificial pressure is a red flag
  • No energy performance certificate (EPC): legally required. If the agent does not have one, the seller may be hiding poor energy ratings or the property may have legal issues
  • Discrepancies between the escritura and reality: if the property has rooms, extensions, or covered terraces that are not shown on the title deed, they may be illegal builds
  • Agent discourages you from appointing your own lawyer: a legitimate agent will welcome independent legal advice. Any resistance is a warning sign
  • Community areas in poor repair: if the communal stairway, garden, pool, or façade is neglected, the community is either underfunded or poorly managed. Your community fees will rise
  • Unfinished neighbouring construction: construction sites that appear abandoned may indicate developer bankruptcy. Check what the planned completion is and whether permits are still valid

Step 9: After You Buy — What Happens Next

Completing the purchase is not the finish line. Here is what you need to do in the weeks following completion:

Immediate (First 2 Weeks)

  • Transfer utility contracts (water, electricity, gas) into your name or a management company's name. Your lawyer or a gestor can handle this
  • Set up home insurance — mandatory if you have a mortgage, strongly recommended regardless. Ensure it covers the property while empty (many policies exclude unoccupied properties after 30-60 consecutive days)
  • Change the locks. You do not know how many copies of the keys exist
  • Set up a direct debit for community fees with your Spanish or Portuguese bank account

First 3 Months

  • Register for non-resident tax obligations. In Spain, this means Modelo 210 (annual deemed income and quarterly rental income). In Portugal, similar obligations through the Finanças. Appoint a local tax advisor (gestor fiscal) — annual cost €200-€400
  • Furnish the property if needed. IKEA has stores in Malaga, Lisbon, and Porto. Local furniture shops offer delivery. Budget €5,000-€15,000 to furnish a 2-3 bed property from scratch
  • Set up internet and TV. Main providers: Movistar, Vodafone, Orange (Spain); MEO, NOS, Vodafone (Portugal). Contract vs pay-as-you-go depends on how often you will use the property
  • Consider a property management company if you will not be living there full-time. Services include key holding, regular inspections, bill management, cleaning, and emergency response. Cost: €100-€300/month

Ongoing

  • File your tax returns annually. Non-resident property owners in both Spain and Portugal have annual filing obligations — even if the property is not rented. Read our costs and taxes guide for details
  • Keep records of all property expenses. Receipts for renovations, improvements, and furnishings can reduce your capital gains tax liability when you eventually sell
  • Review your will. Spanish and Portuguese inheritance law differs significantly from English law. Consider making a separate will covering your overseas property, drafted by a local lawyer who understands cross-border succession

Step 10: The Emotional vs Rational Decision

Buying property abroad is an emotional decision dressed up in financial clothing. The sunshine, the lifestyle, the fantasy of morning coffee on a terrace overlooking the sea — these are powerful motivators. And they should be. Life is short, and owning property in a place you love is genuinely rewarding.

But the happiest overseas property owners are the ones who let emotion choose the destination and then let logic manage the purchase. Fall in love with the area, but hire a cold-eyed lawyer. Dream about the terrace, but read the community minutes. Imagine the lifestyle, but budget for the boring costs.

The golden rule: If you would not buy this property at this price in this condition if it were located in Swindon rather than on the Costa del Sol, do not buy it. Sunshine should not add 50% to what you are willing to pay for a structurally questionable apartment with a damp problem.

For more on the buying process, read our step-by-step guides: Buying Process in Spain and Costs and Taxes. Visit the UK buyers hub for all our resources in one place, and use the MUNDO cost calculator to get a clear picture of your total investment before you commit.

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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: May 2026.

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