NIE number Spain

Buying in Spain

NIE number Spain

Process

The NIE — Número de Identificación de Extranjero — is the Spanish fiscal ID number required for any property purchase, bank account opening, utility contract or tax filing as a non-resident.

How the process actually works

Apply in person at a Spanish consulate in your home country, or via the National Police in Spain. Most buyers use a gestor or lawyer to handle the appointment and paperwork.

Costs and timeline

Allow 10–13% of purchase price for transaction costs (resale; new-build is slightly higher). Reservation deposit at offer (€6,000–30,000 typical), 10% deposit at exchange (Arras contract), balance at notary completion. Total timeline from accepted offer to keys: 6–10 weeks clean resale.

Who you actually need

An independent lawyer (not the one the agent or seller recommends), a gestor for tax and admin, an FX broker if you're transferring from outside the euro, and an agent who actually transacts in the specific micro-market. Skip any of these and you will pay for it later.

Frequently asked questions

Can I buy without being a resident?
Yes. Non-residents buy freely. Only the annual tax treatment differs (Modelo 210).
Is the deposit refundable?
The 10% Arras deposit is double-or-nothing under standard Spanish contract law — buyer walks, buyer loses 10%; seller walks, seller pays back 20%.
Do I need a Spanish bank account?
Yes — for utilities, community fees, taxes and the mortgage if applicable. Opening takes a week or two with NIE in hand.
Can the lawyer act remotely?
Yes. A Power of Attorney (Poder) signed at the Spanish consulate in your home country or by apostille lets the lawyer complete on your behalf without you flying in.

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