ITP transfer tax in Spain 2026: how much resale buyers pay, how it is calculated, and when it is due

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Clear, practical guide to ITP in Spain for 2026 resale buyers - how the tax is calculated, when you must pay, example costs for Marbella and Malaga, and filing pointers.

Euro notes and paperwork for Spanish property transfer tax (ITP)

Published 2 April 2026 · Updated 3 July 2026

What is ITP and who pays it?

ITP - Impuesto de Transmisiones Patrimoniales - is the regional transfer tax on second-hand residential property in Spain. It applies to resale homes and is normally the buyer's responsibility. New-build purchases do not pay ITP - they are subject to VAT and stamp duty instead.

How regional rates work - Andalucia and the 2021 reform

ITP is set by each autonomous community. Since the 2021 tax reform Andalucia applies a flat 7% rate for standard resale purchases. Other regions use different rates and, in many cases, sliding scales, temporary discounts or exemptions for certain buyers. Always confirm the current rate with the regional tax office before you buy.

What exactly is the taxable base?

The taxable base for ITP is the value used to calculate the tax. Practically, this is usually the higher of:

  • the price stated in the public deed or private contract, and
  • the value that the tax authorities determine as the market value for that property (based on cadastre data, comparison data and other tools).

Tax offices have powers to re-assess a transfer if they consider the declared price unrepresentative of market value. That is why buyers should keep clear records and be prepared to explain the deal price.

Which documents and forms are involved?

When you pay ITP you normally submit a regional ITP form - in many regions that is Modelo 600 - together with supporting documents: a copy of the public deed or private contract, proof of identity (NIE or passport), and proof of payment. Requirements can vary by autonomous community, so check the local tax agency or ask your conveyancer to confirm.

When is ITP due? A practical timetable

ITP should be filed and paid promptly after you complete the purchase. A broadly accepted timetable is to file and pay within 30 calendar days from the date of the purchase transaction - commonly interpreted as the date of the public deed (escritura) or, in some cases, the date of the private contract. If you register the title at the Property Registry before filing, the tax authorities can also check it during registration.

Missing the deadline can trigger interest and surcharges. If you are unsure which date applies in your region, ask your notary or gestor before signing the deed so you can plan payment and registration.

How to calculate ITP - the simple formula

The calculation itself is straightforward once you have the taxable base and the regional rate:

ITP payable = taxable base x regional ITP rate

Example: in Andalucia a 7% ITP on a taxable base of EUR 500,000 would be EUR 35,000.

Real examples using verified market data for Marbella and Malaga

Below I use PropertyList market medians and Spain's notarial register price-per-square-metre data to show how two practical examples look at a 7% Andalucia rate. All price-per-m2 figures that come from the Spanish notarial register are linked to the source.

Location Active listings Median price Median EUR/m2 Notary-verified EUR/m2 Implied median area Notary-based value ITP at 7% on median price ITP at 7% on notary-based value
Marbella 1,286 EUR 1,499,000 EUR 6,296/m2 EUR 4,571/m2 ~238.09 m2 (median price / median EUR/m2) ~EUR 1,088,299 (238.09 x EUR 4,571) EUR 104,930 (7% of EUR 1,499,000) ~EUR 76,182 (7% of EUR 1,088,299)
Malaga 68 EUR 720,000 EUR 5,750/m2 EUR 3,036/m2 ~125.22 m2 (median price / median EUR/m2) ~EUR 380,170 (125.22 x EUR 3,036) EUR 50,400 (7% of EUR 720,000) ~EUR 26,612 (7% of EUR 380,170)

What do these numbers show in practice?

  • If the buyer pays the median listing price and the deed reflects that amount, the taxable base will commonly be the declared sale price and ITP will be 7% of that amount in Andalucia. For example, a Marbella buyer paying the median listing price of EUR 1,499,000 would face around EUR 104,930 of ITP.
  • Where the declared price is lower than market indicators, tax authorities can use their own valuation tools. The notary-verified EUR/m2 figures can produce a significantly different valuation - in our Malaga example the notary-based value using the register price-per-m2 comes out lower than the median sale price. Ultimately the taxable base is normally the higher of the declared price and the authority's assessment, so buyers usually end up taxed on the actual contract price if that is higher.

Why notary-verified EUR/m2 figures matter

Notary-verified price-per-m2 data is one of the reference points the tax office may use when assessing whether a sale is reasonably priced. PropertyList includes links to notary-verified figures alongside live listings so buyers and their advisors can see comparable market evidence. For example, the Spanish notarial register shows EUR 4,571/m2 in Marbella and EUR 3,036/m2 in Malaga - both figures are published in the notarial register and linked in the examples above.

Common buyer questions - practical points to avoid surprises

Here are some of the issues buyers regularly run into, and how to handle them.

  • Undervaluation on the deed - avoid it. Sellers and buyers sometimes try to declare a lower price to reduce taxes. If the tax office considers the sale price too low compared with market evidence it may re-assess and apply penalties. Always use realistic, supportable valuations.
  • Currency, gifts or staged transactions - be transparent. Complex payment structures attract scrutiny and can trigger reassessment.
  • Confirm who pays what in the private contract. ITP is legally the buyer's liability but parties may negotiate contributions - make these terms explicit in the contract.
  • Plan cashflow. You will normally need to pay ITP soon after completion and before final registration, so include it in your budget alongside notary and registration fees.

Filing and payment - who usually does it?

Buyers often instruct a gestor or lawyer to submit the ITP form and arrange payment on their behalf. Notaries do not normally file ITP for you. A good conveyancer will prepare the form, calculate the tax due, lodge it with the regional tax office and obtain the payment receipt that you need to register the deed.

What if the regional rate changes during the purchase process?

Regional rate changes can complicate transactions that span the date of the change. Rules vary on whether the applicable rate is the rate in force on the date of the private contract or the date of the public deed. This is a technical point with legal and tax consequences - if your purchase straddles a rate change, ask your lawyer or tax adviser for a precise, region-specific interpretation.

When to get professional advice

ITP is straightforward in many simple cases but can become complex when:

  • the sale price differs significantly from market indicators,
  • the buyer is a company or a non-resident entity,
  • there are unusual payment terms, or
  • the transaction occurs near a known regional rate change or special regime.

If any of the above applies, get professional tax and conveyancing advice before you sign.

Andalucia's reduced ITP rates: how buyers pay less than 7%

The 7% flat rate is only the starting point in Andalucia. Under Law 5/2021, two reduced rates matter for ordinary buyers: a 6% rate where the property will be your habitual residence and its value does not exceed 150,000 euros, and a 3.5% rate for buyers under 35 purchasing a habitual residence of up to 150,000 euros. Reduced rates also exist for large families and buyers with a disability, subject to their own value caps and conditions. On a 150,000 euro home, the under-35 rate saves 5,250 euros compared with the general rate. These reductions apply to resale purchases only - new builds pay 10% IVA plus 1.2% AJD instead of ITP. Conditions are checked at completion, so confirm the current requirements with your lawyer before signing.

FAQ

1. Is ITP always paid by the buyer?

Yes - legally the buyer is responsible for ITP on resale transactions. Parties can agree commercial contributions in the contract, but responsibility rests with the buyer.

2. Do I pay ITP on new-build homes?

No. New homes are usually subject to VAT and often stamp duty instead of ITP. Resale homes pay ITP.

3. How long do I have to pay ITP?

Generally you must file and pay the tax within 30 calendar days of the purchase date (commonly the date of the public deed). Confirm the precise deadline in the relevant autonomous community.

4. Can the tax office re-evaluate the sale price?

Yes. Tax authorities can apply their own valuation methods if they suspect the declared price is not a true market reflection. That is why supportable valuations and documentary evidence are important.

5. What happens if I pay late?

Late payment can lead to interest and surcharges. If you miss the deadline contact a gestor or tax adviser immediately to regularise the situation.

How PropertyList helps

PropertyList publishes live, verified listings and links notary-verified price-per-m2 data next to market listings so buyers and advisers can compare published prices with notarial register figures. See live listings and notary-verified data at https://propertylist.es. Agents can also join the MLS to share verified listings and reach a focused audience.

Closing advice and call to action

ITP is a material cost in any resale purchase and one you can plan for. Use verified market data, ask the notary or your gestor about the regional filing deadline, and budget ITP into your completion costs from day one. To browse live verified listings and check notary-verified price-per-m2 evidence for specific towns and properties, visit PropertyList at https://propertylist.es. If you are an agent and want to list verified stock, learn about joining the MLS on the same site.

Don't guess prices - verify them

PropertyList's Price Oracle publishes notary-verified €/m² from the Spanish notarial register, and agents can turn live MLS data into a full area market report in minutes. Real data beats asking-price guesswork.

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