Renovating in Jávea: reforms, licences and builders
Almost every villa in Jávea gets renovated eventually, and the process runs on a licensing distinction — obra menor versus obra mayor — that decides how much paperwork, time and professional input a job actually needs. Get that distinction right at the start and the rest of the reform, from quotes to completion, gets considerably less stressful.

Renovating a Jávea villa: what's different here
Reforms in Jávea follow Spanish building law rather than the conventions a UK, German or Dutch owner might expect, and the gap between what you assume you can do and what actually needs a licence is where most reform headaches start. The good news is that the town hall's planning department deals with international owners constantly, and a decent local architect or building company will already know exactly which category your job falls into — the trick is asking that question before you start, not after the tiles are off the wall.
Obra menor vs obra mayor — the distinction that decides everything
Spanish planning law splits works into two broad categories. Obra menor (minor works) covers cosmetic and like-for-like jobs — retiling a bathroom, repainting, swapping kitchen units, repairing a wall in the same footprint — and typically only needs a declaración responsable, a self-declaration you file before starting, with no lengthy wait for approval. Obra mayor (major works) covers anything structural or that changes the building's footprint or use — extensions, knocking through load-bearing walls, adding a pool, converting a garage to living space — and needs a full technical project, an architect's sign-off, and a genuine town hall licence before a single block is moved.
How long each licence actually takes
A declaración responsable for minor works can often let you start almost immediately, since it's a declaration rather than an approval you wait for. An obra mayor licence is a different proposition entirely — the town hall reviews a full technical project, and processing genuinely takes weeks to months depending on the complexity of the works and the department's current workload. Anyone budgeting a renovation around a fixed calendar — a summer-let deadline, a house sale, a family move-in date — needs to build that uncertainty into the plan from day one rather than discovering it mid-project.

Vetting a builder
Jávea has a deep bench of experienced local building companies used to working with international owners, but the market also has its share of informal outfits without proper insurance or licensing. The sensible sequence, in order:
- Get at least three quotes — for anything beyond a small cosmetic job, price spread alone tells you a lot
- Ask to see recent, similar work — ideally in person, not just photos
- Confirm insurance and legal registration — a proper company will produce this without hesitation
- Get the scope in writing — materials, timeline and payment stages, before any deposit changes hands
- Agree payment stages tied to milestones — never the full amount up front
Architects and technical direction
Any obra mayor needs a qualified architect to prepare the project and, usually, a separate technical director to oversee the works on site — two distinct roles that Spanish planning law treats separately even when the same practice fills both. For a straightforward extension this can feel like unnecessary bureaucracy to an owner used to lighter-touch systems elsewhere, but it's also the mechanism that protects you: the technical director's sign-off at completion is what makes the works fully legal and, eventually, reflected correctly on the property's title.
Budgeting honestly
Reform costs in Jávea vary enormously by scope, finish level and the building company involved, which makes any single figure close to useless as a planning tool — the only reliable approach is to get several detailed quotes for your specific job and compare like for like. What you can budget for with more confidence is the tax: ICIO (the construction tax) is charged as a percentage of the declared works budget, paid to the town hall as part of the licence process, with the exact rate set locally and worth confirming at application rather than assumed.
Pools, terraces and party walls
Three reform categories come up constantly in Jávea specifically: new or resurfaced pools (usually obra mayor, given the structural and drainage work involved), terrace enclosures (glazed terraces have their own rules and are a frequent source of retrospective legalisation problems on resale properties), and shared boundary walls in urbanizaciones, where community rules can add a layer of approval on top of the town hall's. If your reform touches any of these three, ask the question early rather than assuming it's cosmetic.
Updating the catastro afterwards
Once major works finish, the property's official record (the catastro) should be updated to reflect the new floor area or use — and because IBI and non-resident tax are both calculated from catastral value, a completed reform that isn't registered can quietly leave a gap between what you actually own and what you're legally shown to own. A good architect or gestor will fold this into the end-of-project paperwork; it's worth confirming explicitly that they have, rather than assuming.
The pitfalls worth avoiding
The two mistakes that show up most often on resale surveys are unlicensed structural work (invisible until someone tries to sell or extend further, at which point it can require costly retrospective legalisation or, worse, can't be legalised at all) and informal cash-in-hand builders without proper registration, who can vanish the moment a problem appears mid-job. Neither is a Jávea-specific risk — it's a Spain-wide one — but the fix is the same everywhere: licence properly, hire registered professionals, and keep every document.
Réponses rapides
Do I need a licence to renovate my Jávea property? It depends on the scope. Cosmetic and like-for-like works — retiling, repainting, replacing fittings — usually only need a declaración responsable, filed before you start, with no long wait. Structural changes, extensions, new pools or anything that alters the building's footprint need a full obra mayor licence with an architect's technical project, approved by the town hall before work begins. When in doubt, ask a local architect or gestor to classify the specific job before you commit to a contractor or a date.
How long does a building licence take in Jávea? A minor-works declaration can effectively let you start almost immediately. A major-works licence takes considerably longer — realistically weeks to a few months, depending on the complexity of the project and the town hall's current workload — because it involves genuine technical review, not just registration. Anyone working to a fixed deadline should get a written timeline estimate from their architect early and build in a buffer, since licence timelines are one of the most common sources of reform delay.
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