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Spanish mortgages for foreign buyers

Foreign buyers can and regularly do get a Spanish mortgage, but the terms — deposit size, documents, rate structure — differ enough from a home-market mortgage that assuming they'll match is the first mistake. This is general, information-only background; a regulated Spanish mortgage broker or bank is where the actual numbers for your situation come from.

The Portitxol islet and bay seen through pines, with the Montgó on the horizon
Photo: Werner Wilmes · CC BY 2.0

Can foreigners get a Spanish mortgage?

Yes — Spanish banks lend to non-resident foreign buyers routinely, and it's a well-established part of the coastal property market. What differs from a home-market mortgage is the shape of the deal: typically a smaller loan relative to the property's value, a more document-heavy application, and lending decisions weighted more heavily toward provable income than local credit history, which a foreign applicant usually doesn't have in Spain.

Resident versus non-resident lending

Spanish lenders generally draw a real line between resident and non-resident applicants, and it shows up most clearly in how much of the purchase price they'll lend. Non-resident mortgages typically cap out lower than a resident's — commonly cited in the region of 60–70% loan-to-value, against up to around 80% for residents — though every lender sets its own bar and these figures move over time, so treat them as a starting orientation rather than a quote.

Panoramic view over Xàbia’s bay and coastline
Photo: Joanbanjo · CC BY-SA 3.0

What Spanish banks actually check

Lenders build a picture from provable, documented income rather than a credit score in the way a UK or US buyer might expect — payslips, tax returns, and bank statements covering a meaningful stretch of time, translated where needed. Existing debts, other property, and the source of the deposit all typically get scrutinised as part of the same process.

Documents you'll typically need

Gathering the paperwork before you start actively house-hunting speeds the whole process up considerably.

  1. A Spanish NIE (foreigner identification number), or an application for one already underway
  2. Passport and proof of address in your home country
  3. Recent payslips or, if self-employed, tax returns for the last two to three years
  4. Bank statements covering several months, plus proof of the deposit source
  5. Details of any existing mortgages, loans or other property owned

Fixed versus variable rates

Spanish mortgages are typically offered as fixed, variable (often tracking the Euribor benchmark rate), or a mixed structure blending both. Fixed rates give certainty over the life of the loan; variable rates can start lower but move with the wider interest-rate environment. Which suits a given buyer depends on risk appetite and how long the property will be held — genuinely a conversation for a broker, not a rule of thumb.

Costs beyond the mortgage itself

A mortgage is only one line in the total cost of buying — notary fees, land registry costs, transfer tax or VAT depending on whether the property is resale or new build, and independent legal fees all sit alongside it and typically add a further tenth or more of the purchase price. The full breakdown belongs to the buying-property guide linked below; the point here is simply not to budget for the mortgage in isolation.

Currency risk

Earning in one currency and borrowing in euros introduces a genuine risk that's easy to overlook in the excitement of a purchase — exchange-rate movement between agreeing a price and completing can meaningfully change the real cost, and ongoing mortgage payments carry the same exposure for as long as the loan runs. Specialist currency transfer services exist precisely to manage this, and it's worth a conversation with one alongside the mortgage broker, not after.

Local tip Ask a currency specialist about locking in a rate for the completion transfer as soon as a purchase price is agreed — a forward contract removes the guesswork on the single largest transfer of the whole process.

Mortgage brokers versus going direct to a bank

An independent mortgage broker who works specifically with foreign buyers can compare offers across several lenders at once and knows which banks are currently most receptive to non-resident applications — that knowledge shifts over time and isn't something a single bank branch will volunteer. Going direct to one bank is simpler but only shows you that bank's own terms.

A typical timeline

Mortgage approval timelines in Spain are genuinely variable, but a rough shape is worth knowing before you commit to a purchase timetable.

4–8weeks is a commonly cited range from full application to formal approval
1NIE number is required before a mortgage application can complete, so start that process early

Information only — always take regulated advice

Nothing on this page is personalised financial advice, and mortgage terms, rates and lending appetite all change over time and by lender. Before making any decision, speak to a regulated Spanish mortgage broker or bank adviser who can assess your actual financial position and give you current, specific terms.

Local tip Get a broker's initial view before you make an offer on a property, not after — knowing your realistic borrowing range changes what's worth viewing in the first place.

Quick answers

Can a non-resident get a 100% mortgage in Spain? It's highly unusual. Non-resident lending in Spain typically caps well below the full purchase price, commonly cited in the 60–70% loan-to-value range, meaning most non-resident buyers need a substantial cash deposit alongside the mortgage rather than relying on it to cover the whole purchase.

How much deposit do foreign buyers typically need? Enough to cover the gap the mortgage won't reach, plus the purchase costs on top. If a lender offers 60–70% loan-to-value, that implies a deposit in the region of 30–40% of the purchase price before even accounting for taxes and fees — an independent broker can give an exact figure for a specific property and buyer profile.

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