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Property taxes for owners in Jávea: IBI and non-resident tax

Owning in Jávea comes with two recurring bills — the local IBI tax collected by SUMA, and, for non-residents, an annual declaration on the property whether or not you rent it out. Neither is complicated once it's set up, but both are easy to miss from abroad. This is the honest shape of what you owe and when.

Panoramic view over Xàbia's bay and coastline
Photo: Joanbanjo · CC BY-SA 3.0
Håndskrevet guide. Foreløpig kun på engelsk — nøye oversettelser er på vei; ingenting her er maskinoversatt.

Two bills every owner should know

Owning a home in Jávea comes with a short, predictable list of recurring tax obligations, and the honest news is that once you understand the shape of it, it runs on rails. The two that matter most are IBI — the local property tax every owner pays regardless of residency — and, for non-residents, an annual Modelo 210 declaration to the Spanish tax authority. Miss either one for long enough and the consequences range from a late-payment surcharge to, eventually, a lien on the property — so this is worth setting up properly in year one rather than treating as an afterthought.

IBI: the annual local tax

IBI is charged by the town hall (via SUMA, the Alicante provincial agency that collects it on Jávea's behalf) on every property in the municipality, resident-owned or not. The bill is calculated from the valor catastral — an administrative value set by the land registry, usually well below market price — multiplied by a rate the council sets each year. The rate itself varies by municipality and can change annually, so treat any figure you're quoted as a guide rather than gospel and confirm the current one with SUMA or your gestor.

AnnualIBI is billed once a year, usually with a payment window in summer
Valor catastralThe tax base — not the same as market value, and usually lower

Setting up SUMA and staying ahead of it

SUMA sends the bill to whatever address is on file, which is precisely the problem for owners who split their time between countries — a paper notice to an empty villa achieves nothing. The fix is simple and nearly every long-term owner ends up doing it: register for direct debit (domiciliación) so the payment happens automatically from a Spanish bank account, and keep your contact details current with SUMA directly rather than assuming your gestor or agent will chase it for you.

Lokalt tips Set up direct debit the same month you complete on the purchase — not after the first paper reminder arrives at an address you're not checking.
The fortified church of San Bartolomé in Jávea’s old town
Photo: JnCrlsMG · CC BY-SA 4.0

Non-resident tax: imputed income vs rental income

This is the bill that catches people out, because it applies even if the property sits empty all year. Spain treats a non-resident's second home as generating a notional benefit — imputed income — and taxes a small percentage of the catastral value annually via Modelo 210, filed once a year for the whole period the property wasn't rented. If you do let the property, the calculation changes: you're taxed on actual rental income instead, at a rate that depends on your tax residency, with EU/EEA residents generally taxed more favourably than non-EU residents — confirm your exact rate and any allowable deductions with a gestor, since the rules and rates are reviewed periodically.

Modelo 210The non-resident tax form — filed annually, even on an unrented property

Filing Modelo 210, step by step

The mechanics are straightforward once you've done it once, which is exactly why most owners hand the first year to a gestor and then either continue with them or take it on themselves once they've seen the pattern:

  1. Gather the numbers — your property's valor catastral, found on the IBI receipt or the land registry
  2. Calculate the imputed (or rental) income — a gestor will do this correctly first time; DIY is possible but unforgiving of small errors
  3. File Modelo 210 — electronically, within the annual window that applies to your situation
  4. Pay the tax due — by direct debit or bank transfer, in the currency and account the form specifies
  5. Keep the filing confirmation — you'll want it if you ever sell, remortgage, or get asked to prove tax compliance

Above a certain value: wealth tax

Owners with high-value property, or significant assets in Spain more broadly, should also ask their gestor whether regional wealth tax (Impuesto sobre el Patrimonio) applies — the Valencian Community sets its own threshold and allowances, and they move. For the majority of ordinary villa and apartment owners this never bites, but it's a five-minute conversation worth having rather than assuming, especially if your circumstances change.

Lokalt tips Revisit the wealth-tax question whenever your Spanish asset base changes meaningfully — a remortgage, a second property or a large inheritance are the moments worth checking, not just the year you buy.

The costs that aren't technically tax

Community fees (for anyone in an urbanización or development with shared services — pools, gates, gardens), rubbish collection charges, and buildings insurance all arrive on a similar annual rhythm and get mentally filed under "the tax bill" by most owners even though they're not, strictly, taxes. Budgeting for all of it together, once a year, is the practical habit that keeps Jávea ownership from ever feeling like a surprise.

If a bill goes unpaid

Spain's tax administration is patient at first — a missed IBI payment typically triggers a reminder and a modest surcharge, not immediate drama. Left long enough, though, unpaid local tax can attach to the property itself rather than just the owner, which matters enormously if you come to sell: buyers' lawyers check for exactly this during due diligence, and an outstanding balance can hold up or unwind a sale at the worst possible moment. The honest fix is unglamorous: pay on time, keep records, and if you fall behind, deal with it directly rather than letting it compound.

Selling later: what changes

When you eventually sell, a non-resident seller has tax withheld at completion against any capital gain, reconciled afterwards once the actual gain is calculated — a different process again, and one your lawyer handles as part of the sale rather than something you file separately. It's worth knowing it exists now, even years before it's relevant, because it affects how you should be keeping receipts for any improvement works along the way.

Raske svar

How much is IBI in Jávea? IBI is calculated as a percentage of the property's valor catastral, and the exact rate is set by Xàbia town hall and can change year to year — as a working guide it's a modest fraction of a per cent of that catastral value, not the market value, which keeps most bills lower than owners initially expect. The only reliable way to know your figure is to check your most recent SUMA receipt or ask SUMA directly, since two similar properties in different zones can carry different catastral values.

Do I have to pay tax if I don't rent my property out? Yes. Non-resident owners owe an annual Modelo 210 declaration on imputed income whether or not the property is ever rented — Spain treats ownership of a second home itself as generating a small notional benefit that's taxed. It's a modest sum for most ordinary properties, but it's easy to overlook precisely because there's no rental income to remind you it exists, which is the single most common tax mistake new owners make in their first year.

What happens if I sell without having filed my annual tax? It can complicate the sale. Buyers' lawyers routinely check for outstanding local tax and unfiled non-resident declarations during due diligence, and unresolved amounts can be deducted from completion proceeds or hold up the transaction while they're settled. Keeping every year's SUMA payment and Modelo 210 filing on record — even just as scanned PDFs in a folder — is the cheap insurance that avoids this becoming a problem years down the line.

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