Foreigners could avoid Spain's 100% tax by buying new builds


A draft law which proposes doubling property prices for non-EU non-resident home buyers in Spain through a 100 percent tax could be dodged when buying newly built homes instead of second-hand ones, legal experts have revealed.
There has been anger and confusion following the Spanish government's decision to move forward with a proposal to tax new non-EU non-resident home buyers 100 percent on the value of Spanish property, an idea first proposed by Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez in January as a way of limiting "foreign speculation" in the property market.
However, after experts have consulted the legal text, it has emerged that there may be a way for some of these foreigners to avoid Spain's 100 percent tax: by buying a new build property.
Despite widespread confusion online, the draft text clarifies that the proposal is not to double the property transfer tax (ITP, which is 6 to 11 percent of the property value depending on the region) as many had previously thought or hoped.
Rather, the draft bill is that the 100 percent tax would apply to the taxable base of the property (the value of the property, in other words), which would effectively double the price for these buyers. The Local has spoken to property experts and reported on this in detail to avoid doubts, which you can read about here and via the link below.
The measure will affect 'second hand' properties in Spain but not new builds directly from developers, something that could price people out while allowing wealthier foreigners to bypass the proposal.
The price of new build housing in Spain is 44 percent more than second-hand housing on average and 10 percent more than the high it reached during the property bubble, according to a report by valuation firm Tinsa.
FACT CHECK: Yes, Spain's 100 percent tax on non-EU, non-residents doubles property price
Spain's Register of Tax Advisor Economists (REAF) has presented its first assessment of the proposals, and explains that the new tax does indeed contain a legal loophole. Raquel Jurado, a technician in REAF's research department, told Spanish daily El País that "as VAT cannot be touched, because it is aligned, all sales that are taxed by it will be outside the complementary tax."
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