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Licensing laws and buying in PP

  • Thread starter Thread starter Gp1602
  • Start date Start date
Rental Laws

Hi All,

I know this question has been raised before but wondered if anyone has any up to date information?
I would like to rent out my villa but it does not have a rental licence and I can't find any information about how to obtain one.
Also if I rent without a licence and then pay the tax in Mallorca the authorities will know I don't have a licence.
Can I pay the tax in the UK?

I know many villas are rented without licences but don't want to be landed with a huge fine. The reason I need to rent is to cover the running costs. Any advice would be much appreciated.

Many thanks
 
The advice I've received is that there is no way that you will get a licence unless your villa is detatched and free-standing. This apparently is the pertinent part of the new law :
'2. Under no circumstances shall homes found in multifamily or attached buildings subjected to the horizontal
property system be considered independent freestanding
homes, and as a result tourist stays are forbidden in this kind
of home'.
 
The horizontal propertty system simply means any property which has common parts and a 'Community'
 
Hi Graham,

My property is a detached stand alone villa do you think I could apply for a licence?
 
I have emailed a local lawyer but not had a reply yet!

If I get any news I will post.

If anyone else has any advice or experience with obtaining a licence or how they pay their taxes i.e. here or in the UK I would be greatful.
 
I recently spoke to an estate agent who suggested that the law had changed last year (as per earlier posts on this thread), and confirmed what Graham suggests above, that only independent villas (ie no apartments and no villas on a community) would be able to get a license. They didn't know how easy this would be in practise,although in principal it should now be possible whereas before they were not issuing licenses at all.
 
Thanks Codex...I will post back when I get any further information; its so frustrating nothing is straightforward here!!!
 
Keep trying as you should get there in the end :)

You would have thought Spain would be glad of the tax income rather than having thousands of empty villas but I don't think they run Spain like a business....
 
Keep trying as you should get there in the end :)

You would have thought Spain would be glad of the tax income rather than having thousands of empty villas but I don't think they run Spain like a business....

They are eager to take the taxes but not so keen to issue the licences!:rolleyes:
 
Putting aside the ìs it legal to holiday rent´part and looking at the taxes bit -
If you are a non-resident and have income derived in Spain then it must be declared in Spain and taxes paid in Spain. The rate of tax on rental income used to be 25% of every euro taken (no allowances for anything) but that may well have increased now. Many non-resident owners ignore this and instead pay the Property Owners Imputed Income Tax which very roughly amounts to 0.5% pa of the property value, however this is not a legal alternative, it is tax evasion!
 
............ Many non-resident owners ignore this and instead pay the Property Owners Imputed Income Tax which very roughly amounts to 0.5% pa of the property value, however this is not a legal alternative, it is tax evasion!

I did not think this Owners Imputed Income Tax was an option!! :rolleyes:
 
Rental Licence

Quick update:
The lawyer returned my email and has told be that yes, in principle a detached villa can obtain a rental licence. It takes a couple of months for the paperwork to go through the system but as soon as you have submitted the forms you can start to rent the villa.
Apartments can not obtain a rental licence......but I think we know that :confused:
 
The lawyer has also told me that the rental tax is 24.75% but you can deduct certain expenses first such as cleaning, pool maintenance, garden maintenance etc.

Putting aside the ìs it legal to holiday rent´part and looking at the taxes bit -
If you are a non-resident and have income derived in Spain then it must be declared in Spain and taxes paid in Spain. The rate of tax on rental income used to be 25% of every euro taken (no allowances for anything) but that may well have increased now. Many non-resident owners ignore this and instead pay the Property Owners Imputed Income Tax which very roughly amounts to 0.5% pa of the property value, however this is not a legal alternative, it is tax evasion!
 
Last edited:
Thanks for posting it's good to hear from someone who knows. Would also be interested to hear how you get on if you do try to get a license.
 
Unless the law has changed recently you can only deduct expenses if you are a resident and registered here to pay tax. If not then the tax is 24.75% of the total rent received.
With regard to the Property owners Imputed Income Tax I belief that all non-resident owners pay this if they are not declaring the rental income.
 
The tax law changed on the 1st January 2010 which allows all residents of the EU (you don't have to be a resident in Spain) to deduct expenses directly related to the rental income.
The tax should be paid one month after it is received or you can do quarterly returns.



Unless the law has changed recently you can only deduct expenses if you are a resident and registered here to pay tax. If not then the tax is 24.75% of the total rent received.
With regard to the Property owners Imputed Income Tax I belief that all non-resident owners pay this if they are not declaring the rental income.
 
.............With regard to the Property owners Imputed Income Tax I belief that all non-resident owners pay this if they are not declaring the rental income.

It is paid by all non resident owners......... even if you don't rent out!! :(
 
I think all you property owners may find this interesting, from Majorca Daily Bulletin . Grupo Serra Newspaper . Daily Press . News in English . Online Digital Information . Palma of Majorca Balearic Islands Spain. majorca daily bulletin. grupo serra newspaper . daily press . news in english . online digital info.

SUMMER RENTALS REVISITED

A fter many interesting queries that followed the publication of my article dealing with the law and practice of holiday rentals, I have decided to revisit the issue again, to give you another shot at clarifying this muddled system of laws.
As you may recall, I mentioned that there is a Spanish general law (the Tenancy act) that regulates leasehold activities in this country. It has been said by some, rather erroneously, that leaseholds must have a certain minimum term, and that anything under one year, or six months, or eve a month, automatically classes your tenancy agreement as a touristic one, and therefore an illegal one.

This mistaken account shows the two points where the understanding in this issue has gone wrong. Let me take them in turn.
In regard to the term of a lease, you are perfectly legally entitled to rent out your house or flat for any period of time you like. It can even be 24 hours. More over, this leasehold can be done under the above-mentioned Tenancy Act. The key is that in this country, this Act covers ‘permanent housing needs’, that is, tenants seeking a lease of certain duration to call your property home, but it also regulates leases that might be agreed for purposes other than a permanent home for the tenant. There is nothing materially that distinguishes these two types, as they are subject to the same piece of legislation.

A leasehold, then, that is agreed for a week, for instance, clearly is not designed to satisfy a tenant’s need of permanent habitation, but it falls in the category of ‘purposes other than’ longer term habitation. Either way, the law protects your activities as a landlord and allows you to rent out your asset for any period of time without it being necessarily classed as a touristic rental.

After this general, Spain-wide law, there came a regional touristic-regulatory law. This very badly drafted piece of legislation does not, and cannot, affect the general tenancy act that we are by now so familiar with. What this law does, is to ban ‘touristic rentals’ UNLESS a license has been applied for and obtained. Last time I mentioned the conditions you have to fulfil to obtain a license: basically, only semi detached or detached houses, where certain services are provided, can be subject to a touristic license. This naturally means that you can always rent out touristically your house or semi, yet not your flat. The latter, you can only rent out non-touristically.

So we come now full circle: do you own a semi or a detached house? Then you can have the choice of renting out your property either as a touristic rental, by obtaining a license, COMPULSORY providing services and charging your clients VAT, OR you can rent out your property, without a license, therefore without providing ANY kind of service, and therefore without charging VAT. In this second case, the rental will be subject to the Tenancy Act. And in either case, the property can be leased for any period of time.

Do you, on the contrary, have a flat that you wish to rent out? No problem. In this case, you leasehold cannot be a touristic one, because you cannot get a license to rent an apartment TOURISTICALLY. You can, however, rent it out NON TOURISTICALLY, for any period of time, by NOT offering and NOT providing any kind of services. Again, your leasehold agreement will be one subject to the Tenancy Act, which, as we know, allows you to rent out your property for any term of time.

Thus, without a license, you must rent out your house or your flat (for which you can never get a touristic license) in a non-touristic way. So what does this imply, and how can you prove that it is a non-touristic rental?

Tourism inspectors will assume, because you are renting out your property for short terms, because it is in summer, and because Majorca receives millions of tourists a year, that what you are doing is a touristic rental. Well, you may be renting it out to tourists, but this is just an unfortunate coincidence of words. To dissipate the assumption, you must pay attention to two things, first, to have a contract between you and your tenant that shows, by including some criteria and leaving others out, that you are subjecting your leasehold to the Tenancy Act and which describes what you are doing fulfilling the terms and conditions of the Tenancy Act. Second, you must pay attention to how you advertise the property. A property advertised as a holiday home where some services are offered may tilt the touristic inspector into regarding your rental as a touristic one and, if you don’t have a license (if a house because you didn’t want to apply for it, and if a flat, because you simply cannot get it), then you will be severely fined. Adverts and contracts must be in harmony with one another and must stay clear of sounding as a touristic rental.

In sum: it is your property, and the law allows you to rent it out to whoever you please, whether a businessperson or a tourist, and for whatever period of time. You just have to use and apply the law appropriately, and you will have a trouble free season.

Will Besga is a lawyer in Palma.
 
lol, so you can rent a flat out as a holiday let, so long as you pretend it's a permanent let for a week, rather than a holiday let. And I suspect if you advertise it on a holiday lettings site, then that wouldn't be in your favour with the tourism inspectors if you tried to suggest it wasn't a tourist let.
 
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