Spanish Non-Resident Taxes Explained

If you own property in Spain but don’t live here full-time, you must file Non-Resident Income Tax (NRIT) using Modelo 210.


✔ If you rent out your property → declare rental income (quarterly).
✔ If you don’t rent → you still must declare “deemed” rental income (annually).
Tax rates: 19% for EU/EEA residents, 24% for others.


Late filing = fines — so don’t ignore it.

What Is Non-Resident Income Tax?

Non-Resident Income Tax (NRIT) applies to anyone who owns property or earns income in Spain but is not a Spanish tax resident. Residents pay tax on worldwide income; non-residents only pay tax on income generated in Spain.

If you have a holiday home, rental property, or Spanish-source income, you likely need to file.

Who Is Considered a Non-Resident?

You are a non-resident if you:

  • Spend fewer than 183 days a year in Spain
  • Do not have your economic centre of interests in Spain
  • Have your main home and financial ties abroad

If that’s you and you own Spanish property NRIT applies.

How Is Non-Resident Tax Calculated?

1. If You Rent Out Your Property

You must declare your rental income every quarter.

  • EU/EEA residents: 19% tax
  • Non-EU residents: 24% tax
  • EU residents can deduct eligible expenses (mortgage interest, community fees, repairs, etc.)
  • Non-EU residents cannot deduct costs

2. If You Use Your Property as a Second Home

Even if you never rent it, Spain taxes you on “deemed rental income.”

How it works:

  • Taxable amount = 1.1% of the cadastral value
    (or 2% if not updated in 10+ years)

 

Example:
Cadastral value €100,000 → 1.1% = €1,100 taxable

  • EU resident pays €209
  • Non-EU resident pays €264

When Do You File Modelo 210?

  • If NOT rented:
    File once a year → by 31 December for the previous year
  • If rented:
    File quarterly → every April, July, October, January

 

Missing the deadline leads to penalties and interest.

Common Mistakes (to Avoid)

  • Not declaring when the property isn’t rented
  • Missing quarterly deadlines
  • Claiming deductions you’re not entitled to
  • Incorrect cadastral value use
  • Thinking “the tax office will never know”

 

Spain’s tax system is automatic and connected, they know.

Let Us Handle Your Non-Resident Tax

Filing Modelo 210 can be confusing, especially if you don’t speak Spanish or don’t live here. We handle:

✓ Calculations
✓ Correct tax rate and deductions
✓ Preparing and submitting Modelo 210
✓ Reminders for annual/quarterly deadlines