Renting long-term in Spain looks easy on the listing portals — and then the reality hits. Landlords want Spanish payslips, agencies charge fees that may or may not be legal, and the contract is in legal Spanish governed by a 1994 rental law you have never heard of. Here is exactly how the Spanish rental market works — and how to land a flat without losing your deposit.
DGSFP-registered • English-speaking • 7 days a weekThe basics
A long-term rental in Spain — alquiler de vivienda habitual — is a contract for the tenant's main home, governed by the Ley de Arrendamientos Urbanos (LAU 29/1994). It is the strongest legal regime for tenants in Spain, with a statutory right to renew the contract year by year for up to five years (seven if the landlord is a company), strict rules on deposits, and tight limits on what the landlord can charge you for.
Anything shorter is treated differently. A temporada contract (seasonal — 1 to 11 months, for students, sabbaticals, or work assignments) gives you almost none of those rights, and a vivienda de uso turístico (tourist let) sits under hotel-style regulation. If you are moving to Spain to live, you want an LAU long-term contract — and the listings on Idealista, Fotocasa, and Habitaclia should make this explicit.
Rent is paid monthly in advance, almost always by bank transfer to the landlord's Spanish account. The market is competitive in every major city — Madrid, Barcelona, Valencia, Málaga, Palma, Bilbao, Alicante, San Sebastián, and increasingly Sevilla and Zaragoza — so being prepared with documents, deposit money, and a guarantor (if needed) on day one is the difference between getting the flat and watching it go to someone else.
Where to search
Spain has a small handful of dominant property portals and a long tail of local agencies. These are the six channels English-speaking renters use most often — and what each is best for.
The largest property portal in Spain. Idealista.com has the deepest inventory in every region, filters for long-term vs temporada, and listings from both agencies and private owners (particulares).
Fotocasa.es is the second-largest portal and often shows listings Idealista does not — especially mid-market and family-sized rentals in coastal and inland cities.
Habitaclia.com is the strongest regional portal in Catalonia, Aragón and the Valencian Community — essential if you are searching Barcelona, Tarragona, Lleida, Girona, Castellón or Valencia.
Local agencies — many specialise in expat clients in cities like Madrid, Barcelona, Marbella and Palma. They charge a fee (now legally paid by the landlord on housing rentals since 2023) and often see properties before they hit the portals.
Idealista and Fotocasa let you filter for solo particulares — no agency fees on either side and faster decisions, but no agency to mediate disputes. Best when you can view in person and bring all documents to the first viewing.
City-specific expat groups ("Brits in Valencia", "Americans in Madrid", etc.) and local English-language Facebook pages occasionally turn up flats from departing expats. Use them as a supplement — never as your only channel.
Documents & money
The legal LAU requirements are minimal — but the practical reality is that you are competing with Spanish applicants who arrive at viewings with a folder of documents. These are the eight things every expat should have ready before the first viewing.
Watch out for these
The Spanish rental market is full of small details that catch English-speaking tenants off guard. These are the six most common — and most expensive — mistakes we see.
A contrato de temporada is a short-term seasonal lease — it does not give you the 5-year LAU renewal right, and it does not let you register on the padrón as your main home. Many landlords prefer them because tenants have fewer protections. Always check the contract reads arrendamiento de vivienda habitual.
If a listing asks you to wire money before you have visited the flat and met the landlord or agency in person, walk away. Idealista and Fotocasa both warn about this scam — it almost always ends with the listing disappearing once the transfer clears.
By law, the landlord must deposit the fianza with the regional housing authority within a set number of days. If they have not, you may face delays recovering it at the end of the tenancy. Ask for the receipt (justificante de depósito) and keep a copy.
Under the LAU, annual rent increases are capped — currently to the official reference index, not the historical CPI (IPC). If your contract says "increase as per IPC" or "as agreed annually", that clause may be void. Always check that any increase matches the official Ministry of Housing index for the year.
Without a proper, signed inventario with photos of the condition of every room, appliance, and item of furniture, you have no defence when the landlord claims damages at the end. Insist on a written and photographed inventory both parties sign on day one.
The landlord's policy covers the building, not your belongings or your civil liability if you flood the flat below. A basic tenant policy (seguro de hogar para inquilinos) starts from a few euros a month and is often a contractual requirement.
Why expats choose us
We do not find you the flat — but once you have signed the contract, we make sure your belongings, your liability, and your peace of mind are covered. In English, 7 days a week, by a team that understands Spanish rental contracts.
Policy wording, renewal documents, and claims — handled in plain English so you know exactly what you are signing and what you are covered for.
Authorised under Spain's national insurance regulator. You have the legal protections and accountability of a properly registered intermediary.
Cover designed for renters — contents, civil liability for accidental damage to the building or neighbours, and legal expenses when disputes arise.
Phone, WhatsApp, and email — Monday to Sunday. If your washing machine floods the flat below on a Sunday, we are still here to take the claim.
We know what Spanish rental contracts require tenants to insure — and we build the policy around the obligations in your contrato de arrendamiento.
If something goes wrong — leak, theft, fire — we guide you through the Spanish claims process end to end, including liaising with the landlord's insurer.
Common questions
These are the questions we hear most often from expats trying to land their first flat in Spain. If yours is not listed, call or WhatsApp our English-speaking team — 7 days a week.
By law, the fianza on a housing rental is one month's rent (two months for commercial premises). The LAU (Ley 29/1994) also lets the landlord ask for additional guarantees — typically up to two more months' rent for a 5-year (or 7-year, if landlord is a company) housing rental. In practice, most expats pay one month's fianza plus 1–2 months as garantía adicional, plus one month's rent in advance, on signing.
Legally, no — a passport is enough to sign a contract. In practice, most landlords and almost all agencies will insist on a NIE because they need it to register the contract for tax purposes. If you have just arrived, ask your gestor to start your NIE application straight away; in the meantime, a passport plus strong proof of income may carry you through a short trial period or a flat-share.
Idealista is the largest national portal with the deepest inventory in nearly every city. Fotocasa is the second-largest and often carries listings Idealista does not. Habitaclia is dominant in Catalonia, Aragón, and the Valencian Community. Most serious searches use all three side by side, with alerts enabled for new listings under your price ceiling.
No — not on housing rentals. The 2023 Housing Law (Ley 12/2023) made the landlord legally responsible for the agency's fee on rentals of a tenant's main home. If an agency tries to charge you a month's commission on top of the deposit, ask them to point to the legal basis. They cannot.
The other way round: the LAU locks the landlord in. As the tenant, you have the right to renew the contract yearly for up to 5 years (7 if the landlord is a company), with a further 3-year tacit extension after that, even if the original contract is shorter. You can leave at any time after the first six months by giving 30 days' notice in writing. The landlord can only refuse renewal in narrowly defined circumstances — such as genuinely needing the property as their own home — and only after the first year.
Only by the official annual reference index published by the Ministry of Housing and the INE — not by whatever the contract says. The historical IPC link was capped and then replaced under the 2023 Housing Law. If your landlord proposes an increase, check the year's official index first and ask for the calculation in writing.
Protect what is yours
The fianza protects the landlord. The right tenant policy protects you, your belongings, and your liability if something at the property goes wrong. We arrange English-language cover for renters right across Spain.
Contents, civil liability, and legal expenses cover for renters — designed to satisfy what Spanish landlords ask for, in plain English.
Get a quote →Protect your furniture, electronics, clothes, and valuables against fire, theft, leaks, and accidental damage in your Spanish rental.
Get a quote →Cover for legal costs if you end up in a dispute with your landlord, neighbour, or the comunidad — in English, with Spanish lawyers.
Get a quote →Keep reading
Renting a flat is one piece of a much bigger move. These guides cover the obligations and admin every new expat tenant runs into in their first few months in Spain.
Once you have a long-term rental, registering on the padrón is your first step into the Spanish system.
Setting up utilities is the next step after signing the lease — including how to put the supply in your name.
How the council waste tax works, who pays it (owner vs tenant), and what your contract should say about it.
If something is stolen from your rental, the police report is the first step in any insurance claim.
The landlord's policy covers the building. Tenant insurance covers everything inside it — and protects you if a leak, fire, or accidental damage falls back on you. Our DGSFP-registered, English-speaking team is here 7 days a week to put the right policy in place.
Reverse mortgages need a personal consultation. Our specialist team will discuss eligibility, amounts and what suits your situation — in clear English.