Spanish inheritance tax (Impuesto sobre Sucesiones y Donaciones) varies wildly by autonomous community — from a 99% reduction in Madrid to real five and six-figure bills in Cataluña and Asturias. Here is what British, American and international expats need to know to protect their families and their estate.
Get a Funeral Insurance Quote WhatsApp Our TeamImpuesto sobre Sucesiones y Donaciones (ISD) — Spain's inheritance and gift tax — is a tax on the person receiving the estate, not on the estate itself. There is no single estate-wide bill like UK Inheritance Tax: each heir is taxed individually on their share, at progressive rates from 7.65% to 34%, with multipliers based on how closely related they were to the deceased.
The framework sits in Ley 29/1987 ↗, but each of Spain's 17 autonomous communities sets its own reductions, allowances and bonificaciones. The result is a postcode lottery: the same €500,000 estate passing to the same child can produce a bill of €0 in Madrid or Andalucía and over €100,000 in Cataluña or Asturias.
Non-resident heirs of Spanish assets also fall within scope. The ECJ ruled in C-127/12 that Spain could not discriminate against non-residents — so since 2015 a non-resident heir can choose to apply the rules of the autonomous community where the asset is located. Filings go through Agencia Tributaria ↗ for non-residents and the regional tax authority for residents.
ISD sits at the intersection of national law, regional rules and cross-border treaties. The core ideas, though, are straightforward — once you know them the regional differences make sense.
Heirs and beneficiaries — not the estate. Spanish-resident heirs pay on their worldwide inheritance. Non-resident heirs pay only on Spanish-situated assets (property, bank accounts, shares in Spanish companies). The deceased's residency matters too, as it sets which regional rules apply by default.
National law sets a floor — autonomous communities top it up with allowances, reductions and bonificaciones. Madrid, Andalucía, Cantabria and Murcia have eliminated most direct-family tax; Cataluña, Asturias and Castilla y León remain materially heavier. Where the deceased lived (or where the asset sits, for non-residents) decides the regime.
Children, spouses and parents (Groups I and II) receive the most generous treatment everywhere — but how generous varies enormously. Some regions exempt almost the whole estate. Others give a modest €15,956 allowance and tax the rest at full rates.
The Comunidad de Madrid applies a flat 99% bonificación to inheritance tax for Groups I and II (descendants, ascendants, spouse). A surviving spouse inheriting €1m typically pays around €2,000–€3,000 instead of €200,000+. See Madrid Hacienda ↗.
Andalucía applies a 99% bonificación for Groups I and II plus a €1,000,000 personal allowance per heir. For most British, Irish and Northern European retirees on the Costa del Sol passing to children, the resulting tax bill is effectively zero. See Junta de Andalucía Hacienda ↗.
Cataluña offers tiered bonificaciones that taper away on larger estates — meaningful tax kicks in above roughly €100,000–€200,000 per heir. Asturias has the highest top brackets in the country (up to 36.5%) and limited reductions. Holiday-home owners in these regions should plan carefully. See ATC Cataluña ↗.
The rules sound abstract until you map them to an actual family. These are the inheritance scenarios we see most often — and how ISD plays out in each.
Most ISD disasters come from one of these six errors — not from the tax itself but from a misunderstanding of how it works.
A Spanish funeral has to be arranged within 24–48 hours of death. Inheritance tax has to be filed within six months. Both fall on the same grieving family. A funeral plan covers the first crisis so your heirs aren't selling assets or borrowing money to pay for either — and it gives them six clear months to handle ISD properly.
We are fully authorised by Spain's insurance regulator, the Dirección General de Seguros y Fondos de Pensiones.
Policy wording, claims and renewals — all handled in plain English by people who actually live in Spain.
We answer when you need us — weekends and bank holidays included. Bereavements do not respect office hours.
Funeral, repatriation, home and life cover structured for cross-border families with Spanish property and overseas heirs.
We compare leading Spanish insurers and explain the differences — no jargon, no hidden exclusions.
If the worst happens, we walk your family through the claim — translating, liaising with the funeral director, easing the paperwork.
Inheritance tax is one piece of the planning puzzle. Make sure the rest of your cover is in order too.

Cover the funeral, repatriation and admin so your family is not financially exposed on day one.
Read the guide ›
Building, contents, liability and legal cover designed for expat homeowners and their heirs.
Read the guide ›
Private medical cover for residency visas, families and retirees protecting their estate.
Read the guide ›Other essential reading for expats planning their Spanish estate:
Spanish inheritance tax has a six-month clock. The funeral has a 48-hour clock. A funeral insurance policy means your heirs don't have to find that money themselves — and it gives them clear breathing room to handle the ISD properly. DGSFP-registered, English-speaking, 7 days a week.
Get a Funeral Insurance QuoteReverse mortgages need a personal consultation. Our specialist team will discuss eligibility, amounts and what suits your situation — in clear English.