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How to Pay IBI (Property Tax) in Spain — Complete Expat Guide

Everything British, American and international homeowners need to know about Impuesto sobre Bienes Inmuebles — the annual Spanish council property tax, deadlines, payment methods and what happens if you miss it.

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What Is IBI and Why Every Spanish Property Owner Pays It

Impuesto sobre Bienes Inmuebles (IBI) is Spain's annual local property tax — the rough equivalent of UK council tax or US property tax. It is set and collected by the local ayuntamiento (town hall) and is one of the main sources of municipal revenue. Every property in Spain has an IBI liability, whether it is a city flat, a country finca or a holiday villa on the coast.

If you own a home in Spain on 1 January of any given year, you are legally responsible for the IBI for that whole year. It does not matter if you are resident or non-resident, where you live, or how often you visit — ownership on that date triggers the bill. The framework is set out in the Real Decreto Legislativo 2/2004 (Ley Reguladora de las Haciendas Locales) .

Deadlines vary by region and even by municipality. In Valencia and Alicante it is collected by SUMA , in the Balearics by ATIB , in Málaga via the Diputación de Málaga , and elsewhere directly through your town hall. Voluntary payment windows usually fall between April and November.

AnnualIBI is charged once per calendar year
Set By Local CouncilRates differ by municipality — typically 0.4%-1.1% of catastral value
Based On Catastro ValueCalculated from the Catastro valor catastral, not market price
Late = RecargoSurcharges of 5%-20% plus interest if you miss the window

The 6 Things Every Homeowner Needs to Understand About IBI

IBI seems simple — pay your council an annual tax — but the calculation, exemptions and collection vary enough that expats often get caught out. Here are the core rules.

What IBI Pays For

Street lighting, rubbish collection, road maintenance, local police, parks and the running of the town hall. It funds municipal services where your property is located, not central government.

How the Catastro Value Is Set

Every property has a valor catastral — an administrative value set by the national property registry (Sede Electrónica del Catastro ) based on location, plot size, build size, age and use. It is usually well below market value.

Who Owes IBI

Whoever is the registered owner on 1 January. If you sell on 2 January, you still owe the full year. Buyers and sellers often prorate it privately at completion, but the council holds the named owner responsible.

Payment Methods

Direct debit (domiciliación bancaria) is the safest — many councils give a small discount for setting one up. You can also pay online with a card, in person at the town hall or at participating banks with the payment slip.

Discounts and Bonificaciones

Many councils offer reductions for early payment, large families (familia numerosa), energy-efficient homes with solar panels, and properties used as a primary residence. Rates and rules vary — always check your local ayuntamiento's annual ordenanza fiscal.

What Happens If You Don't Pay

You enter vía ejecutiva: a surcharge of 5%, 10% or 20% plus interest. Persistent non-payment can lead to your bank account being embargoed, or even your property being auctioned to recover the debt. Councils do enforce.

Who Pays IBI? Common Expat Scenarios

The rule is simple in principle — owner on 1 January pays — but every situation has its quirks. Here is how it works in the real world.

  • Owner-occupier residents: You pay IBI on your main home. You may qualify for a primary-residence discount if your council offers one.
  • Holiday-home owners (non-resident): You pay the same IBI as a resident — plus a separate non-resident income tax (Modelo 210). Many British and Irish owners forget about IBI because there is no automatic reminder posted abroad.
  • Landlords renting long-term: The owner pays IBI, not the tenant. Some contracts pass it on, but the council always pursues the registered owner first.
  • Holiday-rental hosts (Airbnb / Booking): Same rule — you pay IBI as owner. Short-term rental income is taxed separately.
  • Multiple property owners: Each property has its own IBI bill, its own catastral reference and potentially its own deadline if they sit in different municipalities.
  • Off-plan or new-build buyers: IBI starts from the year the property is registered in the Catastro. Sometimes the developer is still the owner on 1 January and you only inherit IBI from the following year.
  • Co-owners (joint ownership): The bill is issued in one or all names. Co-owners are jointly liable, but typically one direct debit covers the whole property.
  • Inherited property: The heir becomes liable from the year following inheritance, once the new ownership is registered at the Catastro and Land Registry.

6 Costly Mistakes Expats Make With IBI

Most IBI problems come from misunderstandings, not bad intent. These are the ones we see most often.

  • Assuming the previous owner paid the current year: The seller owes the year you buy, but only if you agreed it at completion. Always check at the notary.
  • Missing the voluntary payment window: Each council sets its own dates (often April-July or September-November). Miss it and you go straight into the surcharge regime.
  • Wrong or outdated Catastro details: If your build size, use or boundaries are wrong at the Catastro, you may be over- or underpaying. Errors must be corrected through a Catastro modificación.
  • Not knowing your council's deadline: A Madrid flat, a Valencia villa and a Mallorca apartment all have different deadlines and different collection agencies. Check each one.
  • No direct debit set up: If the council cannot reach you (no Spanish address, no email), the bill goes uncollected and surcharges quietly accumulate. Set up domiciliación from day one.
  • Ignoring re-evaluations (revisión catastral): Councils periodically re-value entire neighbourhoods. Your IBI can jump significantly. There is an appeal window — use it if the figures look wrong.

Why Expats Get Home Insurance Through 247 Expat Insurance

Paying your IBI keeps you legal with the town hall. The right home insurance keeps you protected when something actually goes wrong — and we make sure you understand every word of the policy.

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Holiday homes, long-stay rentals, primary residences — we structure cover for how you actually use the property.

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IBI Frequently Asked Questions

When is IBI due in Spain?
Most councils set a voluntary payment window between April and November, but exact dates vary. SUMA in Alicante typically runs September-November; ATIB in the Balearics runs September-November; many Andalucían councils run April-July. Check your local ayuntamiento or collection agency website for the exact dates each year.
How is the IBI amount calculated?
IBI is a percentage of the valor catastral (catastral value) of your property, set by the Catastro . The municipal rate (tipo impositivo) is set by each council annually, typically between 0.4% and 1.1% for urban properties. So a property with a catastral value of €120,000 and a council rate of 0.65% would have an IBI of around €780 per year.
What if I bought the property mid-year?
Legally, whoever owned the property on 1 January owes the IBI for that whole year. In practice, buyer and seller usually agree to prorate the bill at completion based on the number of days each party owned the property. Make sure this is written into the purchase agreement and settled at the notary — once you sign, you have little recourse.
Do I get a reminder if I live abroad?
Usually not in any reliable way. Spanish councils may post a paper notice to the property address, which is useless if you only visit occasionally. The safest approach is to set up a direct debit (domiciliación bancaria) so the bill is collected automatically each year, and to register an email address with the collection agency for digital notifications.
Can I pay IBI online from abroad?
Yes. Most major collection agencies — SUMA, ATIB, the Diputación de Málaga and large city councils — allow online card payment via their website using the IBI reference or your Catastro number. You can also set up a direct debit from a non-Spanish IBAN in many cases, but a Spanish bank account is simpler and avoids occasional rejections.
What if there is an error in my IBI bill?
You have a limited window to appeal — typically one month from receiving the notification. Errors usually trace back to the Catastro (wrong build size, wrong use classification) rather than the council itself, so corrections often start at the Sede Electrónica del Catastro . For complex cases, use a Spanish gestor or tax advisor.

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