Buying Guide · 10 min
The Real Running Costs of Owning a Spanish Property in 2026
2 June 2026 · Hansson & Hertzell
Beyond the purchase price, owning a property in Spain has ongoing costs that surprise many buyers. Here is a complete breakdown of what you can realistically expect to spend each year.
# The Real Running Costs of Owning a Spanish Property in 2026
The purchase price is only part of the story. Understanding the annual running costs of a Spanish property — from taxes and utilities to insurance and maintenance — allows you to budget properly and avoid unpleasant surprises.
The figures below are for a typical 2-bedroom apartment on the Costa Blanca. Villa costs are higher; smaller apartments may be lower.
IBI — Property Tax
The Impuesto sobre Bienes Inmuebles (IBI) is the Spanish equivalent of council tax. It is levied annually by the municipality and calculated as a percentage of the cadastral value of the property.
Typical IBI bills on the Costa Blanca:
- 2-bedroom apartment: €200–€500 per year
- 3-bedroom villa with pool: €500–€1,500 per year
The IBI is paid to the local ayuntamiento, usually by direct debit in late summer or autumn. Set up the direct debit to avoid surcharges for late payment.
Community Fees (Comunidad de Propietarios)
If you own in an apartment block or an urbanisation with communal areas, you pay monthly community fees covering maintenance of shared spaces, pool, gardens, building insurance, and the building manager (administrador).
Typical monthly community fees:
- Basic apartment complex: €50–€100 per month (€600–€1,200 per year)
- Complex with pool and garden: €100–€200 per month (€1,200–€2,400 per year)
- Gated urbanisation with extra services: €200–€400 per month
Utilities: Electricity and Water
Electricity (Iberdrola, Endesa, or a comparator): Spain's electricity costs are moderate by European standards, though they have risen since the energy crisis.
- A 2-bedroom apartment: €80–€150 per month (more with air conditioning in summer)
- A villa: €150–€350 per month depending on size and air-con usage
Water: Charged by the municipality based on consumption. Typically €20–€60 per month for an apartment, more for a villa with garden and pool.
Gas: Many Spanish properties use butane bottles (butano) rather than mains gas — typically €15–€20 per bottle, lasting 1–3 months.
If the property is empty for months at a time, you still pay standing charges (potencia) on electricity. This is often €20–€40 per month even with no consumption.
Internet and Telephone
Major providers (Movistar, Orange, Vodafone, Digi) offer fibre bundles from around €30–€60 per month. Coverage in coastal areas is generally excellent.
Non-Resident Income Tax (IRNR) — Imputed Rent
If you are a non-resident and do not rent the property, you still owe a form of notional income tax based on the property's cadastral value. This is the imputed rental income (imputación de rentas inmobiliarias), taxed at 19% for EU/EEA residents and 24% for non-EU residents.
The calculation: 1.1% of the cadastral value × 19% (EU resident) = annual IRNR.
For a property with a cadastral value of €80,000:
- Imputed income: €80,000 × 1.1% = €880
- IRNR: €880 × 19% = €167 per year
This is a modest amount but must be declared annually (Form 210) — failure to do so results in a fine.
Property Insurance (Seguro del Hogar)
A comprehensive home insurance policy (seguro de hogar) for a 2-bedroom apartment costs €200–€400 per year; for a villa, €400–€800. This typically covers the building structure, contents, and liability.
Note: If you are in a community, the communidad usually covers the building structure, so you may only need contents insurance (seguro del contenido), which is cheaper.
Maintenance and Repairs
Realistic annual maintenance budget for a 2-bedroom apartment in good condition: €500–€1,500. For a villa with pool, garden, and more mechanical systems: €2,000–€5,000.
Budget for pool maintenance separately if you have one: professional pool maintenance costs €100–€200 per month, or €1,200–€2,400 per year.
Accountant/Gestor Fees
Most non-residents use a Spanish gestoría (administrative agent) or accountant to file their annual IRNR declaration and other administrative tasks. Annual fee: €150–€400 depending on complexity.
Total Annual Running Costs: A Summary
For a 2-bedroom apartment in a managed complex:
| Cost | Annual Estimate | |------|-----------------| | IBI (property tax) | €300–€500 | | Community fees | €1,200–€2,400 | | Electricity | €960–€1,800 | | Water | €240–€720 | | Internet | €360–€720 | | IRNR (non-resident tax) | €150–€300 | | Home insurance | €200–€400 | | Maintenance | €500–€1,500 | | Accountant/gestor | €200–€350 | | Total | €4,110–€8,690 |
For a villa with pool, double or triple most of these figures, particularly maintenance, utilities, and insurance.
The Bottom Line
Most buyers should budget €4,000–€6,000 per year for an apartment and €8,000–€15,000 for a villa in total annual running costs. These figures are very manageable compared to property ownership costs in most northern European countries, and are easily offset by rental income if you let the property during peak season.
