Insikter/Currency Exchange When Buying Property in Spain: How to Save Thousands
Currency Exchange When Buying Property in Spain: How to Save Thousands

Buying Guide · 11 min read

Currency Exchange When Buying Property in Spain: How to Save Thousands

28 May 2026 · Hansson & Hertzell

Most buyers lose €3,000–€15,000 on currency exchange unnecessarily. Here is how to time your transfer, choose the right provider, and protect yourself from exchange rate moves.

When you are buying a property for €250,000, a 1% difference in your exchange rate costs you €2,500. A 2% difference — which is entirely realistic between a high street bank and a specialist currency provider — costs you €5,000. Over a €400,000 purchase, that is €8,000 vanished before you even get the keys.

Most buyers focus on negotiating the purchase price but give no thought to how they actually get the money to Spain. This is a mistake.

Why Banks Give Poor Exchange Rates

High street banks (HSBC, Barclays, Lloyds, NatWest, Swedish banks, Dutch banks) typically charge a spread of 2–3% above the mid-market rate — the "real" exchange rate you see on Google. On large transfers, this is a substantial hidden cost. They also typically charge transfer fees of £15–£30 per transaction.

Banks are convenient and trusted, but they are not optimised for large international property transfers. For your everyday banking, fine. For a €200,000+ property purchase, there is a better way.

Currency Exchange Specialists

Specialist currency brokers offer rates much closer to the mid-market rate — typically 0.5–1.5% spread rather than 2–3%. On a €300,000 transfer, that 1.5% difference is €4,500 in your pocket.

Reputable Providers (2026)

Wise (formerly TransferWise) Best for smaller amounts and speed. Transparent fees, real mid-market rate, easy online setup. For property purchases above €100,000, the rates are still good but the personal service of a dedicated broker has advantages.

Moneycorp One of the largest currency brokers. FCA regulated, FSCS protected up to £85,000. Dedicated account managers for property purchases, forward contracts, and rate alerts. Strong track record with property buyers.

Currencies Direct Similar to Moneycorp. Good rates, personal service, and experience with property purchases. Offices in Spain including on the Costa Blanca.

Global Reach (formerly FC Exchange) Competitive rates, dedicated account manager approach. Good for buyers who want guidance rather than a purely self-serve experience.

Equals Money (formerly FairFX) Good technology, competitive rates, solid for medium-sized transfers.

What to Look For

  • FCA regulated (UK buyers) or equivalent regulatory authorisation in your home country
  • Safeguarded client funds (your money is held separately from the company's operational funds)
  • Dedicated account manager for property purchases
  • Ability to do forward contracts (see below)
  • Transparent fee structure
  • Experience with Spanish property market timelines

Understanding Exchange Rate Risk

Exchange rates move. Between the day you agree a purchase price and the day you complete — often 2–4 months later — the GBP/EUR or SEK/EUR rate can shift significantly. In 2022, GBP/EUR moved from 1.21 to 1.08 within a few months. On a €300,000 purchase, that would have increased your cost in GBP by approximately £31,000.

This is not theoretical. Exchange rate risk is a genuine financial exposure for property buyers.

How to Protect Yourself: Forward Contracts

A forward contract lets you lock in today's exchange rate for a future transfer. If you agree a purchase price of €280,000 and fix the GBP/EUR rate today, you know exactly what you will pay in pounds, regardless of what the pound does between now and completion.

Forward contracts typically require a deposit of 5–10% of the transfer amount. The balance is paid when you transfer the funds. The rate is guaranteed.

This is not speculation — it is risk management. If the rate moves in your favour, you lose nothing except the upside. If the rate moves against you, you have saved potentially tens of thousands of pounds.

Most currency specialists offer forward contracts up to 2 years. For property purchases, 3–6 months is typically sufficient.

Market Orders and Rate Alerts

If you are not in a rush to fix your rate, a market order lets you set your target rate and have the transfer execute automatically when that rate is reached. Currency specialists offer this as a standard feature.

Rate alerts notify you when the rate hits a level you specify, so you can act quickly without monitoring the market yourself.

Timing Your Transfer

There is no reliable way to predict short-term exchange rate movements. What you can do:

  1. Act on fundamentals: Major economic announcements (central bank decisions, inflation data, elections) move rates. Your currency broker will flag upcoming events.
  2. Don't wait for the "perfect" rate: Many buyers wait and the rate moves against them. If today's rate is acceptable for your budget, locking it in has real value.
  3. Use a forward contract if you are risk-averse: Peace of mind has value. Knowing your exact pound cost lets you plan finances without currency exposure.
  4. Transfer the funds in stages if purchasing off-plan: If you are paying a 20% deposit now and 80% on completion in 18 months, you can use separate contracts for each stage.

The Practical Process

  1. Get your NIE and Spanish bank account open (or your lawyer's client account details)
  2. Register with a currency broker — takes 10–15 minutes online, plus ID verification
  3. Speak to your account manager — explain your situation, purchase price, and timeline
  4. Lock in a rate (spot rate or forward contract)
  5. Transfer GBP/SEK/other currency to the broker from your bank
  6. The broker converts and sends EUR to your Spanish bank account or lawyer's account
  7. Repeat for completion payment if you have staged payments

Always use your lawyer's verified account details. Never transfer funds based on email instructions without verbal confirmation — property purchase fraud via email interception exists.

VAT on New Builds vs Transfer Tax

A note for off-plan buyers: new builds attract 10% VAT (IVA) in Spain, payable on the purchase price. Resale properties attract transfer tax (ITP) of 8–11.5% depending on the region and value. Factor these into your currency transfer planning — you need to transfer enough to cover the full purchase price plus all taxes and costs.

Total purchase costs in Spain are typically 10–14% on top of the purchase price. Budget accordingly.

What Hansson & Hertzell Recommends

We do not take commissions from currency brokers and do not recommend specific providers for financial reasons. What we do recommend:

  • Compare at least 2–3 providers before deciding
  • Use an FCA-regulated specialist, not your high street bank, for property transfers
  • Consider a forward contract if you are uncomfortable with exchange rate uncertainty
  • Never transfer funds to an account you have not verified directly with your lawyer

Speak to your Spanish lawyer about the exact payment schedule before you engage a currency broker. That way you can structure your transfers correctly from the start.

Frequently Asked Questions

How much money can I save by using a currency exchange specialist instead of my bank?
On a €300,000 property purchase, using a specialist instead of a high street bank typically saves €3,000–€6,000. High street banks charge 2–3% above the mid-market rate; specialists charge 0.5–1.5%.
What is a forward contract and should I use one?
A forward contract lets you lock in today's exchange rate for a transfer you will make in the future. If you are buying property with completion in 3–6 months, a forward contract eliminates exchange rate risk. A deposit of 5–10% is typically required. It is a risk management tool, not speculation.
Which currency exchange providers are best for Spanish property purchases?
Moneycorp, Currencies Direct, and Global Reach are well-established specialists with experience in Spanish property. Wise is excellent for smaller amounts. All should be regulated by the FCA (UK) or equivalent authority in your country.
Is it safe to use a currency exchange specialist for a large transfer?
Yes, provided the specialist is FCA-regulated (or equivalent) and holds client funds in segregated accounts. Avoid unregulated providers. Moneycorp, Currencies Direct, and similar established brokers have processed hundreds of thousands of property transactions safely.
When should I fix my exchange rate?
There is no perfect time — currency markets are unpredictable. If today's rate is workable for your budget, locking it in via a forward contract removes uncertainty. If you are comfortable with some risk, a market order lets you set a target rate and execute automatically when it is reached.
Can exchange rate movements really cost me tens of thousands of pounds?
Yes. In 2022, GBP/EUR moved from 1.21 to 1.08 in a few months. On a €300,000 purchase, that shift would have cost a UK buyer approximately £31,000 more. Exchange rate risk is real and material for property buyers.
Should I transfer the full purchase price at once or in stages?
For resale purchases, typically one main transfer for the deposit and one for completion. For off-plan new builds, you may make staged payments during construction — each can be handled separately. Discuss the payment schedule with your lawyer before engaging a currency broker.
Can I transfer money directly from my UK bank to my Spanish bank?
Yes, but the exchange rate will be poor (typically 2–3% worse than the mid-market rate). For amounts above €20,000, the cost difference of using a specialist is significant enough to justify the extra step.
What exchange rate should I use to budget for my Spanish property purchase?
Build in a 3–5% buffer on the exchange rate when budgeting. If GBP/EUR is 1.17 today, budget as if it is 1.12–1.14. This protects you if rates move before you complete. A forward contract eliminates this uncertainty entirely.
Do I need a Spanish bank account to receive the currency exchange transfer?
You need either a Spanish bank account in your name or your Spanish lawyer's client account. Most buyers transfer to the lawyer's account for the initial deposit and complete from their own Spanish account. Confirm the preferred method with your lawyer.
What are the tax implications of transferring large sums to Spain?
Transfers above €10,000 must be declared to Spanish customs (Modelo S-1 for cash, or via your bank for wire transfers). For property purchases, your lawyer handles this as part of the completion process. There is no additional tax on the transfer itself — you pay your purchase taxes (ITP or IVA) as part of the transaction.
Can a Swedish or Dutch buyer use the same currency exchange process?
Yes. Currency specialists handle all major currency pairs including SEK/EUR and EUR/EUR (if you hold euros but in a non-Spanish account). Swedish buyers often benefit from SEK/EUR forward contracts given the volatility of the Swedish krona.
How long does an international property transfer take?
With a specialist currency broker, transfers typically settle within 1–3 business days once the broker receives your home-currency funds. Plan for this lead time around your completion date.
What is the difference between the mid-market rate and the rate I am offered?
The mid-market rate is the "real" exchange rate — what you see on Google or XE.com. Every provider adds a margin (spread) above this rate as their fee. High street banks charge 2–3%; specialists charge 0.5–1.5%. The smaller the spread, the more euros you receive for your pounds or kronor.
Does Hansson & Hertzell offer currency exchange services?
No. We are a property agency and do not provide financial services. We recommend using an FCA-regulated specialist and comparing at least two or three providers. We can introduce you to providers our clients have used, but we do not take any commission from them.
currency exchangefinancebuying guideforward contractmoney transferpractical guide