Current Spanish Inheritance Tax Framework: No 2026 Changes Confirmed
Despite speculation about inheritance tax reforms, no confirmed legislative changes are scheduled for 2026 affecting Spanish inheritance tax law. Current rates range from 7.65% to 34% depending on the heir's relationship to the deceased and residence status (AEAT 2025). The key distinction remains between state and regional tax regimes: non-resident heirs pay standard state rates while resident heirs in Andalucia benefit from deductions up to 99% for direct family members, reducing effective tax to as little as €20 for a €200,000 inheritance.
The fundamental legal framework established by Law 29/1987 continues to govern inheritance tax, with Andalucia's regional bonificaciones remaining unchanged since their last revision in 2018. Non-resident property owners face effective inheritance tax rates of 15-25% on Costa del Sol properties, while Spanish residents inheriting the same assets typically pay under 1% after regional deductions (Junta de Andalucia 2025).
Impact on Costa del Sol Property Owners
For foreign property owners on the Costa del Sol, the current tax structure creates a €40,000-60,000 inheritance tax liability on a typical €400,000 Fuengirola apartment when inherited by non-resident children. Spanish resident heirs would pay approximately €800-1,200 for the same inheritance after Andalucian deductions. This disparity makes residency planning crucial for families with significant Spanish property assets.
Legal advisors report increasing activity in pre-inheritance planning, with Spanish wills costing €800-1,500 to draft and usufruct arrangements becoming popular tax-efficient structures. Property ownership through Spanish companies (SL) remains viable for some investors, though annual corporate tax compliance costs €2,000-4,000 per entity. The key legal consideration is ensuring proper documentation of residence status, as tax authorities increasingly scrutinize inheritance tax applications requiring proof of 183+ days annual Spanish residence.
Strategic Legal Planning Under Current Rules
Rather than waiting for uncertain 2026 changes, Costa del Sol property owners should optimize under existing legislation. Spanish testament preparation costs €800-1,500 through a Spanish notary and eliminates the €3,000-8,000 expense of translating and validating foreign wills during probate. Life insurance policies specifically designed for Spanish inheritance tax typically cost 2-4% of coverage annually and provide immediate liquidity for tax payments.
Usufruct arrangements allow property transfer while retaining lifetime use rights, potentially reducing inheritance values by 15-40% depending on the usufructuary's age (AEAT valuation tables 2025). Family limited partnerships and donation strategies during lifetime can reduce inheritance tax exposure, though these require careful structuring with legal costs typically €5,000-12,000 for complex family arrangements.
Next Steps for Property Owners
Given the absence of confirmed 2026 legislative changes, focus on optimizing under current rules rather than speculative planning. Schedule annual reviews with Spanish tax advisors (typical consultation fees €300-500) to ensure compliance and identify optimization opportunities. Consider establishing Spanish tax residency if family circumstances allow, as this single change can reduce inheritance tax liability by 80-95% for most family transfers.
For personalized guidance on inheritance tax planning strategies specific to your Costa del Sol property portfolio, Emma, our AI advisor available on this site, can help you understand the current options and connect you with appropriate legal specialists for detailed succession planning.