Buying in Alicante as a foreigner?
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Buying property in Alicante as a foreign buyer is straightforward — but the legal and tax landscape requires careful preparation. This guide covers the full process, all buying costs, and the key legal considerations for 2026.
Alicante has a MERI score of 7.4/10, indicating solid market fundamentals. With buying costs of approximately 10–13% and a proven international buyer market,Alicante remains one of the more accessible entry points for foreign real estate investment in spain.
Can foreigners buy property in Alicante?
✓ Yes — foreign buyers can purchase property in Alicante
EU and non-EU citizens can freely purchase property in Spain with no restrictions. You will need a NIE number (Número de Identidad de Extranjero), which is a Spanish tax identification number. Your lawyer obtains this on your behalf.
Visa / residency
Spain's Golden Visa grants residency to non-EU buyers investing €500,000 or more in real estate, including family members and free Schengen travel.
Step-by-step buying process in Alicante
Timeline: 2–4 months from offer to completion. Cash purchases complete faster (4–6 weeks).
Find property & make offer
Work with a local agent to identify suitable properties. Make a verbal or written offer. If accepted, move to the reservation step.
Reserve property
Pay a reservation deposit (typically €3,000–€10,000) to take the property off the market and stop the seller accepting other offers. Usually non-refundable if you withdraw.
Obtain NIE number
The NIE (Número de Identidad de Extranjero) is your Spanish tax identification number — required for all property transactions, opening a bank account, and paying taxes in Spain. Your lawyer applies for it. Takes 2–4 weeks.
Legal due diligence
Your lawyer checks the property is legally clean: verifies the title deed, confirms no outstanding debts or mortgages are attached to the property, and checks all building permits are in order.
Sign private purchase contract (Contrato de Arras)
The Contrato de Arras is a binding private contract between buyer and seller. You pay 10% of the purchase price as a deposit. If the seller pulls out, they must pay you double the deposit back. If you pull out, you lose the deposit.
Complete at notary
A Spanish notary is a state-appointed official who verifies all documents are legal and authentic. Both buyer and seller attend. You sign the Escritura (the official deed of sale), pay the remaining balance and all taxes, and receive the keys.
Register ownership
Your lawyer registers the Escritura at the Land Registry (Registro de la Propiedad), making your ownership officially public and legally protected. Takes 4–8 weeks.
Taxes and buying costs in Alicante
Total additional costs: 10–13% above purchase price
ITP (Impuesto de Transmisiones Patrimoniales) is the main purchase tax on resale properties. Rate varies by region — Andalusia (Marbella, Málaga) is 7%.
New-build properties pay VAT (IVA) instead of ITP. Plus 1.5% stamp duty (AJD) on top.
Set by government regulation based on purchase price.
Cost of registering your ownership in the public registry.
Budget at least 1% for an independent lawyer who works for you alone.
Budget this on top of the purchase price.
Legal note
Always use an independent lawyer who represents you alone — not the developer or agent. This is non-negotiable in Spain.
Is Alicante a good place to buy property in 2026?
With a MERI score of 7.4/10, Alicante offers solid fundamentals for buyers and investors in 2026.
Frequently asked questions about buying in Alicante
Is Alicante cheaper than Marbella?
Significantly — average prices are 60–70% lower. You can find good apartments from €80,000.
Is it easy to rent out property in Alicante?
Yes — both short-term (summer tourism) and long-term (expat/local) rental markets are active year-round.
What airport serves Alicante?
Alicante Airport (ALC) has direct flights from across Europe, including budget carriers like Ryanair and easyJet.