




Apartment in Hacienda Riquelme Golf Resort, Murcia
€ 169,000
- Number of bedrooms
- 2
- Number of bathrooms
- 1
- Build size
- 65 m²


Property in Spain
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Kyero gives international buyers a clearer view of the market, with property listings, trusted estate agents and practical guidance to make buying abroad easier to understand and easier to navigate.
Browse over 500,000 properties across Spain, Portugal, France and Italy. Search by location and filter by what matters most to you to find the right property.
Browse properties →Kyero was established in 2003 and is trusted by over 5,000 agents. Together we've helped over 75,000 international buyers find property overseas.
Find an agent →Our guides and advice cover the practical side of buying abroad, from choosing an area, to understanding costs, legal steps and what happens next.
Read our guides →Guides, articles and advice to help you buy with confidence

Our free 46-page guide to buying a home in Spain: the process, costs and taxes, mortgages, legal essentials and real buyer stories. Download it free.

From the first daydream to picking up the keys, follow the complete journey to buying a home in Spain, one clear step at a time. Real stories, free guide.

From daydream to keys: the complete journey to a home in Spain, and the buyers who made it. Wherever you are on the path, here's where it leads
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FAQ
Common questions about buying property abroad
Yes. Foreign buyers can purchase property in Spain, whether they are buying a holiday apartment, a retirement home, an investment property or somewhere to live full time. The main difference is usually not whether you can buy, but how well prepared you are with the paperwork and legal checks before you move ahead.
In most cases, yes. An NIE is the foreigner identification number used in Spain for tax and legal matters, and you will usually need one during the purchase process. It is one of those things buyers often put off until later, then wish they had sorted earlier when a good property comes up.
It usually begins with finding a property and agreeing a price, then moves on to reservation paperwork, legal due diligence, contracts, and completion before a notary. After that, the title deed is registered and the taxes are paid. It is not a wildly complicated process, but it is one where the detail matters.
The biggest mistakes tend to be rushing in, paying a deposit too early, or assuming every property is legally straightforward. Buyers should make sure the ownership is clear, check for charges or debts linked to the property, confirm planning and licence issues, and understand any restrictions before signing anything. This is exactly why so many overseas buyers use an independent lawyer rather than relying only on the seller or agent.
The asking price is only part of the total cost. On top of that, buyers should budget for taxes and purchase costs such as legal fees, notary fees and land registry fees. The final figure depends mainly on whether the property is a resale or a new build, and where in Spain it is located.
That depends on the property type. Resale homes are usually bought with transfer tax, while new-build properties are generally sold with VAT and stamp duty or similar regional purchase taxes. The rates vary across Spain, so buyers should always check the numbers for the region they are actually buying in rather than rely on one generic national estimate.
Yes, many do. Spanish lenders do offer mortgages to non-resident buyers, although the deposit required is often higher than for residents and the lending criteria can be stricter. For most buyers, it makes sense to understand borrowing options early, because it can change what is realistic long before they get to the final stage.
Owning a property in Spain does not, by itself, give you the right to stay there without limit. For many non-EU nationals visiting Spain and the wider Schengen area, the usual short-stay rule is up to 90 days in any 180-day period unless they have a visa, residence permit or another legal basis to stay longer.
Not automatically. Buying a property and having the right to live in Spain are separate things, and citizenship is a different matter again. Spain also ended the real-estate Golden Visa route in April 2025, so buying property no longer gives residency through that scheme. Spanish nationality is acquired through other legal routes, including residence-based naturalisation, not by simply purchasing a home.
You can still find very low-priced property in parts of Spain, especially inland areas, smaller towns, and homes that need major renovation. But at that price point, buyers need to be realistic. Cheap property can come with trade-offs around location, condition, paperwork, resale potential, or all four. Sometimes it is a bargain, and sometimes it is cheap for a reason.
The cheapest areas are usually away from the prime coastal hotspots and the biggest international demand zones. Buyers looking for more value often end up comparing inland towns, parts of Murcia, Castile-La Mancha, Extremadura, Aragón, or lesser-known parts of Andalusia and Valencia. The better question, really, is not just where property is cheapest, but where it still offers the lifestyle you actually want.
That depends on why you are buying. If you are looking for a long-term home, a lifestyle move, or a place you expect to use for years, the decision is usually less about timing the market perfectly and more about buying the right property in the right area at a price you are comfortable with. If you are buying mainly as a short-term investment, then financing costs, taxes, local rental rules and resale demand matter a lot more.
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