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Buying property in Spain without first verifying what debts are attached to it is one of the most expensive mistakes an international investor can make. Understanding how to check property debts in Spain online is now easier than at any point in the country’s history, thanks to expanded digital access across the Land Registry, the Agencia Tributaria (AEAT), and municipal tax portals. The AEAT released an updated version of its mobile app on 25 June 2026, adding streamlined debt and embargo consultation features that give buyers direct visibility into tax-related encumbrances.
This guide walks through every essential online check, from the nota simple to community fee certificates, explains exactly what each document reveals (and what it does not), and sets out the contract clauses needed to protect a buyer from inheriting someone else’s liabilities.
Before committing to any Spanish property transaction, complete the following six checks. Each is explored in detail in the sections that follow.
The nota simple is the single most important starting document in any property due diligence process in Spain. It is an informational extract issued by the Registro de la Propiedad that summarises the legal and economic status of a specific property, as recorded in the Land Registry. Obtaining a nota simple Spain online is straightforward once you have the right reference numbers.
A nota simple is an informational document. It carries no official evidentiary weight in court proceedings, but it provides a reliable snapshot of registered data. A certificación registral (public certificate), by contrast, is a formal document signed by the registrar that does carry full legal effect and is typically required at the closing stage. For initial property due diligence Spain searches, the nota simple is sufficient and faster to obtain.
To order a nota simple online, you will need at least one of the following identifiers:
The official online service is operated by the Colegio de Registradores. Navigate to the nota simple request section, select the province and municipality, enter one of the identifiers listed above, and submit the request with an online payment. The typical fee is between €9.02 and €21.24 (depending on the type of extract and the Land Registry district). Turnaround is usually 24 to 48 hours for a digital nota simple delivered by email.
Once received, read each section carefully. The key fields are mapped in the table below.
| Nota Simple Field | What It Shows | Why It Matters |
|---|---|---|
| Finca / Property description | Address, boundaries, built area, plot size | Confirms the property matches what you are buying |
| Titularidad (ownership) | Name(s) of registered owner(s), shares, acquisition basis | Verifies the seller has legal authority to sell |
| Cargas (charges) | Registered mortgages, liens, usufructs | Reveals financial encumbrances that may transfer to the buyer |
| Notas marginales / Anotaciones (annotations) | Embargo annotations, judicial proceedings, condition-precedent notes | Flags active legal disputes or enforcement actions against the property |
Cadastral data, including the cadastral reference, property location on the map, and cadastral value, can be consulted free of charge through the Dirección General del Catastro portal. However, the nota simple itself is a paid service issued by the Land Registry. There is no way to obtain a full nota simple for free. Industry observers expect the gap between free cadastral lookups and paid registry extracts to narrow over time, but for 2026 the fee remains mandatory for any document showing registered charges and encumbrances.
While the nota simple is sufficient for initial screening, a formal certificado de cargas is the document the notary and bank will rely on at closing. This public certificate carries full legal validity and is signed by the registrar. It states all registered charges and their priority order, which determines who gets paid first if the property is sold at auction. To check charges and encumbrances Spain-wide for a property heading to closing, this certificate is indispensable.
The certificado de cargas is typically ordered by the notary as part of the pre-closing process, but a buyer or their lawyer can order one independently from the same Colegio de Registradores portal. It takes slightly longer than a nota simple, usually three to five business days, and costs more, generally in the range of €20 to €50 depending on the registry.
| Document | Where Ordered | Key Things It Shows |
|---|---|---|
| Nota Simple | Registro de la Propiedad (online request) | Ownership, mortgages, charges, annotations (informational only) |
| Certificado de Cargas | Registro de la Propiedad (official certificate) | Official statement of registered charges and priority (suitable for closing) |
| AEAT Debt Record / Embargo | Agencia Tributaria portal / AEAT app | Tax debts, collection proceedings, embargoes by AEAT (not private mortgages) |
The Agencia Tributaria’s electronic office allows taxpayers and authorised representatives to consult outstanding tax debts, active enforcement measures, and embargo status linked to a tax identification number. This is the primary tool for an AEAT debts check, and the 25 June 2026 app update has made the process significantly more accessible on mobile devices.
To access the AEAT debt consultation service, you must authenticate using one of the following methods accepted by the Agencia Tributaria electronic office:
On the AEAT website, navigate to the “Consultar deudas” section within the electronic office. After authentication, the system displays a summary of any outstanding tax debts, enforcement proceedings, and embargoes Spain property records linked to the queried NIF or NIE. The 2026 app update mirrors this functionality on iOS and Android, allowing users to consult debts and embargoes directly from the home screen of the app without navigating to the browser-based portal.
AEAT records cover debts owed to the Spanish state, including income tax, non-resident income tax, VAT, and inheritance tax that remains unpaid after assessment. If AEAT has initiated enforcement, the system will display details of any embargo order registered against the taxpayer’s assets. However, AEAT does not show private mortgages, private debts between individuals, or debts owed to municipal or regional governments, those require separate checks with local authorities. This is why a comprehensive property due diligence Spain process requires combining AEAT checks with the Land Registry nota simple and municipal IBI certificate.
The Impuesto sobre Bienes Inmuebles (IBI) is Spain’s annual municipal property tax. IBI debts Spain buyers should check are administered by local councils or their delegated collection agencies, not by AEAT. Unpaid IBI can result in the local authority placing a charge on the property, and in some municipalities, notaries will refuse to authorise a sale without proof that IBI payments are current.
Under Spanish law, the notary is required to verify payment of IBI for the current year at the time of signing the escritura pública. If the seller cannot produce the most recent IBI receipt, the notary may still proceed but will record the absence in the deed, potentially exposing the buyer to a claim from the municipality. IBI debts attach to the property and, in the event of a sale, the new owner can be pursued for outstanding amounts.
In provinces such as Alicante, IBI collection is handled by SUMA, the provincial tax management body. Buyers or their representatives can request a certificate of payment status online through SUMA’s electronic office, using the property’s cadastral reference or the owner’s NIF/NIE. In other municipalities, the process runs through the local Ayuntamiento’s tax office. Processing times vary but are typically five to ten business days.
Under the Spanish Civil Code, general civil claims are subject to a five-year limitation period following the 2015 reform, as published in the Boletín Oficial del Estado. Tax debts owed to municipalities, however, follow the four-year limitation period established under the Ley General Tributaria. Buyers should note that in Catalonia, the regional Civil Code applies a ten-year limitation period for certain obligations. These distinctions matter when assessing how long a debt can be chased in Spain and whether historical IBI arrears pose a genuine risk.
When a property forms part of a community of owners (comunidad de propietarios), the buyer inherits liability for unpaid community fees. This rule is set out in the Ley de Propiedad Horizontal (LPH), published in the Boletín Oficial del Estado. It is one of the most misunderstood risks in Spanish property transactions, particularly for non-resident buyers unfamiliar with the concept.
Under the LPH, the buyer of a property within a community is jointly liable with the seller for community fees corresponding to the current year and the three preceding years. This means that if the seller has accumulated four years of unpaid fees, the community can pursue the new owner for the full amount. This liability transfers automatically on completion, no contract clause can override it vis-à-vis the community itself, although the buyer can seek indemnification from the seller.
Before signing any contract, request a certificate from the community administrator or president confirming:
Include a contractual warranty from the seller that all community fees are current, backed by an indemnity clause and, where possible, an escrow holdback until the certificate is delivered and verified.
Even with a nota simple in hand, many buyers are unsure what they are reading. The following annotations and entries should trigger immediate further investigation.
If any of the following appear, instruct a qualified lawyer to investigate before proceeding: multiple embargo annotations, discrepancies between the nota simple description and the physical property, an ownership chain that includes recent donations or transfers at undervalue, or any annotation referencing insolvency proceedings (concurso de acreedores).
Contract wording is the buyer’s last line of defence. The following provisions should appear in every private purchase contract (contrato de arras) and be confirmed in the public deed:
If embargoes or hidden debts surface after closing, the buyer faces enforcement action from creditors. In Spain, tax debts owed to AEAT enjoy a statutory lien that takes priority over most private claims, meaning the tax authority can seize and auction the property to recover unpaid taxes, even from a new owner who had no knowledge of the debt. Private mortgages registered in the Land Registry follow a strict priority order based on their date of registration.
Spain does have debt collection mechanisms: AEAT enforces through its own collection branch (recaudación ejecutiva), while private creditors must obtain a court judgment and then enforce through judicial auction via the courts administered by the Poder Judicial. The buyer’s remedies include rescission of the contract on grounds of hidden encumbrances, a damages claim against the seller under the indemnity clause, and, in extreme cases, a criminal fraud complaint if the seller deliberately concealed debts.
Use the following checklist as a sequential workflow. Complete each step and record the result before moving to the next.
The ability to check property debts in Spain online has improved markedly, but access to the right portals is only half the equation. Each document, from the nota simple to the AEAT embargo check to the community fee certificate, reveals a different layer of potential risk, and none of them alone provides the full picture. A comprehensive approach to property due diligence in Spain demands all six checks outlined in this guide, backed by carefully drafted contract protections and independent notary verification.
For buyers unfamiliar with Spanish property law or uncertain how to interpret the results, engaging a qualified real estate investment lawyer through the lawyer directory is the most reliable way to ensure that no hidden liability survives the transaction. Further guidance is available via the Global Law Experts contact page.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Isabel del Álamo at Corelex Global, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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