Legal coordination guide
Legal Process for Buying Property in Spain
The legal process should never be treated as a final administrative step after the property has already been emotionally chosen. For foreign buyers in Alicante province, legal coordination works best when it supports the shortlist and financing strategy from the beginning.
Legal review starts before completion
Ownership, debts, documentation and contract structure all need attention well before the final signing.
Premium and new-build purchases are not exempt
If anything, stronger-value and developer-led purchases usually need even tighter legal coordination.
Area and product type affect the process
A villa, an apartment or a new build can create different legal checks and risk points.
Integration reduces friction
The process is cleaner when search, finance and legal work move together instead of in silos.
Why legal review matters before you feel committed
Buyers often focus heavily on finding the right property and only later start thinking about the legal route. In practice, that order creates unnecessary risk.
The core risk
A property can look right commercially while still being the wrong purchase legally. Proper legal work confirms whether the transaction is clean enough to justify moving forward in the first place.
What legal coordination normally needs to cover
The legal path should not be approached as a checklist detached from the rest of the purchase. Each element affects timing, negotiation leverage and how comfortable the overall commitment really is.
- Ownership verification — confirm the seller has clear, unencumbered title at the Land Registry
- Debts and charges — check for outstanding mortgages, unpaid IBI, community fee arrears and utility debts
- Planning and urbanistic status — verify the property is properly licensed and there are no open infringement orders
- Contract review — developer or private seller contracts often need amendment before signing
- Tax handling — correct calculation and payment of ITP or VAT, plus notary and registry costs
- Completion structure — manage the sequence from reservation through private contract to escritura
The legal timeline in a typical purchase
Understanding when each legal step happens helps buyers plan their time and avoid avoidable pressure.
- 1
Pre-offer due diligence
Check registry position, outstanding debts and planning status before making any formal offer or paying any money.
- 2
Reservation contract
A brief agreement that removes the property from the market. Usually involves a small deposit (1–3%). Legal review at this stage is still possible.
- 3
Private purchase contract (arras)
The main pre-completion contract. Terms, price, completion date, tax obligations and conditions are all fixed here.
- 4
Mortgage deed (if applicable)
If financing is used, the mortgage is formalised at the notary at or just before completion.
- 5
Completion deed (escritura pública)
Signed before a notary. Ownership transfers formally. Title is then registered at the Land Registry.
- 6
Post-completion
Tax payment within 30 days of signing, title registration and utility transfers.
1–3%
Reservation deposit
Removes the property from the market
30 days
Tax payment deadline
After signing the completion deed
~1%
Independent lawyer fee
Of purchase price — your protection at every stage
Why legal process and mortgage planning should work together
If financing is being used, the legal and mortgage processes are linked. Timing, reservation terms, contract deadlines and final completion all need to be managed with both streams in mind.
This is another reason why fragmented buying structures tend to underperform compared with an integrated 360 model.
Not the developer's lawyer. Not ours. Yours.
We are real estate specialists. We find the right property, negotiate the price and coordinate every step of the purchase — from first viewing to handover. That is what we do, and we do it well.
What we do not do is the legal work. Not because we cannot — because you deserve someone whose only job is to protect your legal and financial interests. That person is an independent, qualified Spanish property lawyer (abogado). Paid separately by you. Accountable to you alone.
The rule that protects you
Not the developer's lawyer — they represent the developer. Not your agent's in-house service — they are not a law firm. Your lawyer. Independent. Qualified. Insured. It typically costs around 1% of the purchase price — on a €300,000 property, that is €3,000. Not spending it is not a saving.

Some agencies offer to handle everything themselves, including the legal work. They are not lawyers. Their staff carry no professional legal qualifications. The protections that come with a licensed abogado — professional indemnity insurance, a bar association to complain to, legal accountability — simply do not exist when an unlicensed intermediary does the work instead.
- Use an independent abogado — separate from the developer, separate from your agent
- The developer's recommended lawyer works for the developer — that is a conflict of interest
- A licensed abogado carries professional indemnity insurance. An unlicensed intermediary does not.
- Legal fees are paid by the buyer, separately — budget ~1% of the purchase price
- We work alongside a specialist law firm we know from dozens of transactions. You choose — but we can connect you with professionals whose quality and timelines we can personally vouch for.
The strongest foreign-buyer outcome
The best legal outcome is usually not just a clean completion.
It is a purchase where the buyer's agent has coordinated the search, finance and timeline — and an independent lawyer has protected the legal structure at every stage. Two professionals, two roles, one outcome.
That is especially valuable in Alicante province, where the diversity of markets means the right legal path can vary depending on the exact area and property type involved.