Brits amongst the most active purchasers in Spain and the islands

Brits active in property market in Tenerife and Spain

Official figures show that Brits were among the most active purchasers of homes in Costa Blanca last year, along with the Russian and Norwegians, which collectively made up 80% of all transactions in the region.

According to figures obtained from Spain’s notaries, at least 9,200 foreigners bought holiday homes on the Costa Blanca last year, including 5,200 in the Catalonia region Costa Brava/Dorada, and 4,600 in Malaga  Costa del Sol; Balearics (2,700), and Murcia (1,500).

José Vicente Dómine, Director General of Public Works for the Generalitat (Valencian regional government), told the press that more overseas nationals purchased bought homes on the Costa Blanca last year than in Madrid and Andalusia combined, and almost as much as Catalonia, the Balearics, and Murcia combined.

While the Spanish property market continues to suffer from an oversupply of homes, now is a great opportunity “for foreign buyers to bag a bargain on the Spanish coast,” said Spanish property commentator Mark Stucklin.

Change for NIE numbers collection when buying Spanish property

Changes to NIE collection rules in Spain and Tenerife for UK and overseas property purchasers

Foreigners buying property in Spain no longer have to go in person to a Spanish police station to get their NIE numbers, after a Spanish Government u-turn.

Some nine million UK and Irish people travel to Spain each year. Of those, over one million have acquired holiday homes or timeshares. Even without owning property, many have opened Spanish bank accounts to facilitate transactions while there. Spanish law has for many years required foreigners conducting business, professional or social matters in Spain to obtain a Numero de Identificacion de Extranjeros (Foreigners Identification Number), or NIE for short.

Your Spanish NIE certificate number is essential for all types of financial or property transaction and acts as your tax identification number as a foreign resident. It is required for all property and finance related transactions e.g. paying your bills, opening bank accounts or buying or selling property.

In the middle of a deep recession, which has crippled the Spanish property market, the Spanish authorities appeared to have shot themselves in the foot by introducing a ludicrous regulation requiring all foreigners to appear personally at the police station, merely for the purpose of applying for NIE.

The problem stemmed from a little known and little observed regulation dated 20 April 2011, which established that foreigners intending to carry on business in Spain were required to appear personally at their local (Spanish) police station to apply for NIE. In typical Spanish manner, and displaying sound common sense, this regulation was largely disregarded throughout many parts of Spain where the police would accept applications for NIE presented via Power of Attorney in favour of a lawyer or other authorised representative of the applicant. Provided the Power of Attorney was correctly drawn up and properly sealed by a Notary Public and the UK authorities, it was acceptable for use to make application for NIE without requiring the applicant to trek in person all the way to Spain.

However all that changed since a communique from the Secretary of State for Immigration on 13 December 2011 indicating that the expression “personally” contained in the rule governing such foreign related matters did not leave any room for interpretation and whilst acknowledging it hampered the use of Notarial powers to apply for NIE, directed that the personal appearance of applicants was required at police stations all over Spain, and that applications by Power of Attorney would no longer be acceptable

Naturally this literal interpretation of what anyway was initially a daft regulation caused huge consternation throughout Spain in the legal profession and the property construction and sales sector. It also meant that there were probably a lot of unhappy policemen who were likely going to be buried under an avalanche of paperwork from foreigners queuing up to apply for NIE.

There was some optimism among the legal profession in Spain that this nonsense would eventually be resolved but for that period, chaos reigned in the property holiday sector involving non-nationals having bank accounts or property in Spain.

Now, it appears the Spanish authorities have had a rethink and change of heart. A recent communiqué dated 13th April 2012 issued by the department of the Spanish Interior Ministry responsible for policing matters  Direccion General de la Policia  has advised that henceforth applications for NIE will be accepted whether made personally or through a representative. In other words, Powers of Attorney will once again be accepted for such applications. The communiqué also states that this new instruction shall be circulated to all the relevant police or other offices and departments affected by the instruction.  Common sense prevails!

More misery for the Spanish property market?

More property investment misery in Tenerife and Spain?

The Spanish property market faces more misery with average residential prices expected to fall by a further 18% before finally bottoming out, according to Barclays Capital. The British investment bank says that the decline in values will add to the 22% price drop witnessed since the Spanish property market crashed in 2008. The bank’s latest report claims that Spanish home prices will drop by up to 35% before reaching the bottom of the downturn. But the reality is that property price falls nationwide have been far steeper and have already depreciated by 40%, on average. In fact, this rate of fall has been confirmed by Spain’s Minister for the Economy, suggesting that Barclays Capital’s data is largely unreliable. “So Barclays Capital are right to say that prices might fall 40% in total, but wrong to say that means another 18% of declines to come,” says Spanish property commentator Mark Stucklin. “We are already almost there [at the bottom], certainly when it comes to holiday homes on the coast.”

Rich property buyers look to Spain for second homes

Rich buyers search Spain and Tenerife for property and a second home

Spain is the fourth most popular country for rich property buyers looking for second homes, according Knight Frank’s latest annual Wealth Report.

The 2012 report, which saw London, New York, Beijing and Paris continue to dominate the list of top cities for real estate investment, also found Spain to be a popular choice when it comes to holiday homes.

The 68-page document found Spain to be the fourth most attractive destination for second home purchases by the world’s wealthiest investors, beaten by France, the UK and the US. For rich Latin Americans, Spain is even more popular, ranking just behind the USA in second place.

Out of the factors considered by buyers for their second homes, lifestyle was the most important, with 67 per cent of all respondents citing it as a major influence. Investment potential, on the other hand, only influenced 55 per cent.

For Latin American buyers, the emphasis on lifestyle was even more prominent, with 86 per cent ranking it as the most important factor in their house hunting

Cheaper homes in Spain as sellers try to attract more buyers

Cheaper rental and sale property prices in Tenerife and Spain

Resale Spanish property asking prices continued to fall last month, as more vendors slashed prices in a bid to secure a sale. The latest home price index published by idealista.com shows that the average price of a home in Spain depreciated by 9.4% compared to January 2011.

The figures provided by the Spanish property portal reveal that January 2012 was the worst month since the Spanish housing crisis started four years ago. On a month on month basis, asking prices of homes in the idealista.com database depreciated by 1.9% to an average price of €2,045sqm (£1,712sqm) suggesting that homeowners are becoming more realistic about the need to reduce property prices if they are going to have any chance of attracting more home buyers.

It represents the biggest fall in asking prices since idealista.com started publishing the index before the property crash got underway in 2008.

On a monthly basis, prices fell the most in Castille La Mancha (-2.3%), followed by The Balearics, Asturias and Andalucia (-2.1%).  With property prices falling, housing affordability has somewhat improved in Spain, based on average property prices versus average gross annual household income, which has fallen from 7.7 years at the peak of the property boom to a current rate of 6.2 years, according to the Bank of Spain.

Spanish families might welcome more affordable housing,  but housing is still much more expensive than it was before the boom, when it cost just 4 years gross annual income or less.

“There are several reasons why the affordability ratio has not improved more with falling property prices, including higher mortgage borrowing costs and lower household income, said Spanish property commentator Mark Stucklin.

He continued: “None of this really applies to the cost of holiday-homes on the coast, where prices have fallen substantially more than the national average, and where foreigners with higher incomes than the Spanish national average tend to buy.”


The average cost of renting a home in Spain also fell last year as rental prices depreciated in 77% of Spain’s primary rental markets, the latest to data from Idealista.com and the Public Rental Company show.

The greatest rental price decline was recorded in Toledo by 8.7%, followed by a 6.8% drop in Oviedo. In Spain’s largest cities of Barcelona, Madrid and Valencia rents fell by 3.1%, 1.3% and 4% respectively.
However, rents actually increased in Lleida, Bilbao and Alicante rentals, rising 11.2%, 4.2% and 4.1% respectively.

These rental price declines follow on from falls in 2010, suggesting that Spanish homes are becoming cheaper to rent, as well as buy.

Latest Price Index from Tinsa

Tenerife and the Canary Islands fare best in Tinsa's latest property index

Average Spanish house prices fell 6.9pc over 12 months to October, according to the latest House Price Index published by Tinsa, one of Spain’s leading appraisal companies.

Prices fell the most (-8.1pc) in regional capitals and metropolitan areas (-7.5pc), followed by the Mediterranean coast (-6.9) where holiday homes are concentrated, and where prices dropped considerably less than September. Prices fell the least in The Balearic and Canary Islands (-3.4pc).

Peak to present, prices are down on average 30pc on the coast, and 20.5pc on the islands.

September Tinsa Index

Average Spanish house prices fell 7.4pc over 12 months to September, according to the latest House Price Index from Tinsa – one of Spain’s leading appraisal companies.

Prices fell the most (-8.9pc) in capitals and large cities, followed by the Mediterranean coast (-8.2) where holiday homes are concentrated.

Peak to present, prices are down on average 24.1pc, and by 31.9pc on the coast.

Good news from the Spanish property market

Propert sales improve in Spain and Tenerife especially prime property by the coast

At last some good news from the Spanish property market , foreign investment is up strongly on last year. Foreigners invested 1.3 billion Euros in Q2 this year, up 16pc on the first quarter and 37pc on the same time last year, according to figures from the Bank of Spain.

Foreign investment is still some way (32pc) from the peak it reached in Q2 2003, when it hit 1.9 billion Euros, but there has been a clear improvement in the last 2 quarters.  Sales to foreigners have picked up as prices fall, showing how price-sensitive foreign demand for Spanish holiday homes is.

Certainly prime property on or near the coast in Tenerife is attracting greater interest once more.

Economic uncertainty keeping housing market subdued

Housing market in Spain and Tenerife may be subdued by economic worries

Economic and political uncertainty will keep the housing market subdued for the rest of the year, according to several experts quoted in the Spanish press

With the Spanish property market down an annualized 26pc in June, and 11pc year to date, the experts see no recovery for the market this year.

Angel Serrano, a director of Spanish property consultancy Aguirre Newman, says that “few people will start looking for a home in what remains of the year.” On the other hand, he also thinks the correction in house prices is into its final phase.

Economic and political uncertainty, with unemployment over 20pc and general elections in November, are making Spaniards wary about buying primary residencies, let alone holiday homes.

Moreover, the credit crunch is still in full swing for Spain, making scarce the financing needed to oil the wheels of the housing market. The lack of mortgage finance is the biggest problem and obstacle to recovery, according to Emiliano Bermúdez, from the Don Piso chain of estate agents.

Employment, mortgages and asking prices are the key variables , argues Fernando Encinar, head of research at idealista, a property portal. In the short-term the only solution is to “reduce prices if one wants to sell more homes,” said Encinar.

British owners of holiday-homes in Spain paid far fewer visits last year, says a new study.

British visitors to second homes on Tenerife buck the trend in Spain

Visits to Spain by British owners fell by 17pc, whilst visits by German owners were down 11pc, reveals a new report by the government-sponsored Institute of Tourism Studies (IET).

The drop in the number of tourists staying in their own properties was much more pronounced than the fall in the number of hotel bookings, which, in the case of British tourists, were down just 0.6pc last year.

The study also found that British tourists staying in their own holiday-homes spent 55 Euros/day on average, compared to 111 Euros/day average for hotel guests. Spaniards staying in holiday-homes spent an average of 21 Euros/day.

30% of Spaniards stayed in holiday-homes in 2009, compared to just 8.6pc of foreign visitors.

Holiday-lettings also fell in 2010, -13.5pc in the case of British tourists, and 13.4pc in the case of Germans. Bad news for landlords on the coast.

The decline in the number of tourists staying in holiday-homes coupled with the crisis means that “the purchase of a holiday-home is at present far from a priority for the average family,” concludes the report.

However interest in prime property in Tenerife and the Canary Islands continues to increase and the second home visits seem to be bucking the trend of mainland Spain.