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Should you keep your UK property when living in or moving to Spain?

By Chris Burke
This article is published on: 2nd June 2026

A balanced guide for British expats navigating the ‘sell or keep’ decision

We are living in Spain and enjoying all the wonderful reasons that we moved here. But back in the UK, there’s a semi-detached in Swindon, a flat in Leeds, or perhaps a buy-to-let in Manchester quietly sitting there — and sooner or later, you’re going to have to decide what to do with it.

Keep it and rent it out? Sell now? Sell later? Do nothing and hope the question goes away?

The question of whether to retain UK property as an investment once you become a Spanish tax resident is one of the most common and consequential decisions British expats face. There is no universal right answer — but there is a framework for thinking it through clearly, and that’s what this article provides.

Let’s look at both sides of the argument, honestly and with real tax numbers.

First: Understand the Tax Landscape You’re Now In

Before we weigh the pros and cons, it’s essential to understand that the tax treatment of UK property changes significantly once you become a Spanish tax resident. You are no longer just dealing with HMRC. You now have two tax authorities with an interest in your affairs.

In the UK

In the UK, as a non-resident landlord or seller, HMRC still has jurisdiction over:

  • Rental income from UK property (taxed in the UK under the Non-Resident Landlord Scheme)
  • Capital gains on the disposal of UK residential property (reported and paid within 60 days of completion)
In Spain

In the Spain, as a tax resident, the Agencia Tributaria expects you to declare:

  • Your worldwide income — including UK rental income — on your annual declaración de la renta (depending on your tax setup)
  • Capital gains on the sale of any asset, including UK property, in the year of disposal

The good news: the UK-Spain Double Taxation Agreement (DTA) prevents you from being fully taxed twice. The bad news: it doesn’t mean you pay nothing extra in Spain — it means you get credit for UK tax paid, and may top up to the Spanish rate if it’s higher.

Capital Appreciation Over Time

UK property has, over the long term, delivered consistent capital growth. Average UK property values have roughly doubled over the past 20 years in many regions. If you purchased your property a decade or more ago at a lower price, selling now crystallises a gain — and that gain is taxable.

By holding, you defer the taxable event. You continue to benefit from any future growth while delaying the CGT liability.

Example — The Deferral Argument:

Margaret bought a property in Bristol in 2008 for £180,000. It is now worth £340,000, giving an unrealised gain of £160,000. If she sells immediately, she faces CGT in both the UK and potentially Spain. If she holds for another 10 years and the property grows to £420,000, her gain increases — but so does the purchasing power of her asset and her rental yield over that period.

Whether deferral is wise depends on your view of the UK property market, your personal tax position in future years, and your long-term plans.

Sterling-Denominated Asset in a Diversified Portfolio

If your life in Spain is predominantly euro-denominated — pension income in euros, Spanish property, euro savings — then a UK property provides natural currency diversification. If the pound strengthens against the euro, the sterling value of your UK asset rises in real terms relative to your euro living costs.

This isn’t a reason on its own to hold property, but it is a genuine diversification argument, particularly for those who may return to the UK at some point.

Rental Income as a Long-Term Income Stream

A well-managed, mortgage-free UK rental property can provide a reliable income stream. For a Spanish tax resident, that rental income is taxable — but the combined effective rate may still be reasonable, particularly if UK rental profits are modest after allowable deductions.

Example — Rental Income Tax Treatment:

David owns a mortgage-free rental property in Manchester. Annual rent: £14,400 (£1,200/month). After allowable expenses (letting agent fees, insurance, maintenance), his taxable UK profit is £11,000.

UK Tax: As a non-resident basic rate taxpayer, David pays 20% on £11,000 = £2,200 UK tax if he has no other UK income taxable.

Spain: David declares the £11,000 (converted to euros) on his Spanish return. Spain taxes this as general income (rendimientos del capital inmobiliario). If his total income in Spain puts him in the 30% marginal band, Spain calculates tax of approximately £3,300 — but credits the £2,200 paid in the UK. Net additional Spanish tax: approximately £1,100.

Total effective tax on rental income: approximately £3,300 — a combined rate of 30%.

This is not catastrophic, particularly if the property is also appreciating. However, it is notably less tax-efficient than many alternatives available to Spanish residents (more on this later).

A Safety Net or Future Home

Many expats — particularly those who moved within the last five years — harbour a realistic possibility of returning to the UK. Health, family, or simply changing preferences can bring people back. Selling a UK property and then trying to re-enter the UK market at a later date can be expensive, particularly if prices have risen or your borrowing capacity has reduced.

Retaining the property preserves optionality — and optionality has value that doesn’t show up on a tax calculation.

The Case AGAINST Keeping UK Property

The Renters’ Rights Act 2025: The Rules Have Changed — Significantly

This is a major development that every expat landlord needs to understand. The Renters’ Rights Act 2025 received Royal Assent in October 2025 and its first phase came into force on 1 May 2026. The changes are substantial and tip the balance of power firmly toward tenants.

Here is what has changed:

Section 21 ‘no-fault’ evictions are abolished. You can no longer evict a tenant simply because you want to sell the property, move a family member in, or simply end the tenancy. You must now cite a specific legal ground under Section 8 of the Housing Act 1988. If you want possession of your property — to sell it, to move back in, or for any other reason — you need court approval, and you must give four months’ notice in most cases.

All tenancies are now periodic (rolling). Fixed-term assured shorthold tenancies (ASTs) are gone. All tenancies are now open-ended rolling contracts. Tenants can leave with two months’ notice at any time. You cannot.

Rent increases are restricted to once per year and must reflect market rates. Tenants have the right to challenge any increase they consider excessive at tribunal.

Penalties have increased dramatically. Non-compliance with the new rules can result in civil penalties of up to £40,000 per breach. Councils have been given strengthened investigatory powers and funding to enforce compliance.

What this means for expat landlords: Managing a UK property from Spain was already administratively challenging. Under the new regime, removing a difficult tenant, regaining possession to sell, or adjusting rents now involves formal legal processes that are significantly harder to navigate from 1,500 kilometres away. The buffer you once had — the ability to serve a Section 21 notice and regain possession relatively straightforwardly — no longer exists.

EPC Requirements: Looming Upgrade Costs

The UK government has confirmed through its Warm Homes Plan (January 2026) that all private rental properties in England and Wales must achieve a minimum EPC rating of C by 1 October 2030. The current minimum is E, so any property currently rated D, E, or below will require investment.

Key details:

  • Landlords must spend up to £10,000 per property on energy efficiency improvements (cost cap)
  • Spending on improvements from 1 October 2025 counts toward this cap
  • Properties that genuinely cannot reach EPC C within the cost cap may qualify for an exemption, but the bar is high
  • Non-compliance fines of up to £5,000 per property
  • EPCs will now be valid for five years rather than ten under the new framework

For an expat landlord, this is a concrete, time-bound capital cost. A property currently rated D or E may require new insulation, a heat pump, double glazing, or other significant works to reach band C — all of which must be organised, overseen, and paid for from abroad.

Example — EPC Upgrade Cost:

Caroline owns a 1970s semi-detached rental in Leicester currently rated EPC D. Her letting agent advises it will need new loft insulation, cavity wall insulation, and a heat pump to reach band C — estimated cost: £8,500. This is within the £10,000 cost cap but represents a real cash call that must be met before October 2030, regardless of whether the rental income justifies it.

The Section 24 Problem: Mortgage Interest Relief is Limited

Since 2020, UK landlords — resident or non-resident — can no longer deduct mortgage interest as an expense from rental income. Instead, they receive a basic rate (20%) tax credit. For higher or additional rate taxpayers, this significantly increases the effective tax burden on rental income.

Example — The Hidden Higher-Rate Trap:

Susan has a rental property with £18,000 annual rent. Her mortgage interest is £9,000 per year. Under the old rules, she would have declared £9,000 profit. Under Section 24, she declares the full £18,000 as income and receives a 20% credit (£1,800) against her tax bill.

If Susan’s total income (including Spanish pension and other income) puts her in the UK 40% band:

  • Tax at 40% on £18,000 = £7,200
  • Less 20% credit: £1,800
  • UK Tax payable: £5,400
  • Effective tax on her actual profit of £9,000: 60%

She then declares the rental income in Spain, receives credit for UK tax paid, and may or may not owe additional Spanish tax depending on her total Spanish income.

For heavily mortgaged properties, Section 24 can make rental income deeply unattractive — particularly once Spanish tax is layered on top.

Capital Gains Tax: Two Bites of the Cherry

Capital Gains Tax:

Two Bites of the Cherry

When you eventually sell UK residential property as a non-resident, you face taxation in both countries.

UK CGT:

  • Gain calculated from the higher of: original purchase price, or the value at 5 April 2015
  • Current UK CGT rates on residential property: 18% (basic rate) or 24% (higher rate)
  • Annual CGT exempt amount: now just £3,000 (reduced from £12,300 in 2022/23)
  • Gain must be reported and tax paid within 60 days of completion

Spanish CGT:

  • Gain declared on your Spanish annual return, converted to euros at the exchange rate on disposal
  • Spain taxes capital gains at savings rates: 19% up to €6,000; 21% up to €50,000; 23% up to €200,000; 27% above that
  • Credit is given for UK CGT paid
  • Currency movements can create or inflate a Spanish taxable gain independently of sterling property values

Example — CGT on Disposal:

Peter purchased a property in Leeds in 2014 for £220,000. He moved to Spain in 2020. He sells in 2026 for £310,000.

UK CGT:

  • Gain: £90,000
  • Less Annual Exempt Amount: £3,000
  • Taxable gain: £87,000
  • At higher rate 24%: £20,880 UK CGT — payable within 60 days

Spanish CGT:

  • Exchange rate: £1 = €1.17 at purchase; €1.20 at sale
  • Purchase cost in euros: €257,400 | Sale proceeds: €372,000
  • Gain in euros: €114,600
  • Spanish tax: 19% on €6k + 21% on €44k + 23% on €64,600 = €24,158
  • Less credit for UK CGT (approx. €25,056): no additional Spanish CGT due in this scenario

However: had sterling weakened over the holding period, the euro-denominated gain could be significantly larger, potentially resulting in substantial additional Spanish tax liability.

The key takeaway: currency movements create a structural tax exposure that simply does not exist for UK-resident property owners. This asymmetry is a compelling argument against long-term holding as a Spanish resident.

Principal Private Residence (PPR) Relief for Non-UK Residents: What You Need to Know

Principal Private Residence Relief (PPR) is the UK tax rule that normally protects your main home from Capital Gains Tax when you sell it. If a property has been your main residence throughout your entire period of ownership, the gain is fully exempt from CGT. No tax to pay, no calculation needed.

For UK residents, it is one of the most valuable tax reliefs in existence. For non-UK residents — including British expats living in Spain — it still exists, but it has been significantly curtailed. Understanding exactly what you’re entitled to, and what you’re not, is essential before you make any decision about selling a UK property.

How PPR Relief Is Calculated

PPR relief is apportioned. You don’t get it in full simply because you once lived in the property — you get it for the proportion of your total ownership period during which it was your main residence.

The formula is straightforward:

PPR Relief = (Qualifying Periods ÷ Total Ownership Period) × Total Gain

Qualifying periods include:

  • The actual period(s) you lived in the property as your main home
  • The final 9 months of ownership, regardless of whether you were living there (this is a statutory exemption — it exists to give people time to sell after moving out)

That’s it. No other automatic additions apply.

Example:

Sarah bought a property in 2010 and lived in it as her main home until 2018 — eight years. She then moved to Spain. She sells the property in 2026 — meaning she owned it for 16 years in total.

Qualifying period: 8 years (actual residence) + 9 months (final period exemption) = 8 years and 9 months

Total ownership: 16 years

PPR fraction: 8.75 ÷ 16 = 54.7% of the gain is exempt

If the total gain is £180,000, approximately £98,400 is exempt from UK CGT, and £81,600 is taxable.

At 24% (higher rate): UK CGT payable = approximately £19,584 — less the £3,000 annual exempt amount.

The years in Spain during which she did not live there as her main residence are fully exposed to CGT. She does not get relief simply because she used to live there.

The Non-Resident CGT Rule: April 2015 Baseline

There is an important additional layer for non-residents specifically. Non-Resident Capital Gains Tax (NRCGT) on UK residential property was introduced on 6 April 2015. Prior to that date, non-residents did not pay UK CGT on UK property at all.

This means that for properties purchased before April 2015, the taxable gain as a non-resident is calculated from the higher of:

  • The original purchase price, or
  • The market value of the property on 5 April 2015

In practice, this means you can elect to use the April 2015 valuation as your base cost, which reduces the gain that falls within the UK CGT net. For properties that had already appreciated significantly before 2015, this can be a meaningful saving.

Example:

David bought a flat in 2005 for £150,000. It was worth £240,000 on 5 April 2015. He sells in 2026 for £320,000.

He can elect to use the 2015 value as his base cost, meaning his taxable gain for NRCGT purposes is £80,000 (£320,000 minus £240,000) — not £170,000 (the full gain since purchase).

Any PPR relief then applies to the relevant portion of that £80,000 gain, not the full historic gain.

This rebasing election is available automatically and is usually the most advantageous approach for pre-2015 purchases, though you should confirm this with an adviser for your specific situation.

90-Day Rule

The “90-Day Rule” Trap — Non-Residents Claiming PPR

There is one route by which a non-UK resident can claim PPR relief for a period spent outside the UK, but it comes with strict conditions and is often misunderstood.

Under the Statutory Residence Test, a non-UK resident can still claim PPR relief for a tax year in which they — or their spouse or civil partner — spent at least 90 nights in the UK property during that tax year.

This sounds helpful, but in practice it is rarely straightforward:

  • You must actually spend those 90 nights in the property itself — not in the UK generally, not nearby
  • Claiming this can affect your non-UK residency status for that year under the Statutory Residence Test, with potentially significant tax consequences
  • It applies year by year — a single year of 90+ nights does not extend relief across other years

For most expats firmly settled in Spain with no intention of spending extended periods back in the UK property, this route is largely academic. But for those who genuinely split their time between a UK property and Spain — particularly those close to the 183-day residency threshold — it is a potential area of overlap that requires careful analysis.

What Happens in Spain When You Sell?

As a Spanish tax resident, you must also declare the sale on your Spanish declaración de la renta. Spain calculates the gain in euros, using the exchange rate at the date of purchase and the date of sale. Any PPR relief you receive in the UK reduces your UK CGT bill — but Spain performs its own calculation and gives you credit for the UK tax actually paid, not for the relief granted.

This is a subtle but important distinction:

If your UK CGT bill is reduced to zero by PPR relief, Spain still calculates a gain based on its own rules — and you may owe Spanish CGT on the full euro-denominated gain, with no UK tax credit to offset it.

Example:

Claire sells a UK property on which her UK CGT is reduced to zero thanks to PPR relief. The property has also appreciated in euro terms due to sterling strengthening during her ownership. Spain calculates a gain of €60,000. There is no UK tax paid to credit against it. Spain taxes the gain at savings rates — potentially €11,340 in Spanish CGT that many people simply do not anticipate.

This is one of the least well-understood aspects of the UK-Spain tax interaction, and it catches people out regularly.

The 9-Month Final Period: Why Timing Your Sale Matters

The final 9-month exemption runs from the date you last occupied the property as your main residence. If you moved to Spain in January 2023, your 9-month final period expired in October 2023. Every month of ownership after that date is fully exposed to CGT in the UK (on a time-apportioned basis).

This means that delay in selling — whether because you’re not ready, the market isn’t right, or you simply haven’t got around to it — directly increases your UK CGT liability. Each additional year of ownership after the 9-month window adds another year of non-exempt gain.

Practical implication: If you moved to Spain recently and are undecided about selling your UK property, the clock on your CGT exemption is already running. It is not a reason to rush into a sale you’re not ready for — but it is a reason to understand the numbers sooner rather than later.

Summary: Key Points to Remember

  • PPR relief is apportioned — you only get it for the period you actually lived there, plus a final 9-month exemption
  • For properties bought before April 2015, you can use the 5 April 2015 value as your base cost for UK CGT purposes — usually beneficial
  • The 90-night rule allows non-residents to claim PPR for years they spend 90+ nights in the property, but it’s complex and can affect residency status
  • PPR relief reducing your UK CGT to zero does not eliminate your Spanish CGT obligation — Spain does its own calculation in euros
  • Every month of ownership beyond the 9-month final period adds to your taxable gain — understand the numbers before deciding when to sell
Management Headaches from Abroad

Management Headaches from Abroad

Managing UK property from Spain involves letting agents (typically 10–15% of rent), maintenance you cannot oversee in person, and under the Renters’ Rights Act, a legal framework that now heavily favours tenants.

Regaining possession — whether to sell, renovate, or simply exit the market — now requires formal legal process, notice periods, and potentially a court hearing.

The net yield on a UK buy-to-let — after mortgage costs, agent fees, maintenance, insurance, EPC upgrade obligations, and combined UK-Spanish tax — can be surprisingly thin. The spreadsheet sometimes tells a story the landlord doesn’t want to hear.

Spanish Wealth Tax and the Modelo 720 Obligation

As a Spanish tax resident, you must declare your UK property on the Modelo 720 if its value (along with other overseas real estate) exceeds €50,000. Failure to comply carries serious penalties.

Additionally, some regions of Spain apply Wealth Tax (Impuesto sobre el Patrimonio) on worldwide assets above certain thresholds (typically €700,000 net, varying by region). The Solidarity Tax (Impuesto de Solidaridad de las Grandes Fortunas), introduced nationally in 2023, applies to worldwide net assets above €3 million at rates of 1.7% to 3.5%. High-value UK property equity could push you into either territory.

The Alternative: What You Could Do With the Proceeds Instead

This is the section most people don’t think about — and it’s arguably the most important.

If you sell your UK property, you don’t just eliminate a range of costs, risks, and compliance obligations. You free up capital that can be deployed into something specifically designed for your life as a Spanish tax resident — with results that are, in most cases, dramatically more efficient across every measure that matters.

The Spanish Compliant Investment Bond

The Spanish Compliant Investment Bond

The most powerful tool available to British expats in Spain is the Spanish Compliant Investment Bond — sometimes called a seguro de vida ahorro or collective investment bond. Think of it as Spain’s answer to the ISA, but in some respects more powerful.

These are life assurance-based investment wrappers, typically issued by regulated EU insurance companies (often based in Ireland), holding a diversified portfolio of UCITS-compliant funds in your choice of currency — euros, sterling, or dollars. The Spanish tax authority (Hacienda) specifically recognises and endorses these structures, which is what makes them so compelling.

Here is how they compare to holding UK property across the four areas that matter most to expats:

Tax Efficiency

UK Property: Rental income taxed annually in both UK and Spain. Capital gains taxed in UK (with 60-day reporting deadline) and potentially topped up in Spain. Currency movements create additional Spanish exposure. Combined effective rates routinely reach 30–60% depending on the scenario.

Spanish Compliant Bond: Growth rolls up entirely tax-free inside the wrapper — no annual tax on dividends, interest, or internal fund switches. Tax is only triggered when you make a withdrawal, and even then, only the gain element of that withdrawal is taxable (not the original capital).

Sterling-Denominated Asset in a Diversified Portfolio: You can keep the money in sterling, in fact most major currencies, it does not need to be changed into euros.

Example — Proportional Tax Relief in Action:

James invests £400,000 into a Spanish Compliant Bond. After several years, it grows to £600,000 (one-third gain, two-thirds original capital). He withdraws £60,000.

Spain calculates that one-third of the withdrawal (£20,000) represents gain — and only that £20,000 is subject to savings tax. At 19% on the first €6,000 and 21% on the remainder, his tax bill is modest.

Compare this to the same £60,000 being rental income from UK property, where the full amount is potentially subject to income tax in Spain at marginal rates of 37–47%, plus UK tax at source.

The difference in net after-tax income over a 10–20 year retirement is not marginal. It is transformational.

Administrative Simplicity

UK Property: Modelo 720 declaration annually. UK self-assessment tax return. Spanish declaración de la renta declaration of rental income. Potential Wealth Tax inclusion. Letting agent management. Maintenance coordination. Under the Renters’ Rights Act, any possession process now involves formal legal proceedings. EPC upgrade compliance by 2030.

Spanish Compliant Bond: No Modelo 720 required — the bond provider’s fiscal representative in Spain handles all tax reporting and pays tax directly to the Hacienda on your behalf. No UK self-assessment. No letting agent. No maintenance calls at 11pm on a Friday. You simply hold the investment and withdraw as needed.

For many expats, particularly those in later retirement, this reduction in administrative burden is itself worth considerable value.

Inheritance Planning

UK Property: On death, UK residential property passes through UK probate (which can take 12–18 months or more), potentially subject to UK Inheritance Tax at 40% on the estate above the nil-rate band. In Spain, the estate may also be subject to Spanish inheritance tax (Impuesto sobre Sucesiones), which is paid by the beneficiary — not the estate — and the rates and reliefs vary dramatically by region. Getting two tax systems to coordinate on an international estate is neither simple nor cheap.

UK Long-Term Residence Replacing Domicile for Inheritance Tax Purposes

From 6 April 2025, the UK abolished the concept of domicile as the basis for UK Inheritance Tax (IHT) exposure, replacing it with a residence-based test known as “long-term residence.” Under the new rules, an individual becomes a long-term UK resident — and therefore subject to UK IHT on their worldwide assets — once they have been UK tax resident for 10 out of the previous 20 tax years. Critically, the exposure does not end immediately upon leaving the UK; a “tail” period applies, meaning that individuals who were long-term UK residents continue to be liable on worldwide assets for a number of years after departure (up to 10 years, depending on how long they were resident).

For a British national who has relocated to Spain as a Spanish tax resident, this has significant implications: any UK-situated assets — such as UK property, UK bank accounts, or UK-listed investments — will remain within the charge to UK IHT regardless of the new regime, since UK situs assets are always within scope. However, non-UK assets, including investment portfolios and cash held outside the UK, will only remain exposed during the tail period and will eventually fall outside the UK IHT net once that period expires. This is where a Spanish-compliant investment bond becomes particularly powerful: assets held within such a bond are treated, for UK IHT purposes, as a single non-UK situs asset (provided the bond is issued by a non-UK insurer and structured correctly), meaning they fall outside the UK IHT charge once the tail period has elapsed — unlike directly held UK investments or property, which remain permanently within scope.

In contrast, retaining UK property offers no such shelter; it will always be a UK situs asset and therefore permanently exposed to UK IHT at 40% above the available nil-rate bands, regardless of where the owner is domiciled or resident. For Spanish tax residents, a Spanish-compliant bond also delivers the added advantage of tax-deferred growth under Spanish law, with gains taxed only on surrender or withdrawal at Spanish savings income rates, making it a highly efficient wrapper for long-term wealth accumulation and IHT planning simultaneously.

Spanish Compliant Bond: The bond can be structured with named beneficiaries — including a surviving spouse as co-policyholder and children as beneficiaries. On the death of the first policyholder, 100% of the bond passes to the surviving spouse without probate, without Spanish inheritance tax, and without any interruption to the investment. On the death of the second policyholder, the bond is closed and proceeds pass to beneficiaries with significant inheritance tax efficiency. The bond bypasses probate entirely — no court process, no delays, no professional fees to unlock the asset.

For blended families, for those with children in different countries, or simply for anyone who wants their estate handled cleanly and quickly, this is a material advantage.

Spanish Compliance

UK Property: A UK property held by a Spanish tax resident sits awkwardly across two legal systems, two tax regimes, and two reporting frameworks. It is not inherently non-compliant — but it requires active, ongoing management to remain so.

Spanish Compliant Investment Bond: By definition, it is structured to be fully aligned with Spanish tax law. The Hacienda has approved the tax treatment. There is no ambiguity, no grey area, and no annual question of whether you’ve declared everything correctly.

A Worked Comparison

Scenario: Linda has a mortgage-free UK rental property worth £350,000 generating £15,000 gross rent per year. She is a Spanish tax resident in the 37% income band. She is considering selling and reinvesting the proceeds.

Keeping the property (annual position):

  • Gross rent: £15,000
  • Agent fees (12%), insurance, maintenance: -£3,500
  • Net profit before tax: £11,500
  • UK tax (20%): -£2,300
  • Spanish top-up tax (37% less UK credit): -£1,955
  • Net income after all tax: approximately £7,245
  • Plus: Modelo 720 obligation, EPC upgrade cost pending, Renters’ Rights Act compliance risk, no-fault eviction route closed
  • Net yield on £350,000: approximately 2.1%

Selling and investing in a Spanish Compliant Bond:

  • Invest £350,000 (net of CGT on disposal) in a Spanish Compliant Bond
  • Assume 5% annual growth: portfolio grows by £17,500 in year one — entirely tax-free inside the wrapper
  • Linda withdraws £15,000 per year as income after 1 year
  • Only the gain element is taxable, proportionally against the original investment amount
  • Taxable gain approximately £714 – tax to pay @ 19% £136
  • Net income after tax: approximately £14,864
  • No Modelo 720. No letting agent. No EPC upgrade. No tenant disputes.
  • Effective yield on capital: 4.9% + net

The difference in net annual income: approximately £7,619 per year in Linda’s favour from the bond — before factoring in the administrative time saved and the inheritance planning benefits.

The numbers, modelled properly, often surprise people. The property feels like the safe, familiar choice. The bond can often be the better choice for various reasons.

Here’s a paragraph covering those points:

The Decision Framework: How to Decide

Sell if:

  • Your mortgage interest relief is severely restricted by Section 24 and rental profits are thin
  • Your combined UK and Spanish CGT liability is manageable now but may grow substantially if values continue to rise
  • You have no realistic prospect of returning to the UK
  • The net rental yield (after all costs and tax) is below 3–4%
  • The new Renters’ Rights Act regime makes you uncomfortable with the reduced ability to regain possession
  • You face a material EPC upgrade bill before 2030
  • The management stress is affecting your quality of life in Spain
  • You want to simplify your financial affairs, reduce cross-border reporting, and improve your inheritance planning position

Keep if:

  • The property is mortgage-free and generating a strong net rental yield above 5% after all costs and tax
  • You have a realistic possibility of returning to the UK within 5 years
  • The unrealised gain is already very large and the immediate CGT bill on sale would be prohibitive
  • You are entirely comfortable managing the dual reporting, new tenancy legislation, and EPC obligations from Spain
  • The property forms part of a deliberate diversified portfolio — not just habit or sentiment

Consider a halfway house:

  • If you have multiple UK properties, consider selling the most management-intensive, the most mortgaged, or the one with the smallest unrealised gain first
  • Use the proceeds to establish a Spanish Compliant Bond — and compare the after-tax income year by year
The Opportunity

Final Thought:

The Numbers Don’t Lie — But You Have to Run Them

Every expat’s situation is different. The right answer for someone with a mortgage-free, high-yielding property in a strong growth area who genuinely intends to return to the UK is different from the right answer for someone with a mortgaged, D-rated flat generating thin yields and mounting compliance concerns from 1,500 miles away.

What I would urge you to do is this: model the actual numbers. Net yield after all costs and combined tax. The CGT position if you sold now versus in five years. The EPC upgrade liability. The inheritance position. And then compare that — honestly — with what the same capital could generate inside a Spanish Compliant Bond.

UK property feels safe because it’s what you know. But in many cases, it is working far harder for HMRC and the Agencia Tributaria than it is working for you. The question to ask is not “should I keep what I’ve always had?” but “given where I live now, what is the most intelligent home for this capital?”

That question deserves a proper answer — and a proper financial model to back it up.

Sometimes clarity starts with a conversation.

You can arrange an initial consultation to explore your situation [here].

You can also [read independent reviews of my advice and service here].

Article by Chris Burke

If you are based in the Barcelona/Costa Brava area and would like to have an initial, complimentary face to face video call or arrange a time to visit Chris in his office in central Barcelona, contact Chris on chris.burke@spectrum-ifa.com or whatsapp +34 689915730.

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