- Yes, UK citizens can get a Spanish mortgage in 2026, borrowing as non-residents exactly as they did before Brexit.
- UK buyers need a deposit of 30–40% of the property price, plus 10–13% in taxes and fees.
- Spanish banks lend non-residents a maximum loan-to-value of 60–70%, against 80% or more for residents.
- Mortgage rates in Spain are fixed, mixed or variable, with variable rates tied to the 12-month Euríbor.
- A Spanish mortgage takes a median of about 4.7 months to complete, with Sabadell the fastest lender and UCI the slowest.
- Most Spanish banks require the mortgage to be repaid by the age of 70–75, which shortens the term for older buyers.
- Spanish banks assess your income stability and debt-to-income ratio, not your UK credit score.
- Joint applications close at a higher rate than solo applications.
Getting a mortgage in Spain as a UK citizen is very doable after Brexit, but the rules are not the ones you know from a UK mortgage. You will put down a larger deposit, deal with a different set of documents, and navigate the lending criteria of Spanish banks rather than British ones. This guide walks you through eligibility, deposits, the banks that lend to UK buyers, rates, the documents you need, and the full application timeline, so you know exactly what to expect before you start.
The good news is that nothing about Brexit stops a British buyer from borrowing in Spain. UK citizens borrow as non-residents, the same category that applied before 2020. What changed is your residency status for living in Spain, not your right to take out a Spanish mortgage.
Can UK citizens still get a mortgage in Spain after Brexit?
Yes, UK citizens can get a mortgage in Spain, and Brexit did not change that. What changed is the time you can spend in Spain, not your ability to buy or borrow. British buyers have always been assessed as non-resident borrowers, and that is still the case: a Spanish bank looks at your income, your existing debts and the property, then typically lends 60 to 70% of the value.
Being outside the EU does mean two practical things you should plan for. You can spend only 90 days in any 180-day period in Spain without a visa, and longer stays now need a residence visa. Neither affects your right to a mortgage, but both are why most UK buyers borrow as non-residents rather than relocating first.
- What changed: 90/180-day stay limit, no EU freedom of movement, non-resident tax status.
- What did not change: your right to buy property and to take out a Spanish mortgage.
How much deposit and LTV do you need as a UK non-resident?
Plan for a deposit of 30–40% of the property price, plus 10–13% in purchase costs. Spanish banks lend 60–70% loan-to-value to non-residents, against 80% or more for residents. On a EUR 250,000 property that means roughly EUR 75,000–100,000 deposit and a further EUR 25,000–32,000 in taxes and fees, so EUR 100,000–132,000 in cash, not the EUR 50,000 a UK buyer used to a 20% deposit might expect.
| Property price | Deposit (35%) | Costs (~12%) | Total cash needed |
|---|---|---|---|
| EUR 150,000 | EUR 52,500 | EUR 18,000 | EUR 70,500 |
| EUR 250,000 | EUR 87,500 | EUR 30,000 | EUR 117,500 |
| EUR 400,000 | EUR 140,000 | EUR 48,000 | EUR 188,000 |
This deposit gap is the single most common surprise for British buyers, and it is higher than the deposit you would need for a house abroad in many other countries. Realistic expectations make the biggest difference to whether your application succeeds.
British buyers who successfully closed a Spanish mortgage with Upscore asked for a median 69% loan-to-value, about 9 percentage points lower than applicants who did not close. Realistic LTV expectations are the strongest single predictor of a completed application in Upscore’s data.
For context on the regulatory ceiling, the Bank of Spain guidance and standard non-resident lending practice put the typical maximum at 70% for a second home. Asking for more does not just risk a “no”, it slows the whole application.
See your realistic borrowing range across Spanish lenders before you make an offer.
Which Spanish banks lend to UK citizens?
Most major Spanish banks lend to UK non-residents, but they differ in how much they lend, how fast they move, and who they prefer. Santander, Sabadell, CaixaBank, BBVA and UCI all run non-resident mortgage products. There is no single best bank; the right one depends on your profile, your deposit and how quickly you need to complete.
| Bank | Known for | Typical speed |
|---|---|---|
| Banco Sabadell | Non-resident desk, flexibility with varied income | Fastest |
| CaixaBank | Broad product range, strong for employed applicants | Mid |
| Santander | Large non-resident operation, brand familiarity for UK buyers | Mid |
| UCI | Specialist non-resident lender, longer terms | Slowest |
Among Upscore’s British client closings, completed deals are split fairly evenly between Sabadell and CaixaBank, with UCI covering a smaller share. For UK buyers specifically, Sabadell is a genuine front-runner, unlike the US buyer pattern where Portuguese lending partners lead. UCI is the slowest to complete, often taking close to twice as long as Sabadell.
A recurring theme across r/SpainExpats and the MoneySavingExpert overseas board: buyers who approach a single high-street Spanish bank branch directly often get a slower, more conservative offer than those who go through a non-resident desk or a broker who knows which bank fits their profile.
Compare offers from Spanish non-resident lenders side by side, matched to your profile.
What types of Spanish mortgage can UK citizens get?
Spanish banks offer four main mortgage structures to non-residents: fixed-rate, variable-rate, mixed-rate and interest-only. The right one depends on how long you plan to hold the property and your appetite for rate movement.
| Type | How it works | Best for / watch out for |
|---|---|---|
| Fixed-rate | Rate locked for the full term; payment never changes | Certainty for currency-exposed UK buyers |
| Variable-rate | 12-month Euríbor + a fixed bank margin | Cheaper start, but payments move with the index |
| Mixed-rate | Fixed 5–10 years, then variable | Medium-term certainty without the full fixed premium |
| Interest-only / buy-to-let | Rare for non-residents; usually private-bank or rental cases | Higher deposit, stricter assessment |
For most UK buyers of a holiday or second home, a fixed-rate mortgage removes one of the two variables you cannot control. You are already exposed to GBP/EUR currency swings; fixing the rate at least keeps the euro payment constant.
What are current Spanish mortgage rates for non-residents in 2026?
Non-resident mortgage rates in Spain in 2026 sit modestly above resident rates, with fixed deals typically a little higher than the equivalent variable. For wider context, you can compare mortgage rates across Europe. Variable rates are quoted as 12-month Euríbor plus a margin, so the headline rate moves with that index. For a UK buyer the bigger variable is often the GBP/EUR exchange rate, which changes the real cost of every monthly payment.
Because rates move, always check the live 12-month Euríbor before modelling a variable mortgage. [Euríbor 12m: X% — fact-check al publicar.]
A non-resident rate is not a penalty rate. The premium over a resident rate is modest. What moves your rate most is the loan-to-value you request: lower LTV requests are priced more keenly, because the bank carries less risk.
Do you qualify? Eligibility criteria for UK citizens
Qualifying comes down to four things: affordability, age, how your income is documented, and your existing debts. Spanish banks assess income stability and a debt-to-income ratio, not a UK credit score: your Experian or Equifax file does not transfer, and credit scoring in Spain works differently from the UK.
How do banks assess affordability?
Your total monthly debt commitments, including the new mortgage, should sit around 30–35% of net income. UK buyers often ask about the 28/36 rule they know from elsewhere (housing costs under 28% of gross income, total debt under 36%). Spanish banks use a similar but stricter net-income ratio, which is why documenting your existing UK commitments accurately matters.
Is there an age limit?
Most banks require the mortgage to be repaid by age 70–75, which caps the term for older applicants. A buyer in their late 50s or 60s can still borrow, just over a shorter term.
Contrary to the common assumption, retired applicants in Upscore’s data close at close to the same rate as salaried workers. Age shortens the term; it does not shut the door.
Can self-employed UK buyers qualify?
Yes, but the bar is documentation, not income. Self-employed applicants (sole trader or Ltd company director) supply SA302s and full accounts rather than payslips.
Self-employed British buyers close at roughly half the rate of salaried applicants in Upscore’s book, despite often higher incomes. The bottleneck is documentation, not earnings: incomplete or unmodelled accounts are what stall the application.
Does existing debt hurt your application?
Not necessarily. Some existing, well-serviced debt can actually help, because it shows a track record of repayment a Spanish bank can see. What hurts is a high debt-to-income ratio, not the existence of debt itself.
Do joint applications help?
Yes. Presenting two incomes well is one of the highest-leverage things a couple can do.
Joint applicants close at 2.4x the rate of solo buyers, and half of Upscore’s British closings are joint applications.
Find out which Spanish banks work with sole trader and Ltd company income before you apply.
What documents do UK buyers need for a Spanish mortgage?
Spanish banks need to build a picture of your identity, income and existing commitments. Missing or inconsistent paperwork, not income level, is the single most common reason applications stall. The core set differs slightly between employed and self-employed applicants:
| Document | Employed (PAYE) | Self-employed (sole trader / Ltd) |
|---|---|---|
| NIE (foreigner tax number) | Required | Required |
| Passport | Required | Required |
| Income proof | Last 3–6 payslips + P60 | SA302s + full accounts (2 yrs) |
| Bank statements | Last 3–6 months | Last 3–6 months (personal + business) |
| Existing debts | Statements for all loans | Statements for all loans |
| Work status | Employment contract | Proof of self-employment / company docs |
Apply for your NIE early. It is needed to complete and to open the Spanish bank account the mortgage is paid from, and the appointment backlog at Spanish consulates in the UK can add weeks if you leave it late.
How does the application work, step by step?
The process runs in a clear sequence and takes a median of about 4.7 months from first enquiry to signing, depending on the bank. You start before you fly: get a realistic estimate, then your NIE, then an Agreement in Principle.
- Get a realistic borrowing estimate based on your income and the deposit you have.
- Apply for your NIE at a Spanish consulate in the UK or in Spain.
- Get an Agreement in Principle from one or more non-resident lenders.
- Find the property and agree the price (reservation and arras deposit contract).
- Submit the full mortgage application with your document set.
- The bank instructs a valuation (tasación) of the property.
- Receive the binding mortgage offer (FEIN), with a mandatory 10-day reflection period.
- Sign at the notary (escritura), with the mortgage funds released on the day.
Based on Upscore’s closings across the Iberian Peninsula, the typical lead-to-signing timeline is about 4.7 months. Sabadell processes fastest at around 4.3 months; UCI takes nearly double, close to 8 months. Bank choice is one of the biggest levers on how long you wait.
Since the 2019 mortgage law (Ley 5/2019), the binding offer triggers a compulsory 10-day reflection period before you can sign. Build it into your timeline: it is not negotiable, even if everything else is ready.
This is the moment a Finance Passport pays off most. Get your numbers locked before you offer.
Should you use a mortgage broker or go direct to a Spanish bank?
You can go direct, but a non-resident specialist broker compares lenders for you and handles the cross-border paperwork that slows DIY applications. Going direct to one bank gets you one offer. A broker, or a digital platform like Upscore, puts your profile in front of several non-resident desks at once and flags which banks fit your income type before you apply.
| Route | Best for | Trade-off |
|---|---|---|
| Direct to one bank | Spanish speakers with time to negotiate | One offer only; slower for non-residents |
| Specialist broker | Buyers who want options and paperwork handled | Broker fee, offset by better terms |
| Digital platform | Comparing lenders quickly from the UK | You still complete with the chosen bank |
Can you get a UK mortgage for a Spanish property instead?
Generally no. UK high-street banks like HSBC, Lloyds and Barclays do not lend against Spanish property, because they cannot easily take security over a foreign asset. The two routes that do exist are borrowing from a Spanish or specialist non-resident lender (the same way you would when buying property in Spain as a non-resident), or releasing equity from a property you already own in the UK (remortgage or equity release) and buying in cash. Each has different cost and risk implications.
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Go deeper
Which UK banks offer overseas mortgages, and the alternatives that actually work
→
What are the most common mistakes UK buyers make?
The failure points are predictable, and avoidable. Almost all of them happen before the bank ever says no, and the pattern in Upscore’s data is consistent: buyers who get pre-qualified once they have a specific property in mind close far more often than those still exploring.
- Asking for an unrealistically high LTV — successful UK closers asked for around 9 points less than those who did not close.
- Underestimating the cash needed — budget 30–40% deposit plus 10–13% costs, not a UK-style 20%.
- Assuming your UK credit score transfers — it does not; banks assess income and debt ratio.
- Incomplete documents — especially self-employed accounts; this is the top reason applications stall.
- Forgetting the 10-day reflection period in the timeline.
- Ignoring GBP/EUR currency timing — a weak pound can add thousands to the real cost.
“The applicants who complete fastest are the ones who arrive with realistic numbers and complete paperwork. The bank is not trying to catch you out, it is trying to tick boxes. Give it everything it needs in one go.” — Mortgage adviser, non-resident desk
The bottom line: a Spanish mortgage as a UK citizen
If you are a UK citizen, you can get a Spanish mortgage in 2026. Expect to put down 30–40%, borrow at 60–70% LTV as a non-resident, document your income cleanly, and allow around four to five months to complete. Brexit did not take this away; it just made non-resident borrowing the normal path. The buyers who succeed are the ones who set a realistic LTV (around 69%, not 80%+), document income fully, and choose the bank on speed and fit rather than walking into the nearest branch.
Frequently asked questions
Can British citizens get a mortgage in Spain after Brexit?
Yes. UK citizens borrow as non-residents, exactly as before Brexit. Brexit changed how long you can stay in Spain without a visa, not your right to take out a Spanish mortgage.
How much deposit do I need for a Spanish mortgage?
Plan for 30–40% of the property price, because Spanish banks lend 60–70% loan-to-value to non-residents, plus a further 10–13% in taxes and fees.
What is the 28/36 rule?
It is an affordability guide: keep housing costs under 28% of gross income and total debt under 36%. Spanish banks apply a similar net-income debt ratio, usually around 30–35%.
Can I get a UK mortgage for a Spanish property instead?
Generally no. UK high-street banks do not lend against Spanish property because they cannot easily take security over a foreign asset. You borrow from a Spanish or specialist non-resident lender, or release equity from a UK property and buy in cash.
How difficult is it to get a Spanish mortgage as a UK citizen?
It is straightforward if your expectations are realistic. The two things that make it hard are requesting too high an LTV and supplying incomplete documents, especially for self-employed applicants.
Can a 70-year-old get a 30-year Spanish mortgage?
No. Most Spanish banks require the mortgage to be repaid by age 70–75, which caps the term for older applicants.
Does my UK credit score affect a Spanish mortgage?
No. Your UK credit file does not transfer. Spanish banks assess income stability, your debt-to-income ratio and the property valuation instead.




