Power of Attorney to sell a property in Spain from abroad

Poder notarial para vender una propiedad en España desde el extranjero

Selling a home, an apartment, or any real estate property in Spain while residing abroad is a very common legal and commercial situation. Distance, work commitments, or travel restrictions are not an impediment to completing the transaction. Spanish civil legislation allows this operation to be structured 100% legally and securely through an international power of attorney.

In this content, we will detail how to grant a power of attorney for purchase and sale from outside Spain, the available legal routes, the fundamental validity requirements (such as the Hague Apostille), and the critical errors you must avoid to ensure that the signing of the public deed before the Spanish notary is an absolute success.

Power of Attorney to Sell Real Estate from Abroad: What is it and what does it entail?

A power of attorney is a public document through which a person (called the principal) voluntarily authorizes another trusted individual (called the attorney-in-fact or representative) to act on their behalf and representation in certain legal acts or transactions within Spanish territory. When the goal is to sell a house in Spain while living abroad, the ideal document is a Special Power of Attorney. Unlike a general power of attorney—which grants broad and vague powers over an individual’s entire estate—a special power of attorney meticulously defines the permitted actions, restricting its scope exclusively to the purchase and sale of the specific property and the related administrative or financial procedures.

Legal Routes to Create a Power of Attorney Abroad

The Spanish legal framework recognizes the validity of powers of attorney granted outside its borders, provided they are processed through one of the following two channels:

The Spanish Consulate or Embassy (Recommended)

Spanish consular offices abroad possess legitimate notarial functions. The Consul acts exactly like a notary within Spain.
  • Main advantage: The document is drafted directly in Spanish, aligns perfectly with the Spanish Civil Code, and is incorporated into the national protocol records.
  • Additional procedures: None. It does not require subsequent legalizations or translations. It is directly valid in Spain.
  • Disadvantage: Waiting lists and obtaining prior appointments at certain high-demand consulates can delay the process by several weeks or months.

Local Foreign Notary (Private Alternative)

If you do not have a consulate nearby or need to resolve the matter urgently, you can go to a public notary in the country where you are located (e.g., a Notary Public in the United Kingdom or the United States, or a Notaire in France).
  • Main advantage: Greater agility in scheduling appointments and signing the document locally.
  • Critical validity requirements: For this document to have legal force when selling a property in Spain as a non-resident, it must pass the strict principle of equivalence of functions and comply with two international requirements: the Apostille and translation.

Validity of the International Power of Attorney: Essential Requirements

If you choose the foreign notary route, the document will arrive in Spain without automatic validity. To remedy this and ensure the signing of the future deed of sale, it is mandatory to complete the following steps:
Legal Requirement What does it consist of? Who issues or performs it?
The Hague Apostille An international certification that legalizes the authenticity of the signature and the authority of the foreign notary. It applies if the country signed the Hague Convention of 1961. The competent government or judicial authority of the country of origin (e.g., the Foreign Office or Secretary of State).
Legalization via Diplomatic Channels An alternative procedure to the Apostille, applicable only if the country of origin is NOT a signatory to the Hague Convention. It is a longer and more bureaucratic process. The local Ministry of Foreign Affairs and the Spanish Consulate in that country.
Sworn Translation An obligatory official translation if the power of attorney was drafted in a language other than Spanish or the co-official languages of Spain. A Sworn Translator appointed and authorized by the Spanish Ministry of Foreign Affairs, European Union, and Cooperation.
The Supreme Court of Spain requires that the foreign notary satisfies the judgment of capacity (the “principle of equivalence”). This means the notary must expressly state in the text that they have identified the principal and that the principal possesses the necessary mental faculties to grant the document.

Drafting the Power of Attorney to Sell a Property from Abroad

A common mistake that halts real estate sales in Spanish notary offices is the ambiguous or insufficient drafting of the power of attorney. To ensure a smooth transfer when signing a sale with a power of attorney, the document must explicitly authorize the following faculties:
  1. Unambiguous identification of the property: The exact address, physical description, and, if possible, its land registry details (Property Number, Volume, Book, Folio) and the Catastral Reference (Property Tax ID) must be stated.
  2. Authority to set prices and conditions: Authorize the attorney-in-fact to agree on the sale price (or set a minimum authorized price), accept payment terms, and sign prior deposit agreements (contratos de arras).
  3. Collection and management of funds: Expressly empower them to receive checks, open or manage bank accounts in the principal’s name in Spain, and route the money from the sale.
  4. Cancellation of liens and charges: If the property has an active mortgage, the power of attorney must enable the attorney-in-fact to appear before the banking entity, liquidate the debt, and simultaneously sign the mortgage cancellation deed.

Taxes and Fiscal Obligations of Non-Residents

Granting a power of attorney does not modify the tax obligations arising from the property transfer. When executing the sale of an apartment in Spain from abroad, specific regulations for non-resident sellers come into play:

3% Withholding Tax (IRNR)

By law, the buyer (whether resident or not) is obliged to withhold 3% of the total sale price and pay it to the Spanish Tax Agency on account of the seller’s Non-Resident Income Tax (IRNR). The attorney-in-fact must coordinate the receipt of the proof of this payment (Form 211).

Tax on the Increase in Value of Urban Land (Municipal Capital Gains Tax / Plusvalía)

This is a local tax accrued in favor of the Town Hall where the property is located. Even though the seller is abroad, the attorney-in-fact is usually responsible for settling this tax within 30 days following the signing.

Obtaining the Special Non-Resident NIE

Foreign sellers (or Spanish citizens who have lost their tax residency and lack a valid DNI) need to have a Foreigner Identity Number (NIE) or a valid DNI for the notary to authorize the deed. The power of attorney itself can include the faculty for the attorney-in-fact to request this NIE on their behalf before the Police or Immigration Office.

Frequently Asked Questions About a Power of Attorney to Sell a Property from Abroad

Can the attorney-in-fact keep the money from the sale?

Legally, the attorney-in-fact acts on behalf of and for the account of the principal. The money from the sale belongs entirely to the property owner. To avoid fraud or malpractice, it is advised to include a clause in the power of attorney requiring that payment be made via direct bank transfer or certified check to an account whose sole holder is the principal, thereby preventing the attorney-in-fact from collecting cash or diverting funds.

How long is an international power of attorney valid?

As a general rule under Spanish law, powers of attorney do not have an automatic expiration date unless expressly stipulated in the document itself (e.g., “this power of attorney expires on December 31, 2026”). However, the power of attorney is terminated immediately upon revocation by the principal, or due to the death or supervening incapacity of either party (principal or attorney-in-fact).

How much does it cost to make a power of attorney to sell a home?

The cost varies depending on the chosen route. At the Spanish Consulate, notary fees are regulated by the consular tariff and usually range between 30 and 60 euros. If you choose a private foreign notary, the price will depend on the professional’s free fees in that country, to which you must add the cost of the Hague Apostille (variable depending on the state or country) and the rate for the sworn translation in Spain (usually between 40 and 80 euros per page).

Is it necessary to send the original document to Spain?

Yes. Simple copies or scanned documents sent by email are not valid for signing a public deed of sale for real estate. The attorney-in-fact must present the original certified copy of the power of attorney to the Spanish notary in physical paper format, duly apostilled and translated, if applicable.

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