Costs, Taxes & Financing

Ongoing Costs After Buying a Property in Mallorca

Which annual and monthly costs international buyers should realistically plan for after the notary appointment.

The purchase price is only the most visible part of a property in Mallorca. After the handover, ongoing costs begin: municipal taxes, community fees, insurance, utilities, maintenance, and reserves. For international buyers, it is especially important to view these costs not just as a monthly budget, but as the property's operating system: what must be paid annually, what fluctuates seasonally, and which amounts protect against unpleasant surprises?

1. IBI: the annual property tax

The IBI is the Spanish property tax on real estate. The basis of assessment is not the purchase price, but the valor catastral, i.e., the cadastral value. This is maintained by the cadastre; the municipality sets the tax rate, manages the collection, or has it collected through bodies such as the ATIB.

For urban properties, the legal framework is generally between 0.4% and 1.10% of the relevant cadastral value. In practice, IBI in Mallorca is often significantly lower than the property tax burden in many Northern European markets, but it can become noticeable for large plots, sea-view locations, or very high cadastral values.

2. Comunidad: ongoing costs in residential complexes

Anyone buying an apartment, townhouse, or villa in a homeowners' association regularly pays Comunidad. These contributions finance common costs such as cleaning, elevator, lighting, garden, pool, underground parking, building insurance, management, minor repairs, and security services.

According to the Ley de Propiedad Horizontal, owners must contribute to general costs according to their share. Non-use of a communal service does not generally exempt from payment.

3. Insurance

Building or contents insurance is not always legally required for an unencumbered property. With a mortgage, banks typically require at least coverage against damage to the building. Regardless, a solid policy in Mallorca makes sense: water pipes, storms, glass, electrical damage, liability, and damage to third parties can be expensive.

4. Property management and keyholding

Those who do not live permanently in Mallorca often need local support. This can be simple key management or comprehensive property management with inspection visits, coordination of tradespeople, invoice verification, airing, mail handling, emergency contact, and preparation of the property before arrival.

5. Pool, garden, and outdoor areas

Pool and garden are among the cost items that buyers often underestimate. In Mallorca, many systems run year-round: pool pump, chemicals, filters, irrigation, pruning, pest control, and repairs to equipment or terrace surfaces.

6. Security

For second homes, security is often a practical cost item. A simple alarm system with an app may suffice; remote fincas or high-end villas often require monitoring, maintenance, cameras, motion detectors, outdoor lighting, and local response services.

7. Electricity, water, and internet

Consumption costs vary greatly depending on usage. Air conditioning, electric water heating, pool pump, dehumidifiers, and irrigation can significantly increase the cost of a seemingly inexpensive property in summer. For electricity, it is worth comparing tariffs. For internet, buyers should check before signing whether fiber optic is actually available at the address.

8. Maintenance and reserves

The most important ongoing cost item does not appear on any monthly bill: your own reserve. Mallorca properties are exposed to sun, salt air, humidity, limescale, wind, and intense summer seasons. Air conditioning units, windows, seals, roofs, terraces, pool technology, and natural stone require regular attention.

A well-located apartment after purchase can roughly involve 4,000 to 12,000 euros in ongoing costs per year. A villa with pool, garden, and external care can quickly reach 15,000 to 50,000 euros per year, without major renovations or financing costs.

Checklist before purchase

  • Check the latest IBI receipt and cadastral data.
  • Request the Comunidad budget, minutes, reserve fund status, and special assessments.
  • Request confirmation that no community debts exist.
  • Review electricity and water bills from the last 12 months.
  • Check pool, garden, alarm, and maintenance contracts.
  • Clarify insurance coverage for vacancy, rental, and liability.
  • Firmly plan your own annual maintenance reserve.

Conclusion: The best Mallorca property is not only the one you can buy, but the one you can comfortably maintain.

Sources

Thomas Mallorca Real Estate S.L.

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