Spanish Will for Mallorca Real Estate
Why international owners should consider a Spanish will and how it interacts with a will in their home country.
As an international owner of a property on Mallorca, you should not leave estate planning to your heirs. A Spanish will is not mandatory in every case, but it can significantly simplify later proceedings in Spain. It is especially important that it is coordinated with existing wills in the home country.
Why a Spanish will can be useful
A Mallorca property is located in Spain. Therefore, after death, heirs must regularly carry out Spanish probate steps: proof of heir status, notarial acceptance of inheritance, tax declaration, registration in the Land Register, and often bank or utility contracts. If a Spanish notarial will exists, the heirs usually have a locally understandable document that Spanish notaries, banks, and registers can immediately classify.
The most common route is the testamento abierto, an open notarial will. The notary adapts the declaration to the formal requirements, keeps the original, and reports the existence of the will to the central Spanish register.
What the Spanish will does not automatically solve
A Spanish will does not replace all estate planning in the home country. It also does not determine Spanish inheritance tax, municipal capital gains tax, or the practical valuation of the property. These issues run parallel to the inheritance planning and should be examined separately.
A will for Spain should often be expressly limited to Spanish assets, for example, to properties, bank accounts, and rights in Spain. This avoids an unintended later Spanish will overriding provisions in the home country.
Relationship with the will in the home country
Many owners already have a will in Germany, Austria, Switzerland, the United Kingdom, or another home state. An additional Spanish will can be useful if both documents are properly coordinated. Critical are blanket revocation clauses that revoke "all previous wills."
Choice of law under the EU Succession Regulation
For deaths since August 17, 2015, the EU Succession Regulation is relevant in many cross-border inheritance cases. The basic rule is the law of the state of habitual residence at the time of death. However, the regulation allows a choice of law in favor of the law of a state whose nationality the person holds. This choice should be expressly made in a disposition of property upon death.
Registro General de Actos de Última Voluntad
After notarization, the Spanish notary reports the will to the Registro General de Actos de Última Voluntad. There, not the content but the fact that a will was made, with date and notary, is published. After death, entitled persons can request a certificate and determine which will was last registered.
Practical advantages
- Faster localization: The central register identifies the notary who notarized the will.
- Less translation effort: The will is tailored to Spanish proceedings.
- Clearer jurisdiction: Spanish notaries can build on a local document.
- Better planning: Choice of law, heirs, legacies, and usufruct rights can be formulated to suit the Spanish property.
Conclusion
For owners of a Mallorca property, a Spanish will can be a practical tool. However, the benefit only arises if the document is not created in isolation. Crucial are coordination with the home country will, a conscious choice of law, and clear wording to avoid conflicting dispositions.
Sources
- Quiero hacer testamento ante notario, ¿qué pasos debo dar y dónde se quedará guardado cuando yo falte? Consejo General del Notariado
- Certificado de Actos de Última Voluntad Ministerio de Justicia
- Registro General de Actos de Última Voluntad Ministerio de Justicia
- Código Civil Boletín Oficial del Estado
- Regulation (EU) No 650/2012 on matters of succession EUR-Lex / European Union
- Which country’s law applies? Spain: Wills and successions European e-Justice Portal