Usufruct and Rights of Use
How international buyers and families in Spain separate ownership and use, register rights cleanly, and avoid typical inheritance and tax risks.
The Spanish usufructo largely corresponds to the German Nießbrauch: one person may use a property and draw income from it, while another person remains the owner. For international Mallorca buyers, this separation is particularly interesting for family purchases, succession planning, second homes, and securing a spouse or parent.
Usufructo and nuda propiedad
The usufructuario is the usufructuary. He may inhabit, use, rent out the property and receive the rental income, but must generally maintain its form and substance. The nudo propietario holds the nuda propiedad, i.e., bare ownership. Only when usufruct and bare ownership merge again in one hand does the full title, pleno dominio, arise.
Lifelong or limited
A usufruct can be granted for life, for a fixed term, or subject to conditions. Special limits apply to legal entities; a usufruct in favor of a company or corporation may generally not exceed 30 years under the Código Civil.
Succession planning for families
Typical arrangements are: parents transfer or sell the nuda propiedad to children and retain the usufruct; spouses secure a lifelong right of use for each other; or buyers acquire separate positions from the outset. However, this structure does not replace comprehensive succession planning because Spanish property law, inheritance law, matrimonial property law, tax residence, and home country law must be aligned.
Rights and obligations
The usufructuary may use the property and generally rent it out, but must treat it carefully and bear ordinary repairs. The bare owner may sell or encumber the nuda propiedad but may not impair the usufruct. IBI, community fees, insurance, pool and garden maintenance, rental, and major renovations should be expressly regulated.
Land register entry
A usufruct on a Mallorca property should be notarized and entered in the Registro de la Propiedad. The Nota Simple shows whether a property is encumbered with a usufruct or other right of use. A private contract without clear registration is risky in cross-border family structures.
Valuation for taxes
For Spanish taxes, the usufruct is valued according to legal formulas. For a fixed-term usufruct, the tax value is 2% of the property value per year of duration, maximum 70%. For a lifelong usufruct, the rule of thumb is 89 minus the age of the usufructuary, with a minimum value of 10% and a maximum of 70%. The nuda propiedad is valued accordingly at the residual value.
Typical risks
Anyone who buys only the nuda propiedad does not buy immediate use. Further risks arise from rental, tourist use, cost disputes, foreign inheritance tax, compulsory portion rights, and later cancellation of the usufruct. Therefore, the structure should be clearly reflected in the purchase contract, will, tax planning, and land register.
Sources
- Código Civil, artículos 467 y siguientes: usufructo, uso y habitación BOE - Boletín Oficial del Estado
- Usufructo y desmembramiento de la propiedad: concepto y definiciones Agencia Tributaria
- Derechos reales de uso y disfrute: valoración de usufructos Agencia Tributaria
- Preguntas frecuentes sobre el valor de referencia Dirección General del Catastro
- Registro de la Propiedad: información registral y certificaciones Registradores de España
- ¿Qué es el usufructo? Consejo General del Notariado
- Modelo 653: consolidación de dominio por extinción de usufructo Agència Tributària de les Illes Balears (ATIB)