How Property is Valued in Spain: Tasacion, Market Price and the Appraisal Gap (2026)
Spanish property valuation: bank tasacion, certified pericial valuation and market asking price, the appraisal gap and Q2 2026 Tinsa data near the nominal peak.
Spanish property valuation is not one number but three: a bank tasacion hipotecaria that follows a regulated methodology under Orden ECO/805/2003, a certified tasacion pericial produced by an independent architect for tax or legal disputes, and the market asking price a seller or agent sets. The gap between them, typically 5 to 15% in a rising market, decides how much a bank will lend and how much cash a buyer must find. Understanding which valuation applies when, who produces it, and what methodology governs it is the difference between a smooth purchase and a stalled mortgage.
What is the bank tasacion hipotecaria?
A tasacion hipotecaria is the regulated valuation a Spanish bank uses to set the maximum mortgage loan. It must be produced by a sociedad de tasacion homologada, a valuation society approved and supervised by the Banco de España, following the methodology in Orden ECO/805/2003. The order, published in the BOE on 9 April 2003 and updated by Orden ECM/599/2025 (dated 10 June 2025, effective 12 August 2025), defines four value concepts that are routinely conflated but are legally distinct.
The valor de mercado (VM) is the price a willing seller and independent buyer would agree in an arm’s length transaction, with a normal timeframe and no prior relationship between the parties. The valor hipotecario (VH) is a prudential derivative of market value that explicitly excludes elementos especulativos: short-term price speculation, expected changes in buildable area and extraordinary factors whose future is uncertain. The valor de tasacion (VT) is the formal figure the approved tasadora certifies for the specific financial purpose. The valor de reemplazamiento neto (VRN) is the construction cost minus depreciation, used as a cross-check for unusual properties. The prudential principle in Article 3 of the order requires that where two equally probable scenarios exist, the valuer must choose the lower value.
The June 2025 amendment (Orden ECM/599/2025, effective 12 August 2025) added a sustainability principle: the valuer must now consider environmental and climate risks as a factor in long-term property value. This is the first material change to the valuation standard since the order’s original publication and reflects the growing weight of energy ratings and flood-risk exposure in mortgage lending decisions.
Who can produce a valid tasacion?
Only a sociedad de tasacion homologada registered with and supervised by the Banco de España may produce a tasacion hipotecaria. The Banco de España requires each firm to be a sociedad anonima with minimum capital of EUR 300,000 fully paid in nominative shares, to limit its corporate purpose to valuation, and to submit its procedural manual for central bank approval. Banks once owned their own tasadoras, but that was prohibited to remove conflicts of interest, and the number of approved firms has fallen from nearly 200 a decade ago to a smaller, more tightly supervised group today.
The list includes Tinsa (the largest, conducting over 25% of all annual valuations in Spain from a database of more than 6 million historic valuations), Sociedad de Tasacion, Gesvalt, CBRE Valuations, Arquitasa, Tecnitasa and others. Banks are legally required to accept any tasacion from any approved firm, regardless of which one the borrower commissions. A buyer can shop around and use Tinsa, Sociedad de Tasacion or any other approved firm, and the bank cannot refuse the report or charge an internal review fee. The report is valid for six months from the date of issue, after which a fresh valuation is required. Within two years of the original, the same firm can issue an actualizacion (revision) at a lower cost than a full new report.
How much does a tasacion cost?
A mortgage tasacion through Tinsa starts from around EUR 170 with a 15% online discount, and the firm runs periodic promotions at around EUR 130 with a 25% discount. The cost varies by property type, location and complexity but is broadly consistent across approved firms because the underlying work, a physical inspection by a tecnico competente, document verification and a market comparison study, is standardised by the ECO order. The turnaround is typically three to five business days after the inspection visit. The buyer pays the tasacion fee directly, not the bank, and the report belongs to the buyer.
For a certified tasacion pericial, used in tax disputes or legal proceedings, the cost is typically EUR 150 to EUR 600 depending on the property’s size and value. This is a different product, produced by a perito arquitecto (a chartered architect registered with their Colegio de Arquitectos), and it is not regulated by Orden ECO/805/2003. The pericial valuation has no statutory validity period but is most persuasive when recent, ideally within six to twelve months of the proceeding.
Why does the valuation come in below the asking price?
The appraisal gap, the difference between the tasacion and the asking price, is the single most common reason a Spanish mortgage approval stalls. The valor hipotecario under Orden ECO/805/2003 is prudential by design. Article 4 defines elementos especulativos as data or offers arising from short-term speculative behaviour, expectations of a change of use or buildability, or extraordinary factors whose future is not assured, and the valuer must exclude them. In a market where prices are rising rapidly, asking prices on portals reflect seller expectation, sometimes amplified by recent headline transactions. The tasacion, by contrast, uses comparable real transactions, the physical condition of the property, its legal status and its sustainable long-term prospects.
The Banco de España defines two ratios that track this gap. The loan-to-value (LTV) ratio is the mortgage principal divided by the appraised value of the property. The loan-to-price (LTP) ratio is the mortgage principal divided by the price recorded in the sale deed. The bank lends against the lower of the tasacion or the purchase price. If a buyer agrees EUR 500,000 for a property that tasaciones at EUR 450,000, the bank calculates 80% of EUR 450,000, not EUR 500,000. The buyer must find EUR 140,000 in cash instead of EUR 100,000, a 40% increase in the deposit. This gap is most acute in fast-rising micro-markets where asking prices have outpaced registered transaction prices, and it is the mechanism by which prudential valuation acts as a brake on credit growth.
| Valuation type | Purpose | Who produces it | Regulating standard | Typical cost | Validity |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tasacion hipotecaria | Mortgage lending | Banco de España-approved tasadora | Orden ECO/805/2003 | From EUR 170 (Tinsa) | 6 months |
| Tasacion pericial | Tax disputes, legal, inheritance | Independent perito arquitecto | Civil procedure and tax law | EUR 150 to EUR 600 | No statutory limit |
| Market asking price | Sale listing | Seller or estate agent | None (commercial) | Free to set | Until sold or revised |
What LTV will a Spanish bank offer in 2026?
Spanish prudential norms set a recommended maximum loan-to-value of 80% for a primary residence and 60 to 70% for a second home or investment property. Banks can exceed 80% but must justify the risk internally, apply stricter provisioning and report to the Banco de España. In practice, the market has been moving in the opposite direction. According to Banco de España data for Q1 2026, the average LTV on new mortgages was 64.2%, and the share of mortgages with LTV above 80% fell to 10.5%. The proportion of high-risk mortgages (LTV above 100%) has held steady since the 2020 pandemic but remains a small minority of new originations.
The INE reported 40,010 new mortgages on residential property in April 2026, with an average loan amount of EUR 173,331 and an average interest rate of 2.90%. These figures, drawn from the Colegio de Registradores’ property registry data, show a market where mortgage volumes are growing modestly year-on-year (up 2.3%) but banks are financing a smaller share of each property, pushing more cash onto the buyer. The Banco de España has signalled it may tighten limits further on mortgages exceeding 80% LTV, which would widen the appraisal gap’s practical impact.
What is a tasacion pericial and when do you need one?
A tasacion pericial is a certified valuation produced by a perito arquitecto, an independent chartered architect, for non-mortgage purposes: inheritance distribution, divorce settlement, expropriation compensation, insurance claims and tax disputes. It is not governed by Orden ECO/805/2003 but by civil procedure rules and tax law. The most common use is the tasacion pericial contradictoria, a procedure under article 135 of the Ley General Tributaria that lets a taxpayer challenge the valor de referencia (the cadastral reference value) that the tax administration uses to calculate transfer tax (ITP) or inheritance tax (ISD). If the administration’s value is higher than the actual market value, the owner overpays tax, and the pericial contradictoria provides the legal mechanism to contest it.
The distinction matters because the two valuations use different methods and can produce different numbers for the same property on the same day. A tasacion hipotecaria uses the comparable transaction method prescribed by the ECO order, adjusted for the physical and legal condition of the property. A tasacion pericial can use any recognised valuation method (comparative, cost, income) and is tailored to the specific legal question. A buyer who needs a mortgage gets a tasacion hipotecaria. A seller who disputes a tax assessment gets a tasacion pericial. A divorcing couple splitting assets may need both.
How does the tasacion fit into the buying process?
The tasacion sits late in the Spanish buying process, after the arras reservation contract is signed but before the notary completion. Once the buyer and seller have signed the arras and the buyer has applied for a mortgage, the bank commissions the tasacion (or the buyer commissions it from an approved firm and submits it to the bank). The valuer inspects the property, checks the nota simple from the Registro de la Propiedad, the certificado de eficiencia energetica and the situacion urbanistica, and produces a report within three to five business days.
If the tasacion meets or exceeds the purchase price, the mortgage proceeds at the agreed LTV. If it falls short, the buyer faces three options: increase the cash deposit to cover the gap, renegotiate the price with the seller, or withdraw and forfeit the arras deposit. This is why experienced Spanish property buyers commission a pre-sale indicative valuation or study comparable registered transactions before making an offer, rather than discovering the gap after signing arras. The cost of buying property in Spain runs to 12 to 15% on top of the price, so an unexpected valuation shortfall on top of that cost stack is a serious cash-flow problem.
What drives the appraisal gap in 2026?
The Tinsa IMIE index reported an average Spanish property price of EUR 2,071 per square metre in Q2 2026, up 15.2% year-on-year, the highest annual rate since the third quarter of 2006 and now within 0.4% of the 2007 nominal peak. The quarterly advance was 3.7%. The growth has intensified every quarter without interruption since Q4 2024, and the price is 11.8 percentage points above general inflation, reflecting a supply shortage that the Tinsa studies director Cristina Arias attributes to strong population growth meeting scarce new-build output. In areas of high demand, the annual increase is steeper: metropolitan areas and coastal provinces lead, with the Comunidad Valenciana at 20.7% and Castilla-La Mancha at 20.3%. When asking prices rise faster than registered transaction prices, the appraisal gap widens, because the tasacion is anchored to real comparable sales while the asking price is anchored to seller expectation.
Several factors widen the gap in 2026. The Banco de España’s macroprudential posture is tightening, with explicit consideration of further limits on high-LTV mortgages. An IMF Selected Issues paper on Spain (May 2026) used loan-level data from the European DataWarehouse to assess how LTV, loan-to-income and loan-service-to-income ratios at origination affect mortgage default probability, recommending borrower-based macroprudential measures, which if adopted would further constrain high-LTV lending. The June 2025 sustainability amendment to the ECO order (effective 12 August 2025) means valuers now factor climate and energy-performance risk, which can lower the valor hipotecario on older, inefficient properties relative to their asking price. And the gap between asking and closing prices, visible in the difference between portal listings and notarial transaction data, is widest in the micro-markets where foreign buyer demand is strongest. A buyer on the Costa del Sol should treat the non-resident mortgage landscape and the tasacion as two halves of the same equation: the mortgage ceiling is set by the valuation, not the price you agreed.
What should a buyer do before the tasacion?
The most effective pre-tasacion step is a comparable transaction study using the Colegio de Registradores’ open data or a Tinsa market report for the specific zone. If the agreed price is above the comparable registered transactions, the tasacion will likely come in below the price and the buyer should either negotiate the price down or budget for a larger deposit. Sellers who understand this dynamic can commission a pre-sale indicative valuation to set a defensible asking price, which is what the selling property in Spain guide recommends as the first step in pricing a listing. The tasacion is a mechanical, regulated process, not a negotiation, so the best leverage is before the offer is made, not after the report lands.
This guide is general information, not legal or tax advice. Rules change and individual circumstances differ. Verify current requirements with an independent lawyer (abogado) or tax advisor (gestor/asesor fiscal) before acting.
Frequently asked questions
- What is a tasacion hipotecaria in Spain?
- A tasacion hipotecaria is a regulated mortgage valuation performed by a society of valuation approved by the Banco de España. It follows the methodology in Orden ECO/805/2003, which defines the valor hipotecario as a prudential figure that excludes speculative elements. The bank uses it to set the maximum loan amount, lending against the lower of the tasacion or the purchase price. A tasacion from an approved firm like Tinsa or Sociedad de Tasacion costs from around EUR 170 and is valid for six months.
- Why does the bank valuation come in lower than the asking price?
- The valor hipotecario under Orden ECO/805/2003 is a prudential value. It must consider long-term durability, local market conditions and current use, and it must explicitly exclude speculative elements such as short-term price spikes or expected changes in buildable area. Asking prices on portals reflect seller expectation and sometimes market euphoria, so the tasacion typically lands 5 to 15% below the listing price, especially in fast-rising markets.
- What is the difference between tasacion and tasacion pericial?
- A tasacion hipotecaria is for mortgage lending and must be done by a Banco de España-approved tasadora following Orden ECO/805/2003. A tasacion pericial is a certified valuation by an independent perito arquitecto (a chartered architect) used for tax disputes, inheritance, divorce settlements and legal proceedings. The pericial valuation can challenge the tax administration's reference value through the tasacion pericial contradictoria procedure under article 135 of the Ley General Tributaria.
- How much can a bank lend against a Spanish property?
- Spanish prudential norms set a recommended maximum loan-to-value of 80% for a primary residence and 60 to 70% for a second home or investment property. The Banco de España reported that the average LTV on new mortgages in Q1 2026 was 64.2%, and only 10.5% of new mortgages exceeded 80% LTV. Banks lend against the lower of the tasacion or the registered purchase price, so a low valuation directly reduces the loan.
- Who can produce a valid tasacion in Spain?
- Only a sociedad de tasacion homologada (approved valuation society) registered with and supervised by the Banco de España may produce a tasacion hipotecaria. The list includes Tinsa, Sociedad de Tasacion, Gesvalt, CBRE Valuations, Arquitasa and others. Banks are legally obliged to accept any tasacion from any approved firm, regardless of which one the borrower commissions. The Banco de España supervises their procedures, solvency and ownership structure.
- How long is a Spanish property tasacion valid for?
- A mortgage tasacion is valid for six months from the date of issue, after which the bank requires a fresh valuation. The Orden ECO/805/2003 also allows an actualizacion de tasacion (a revision by the same firm) within two years of the original report, which is cheaper than a full new valuation. For tax purposes, a tasacion pericial does not have a statutory expiry but is most persuasive when recent.
Sources and data
- Orden ECO/805/2003, de 27 de marzo, sobre normas de valoracion de bienes inmuebles y de determinados derechos para ciertas finalidades financieras — BOE (Agencia Estatal Boletin Oficial del Estado)
- Orden ECM/599/2025, de 10 de junio, por la que se modifica la Orden ECO/805/2003 (sostenibilidad en valoracion) — BOE (Agencia Estatal Boletin Oficial del Estado)
- Limits and conditions on lending (LTV and LTP definitions, macroprudential framework) — Banco de España
- Precio Vivienda España 2026 (Tinsa IMIE Mercados Locales, Q2 2026 data) — Tinsa Tasaciones Inmobiliarias
- IMIE Mercados Locales 2º trimestre 2026 — Tinsa Tasaciones Inmobiliarias
- The Case for Borrower-Based Macroprudential Measures in Spain (IMF Selected Issues Paper, May 2026) — International Monetary Fund
- Estadistica de hipotecas, Abril 2026 (notas de prensa) — Instituto Nacional de Estadística (INE)
- Tasacion online de viviendas y otros inmuebles (pricing, process and ECO 805/2003 reference) — Tinsa Tasaciones Inmobiliarias