Whether you are already settled in the wider Catalan region or planning to relocate here, engaging a lawyer in Barcelona who understands both Spanish law and the specific rules that apply locally makes a real difference.
Catalonia operates under its own succession framework, its own tax regulations, and one of the most closely regulated property environments in Spain — and getting your legal structure right from the start means fewer problems later. If you also decide to purchase property in the city or the surrounding area, your lawyer can coordinate that process alongside your residency or tax planning.
Our team works in English, fees are clear upfront, and the advice is direct.
Why Local Legal Knowledge Matters in Barcelona
Barcelona sits in one of Spain's most regulated property environments, where the legal value of an asset depends on far more than its location or floor plan. Rent caps and tensioned-market rules can directly limit what you charge as a landlord.
Tourism-licence restrictions — covering short-term lets known locally as VUT (Vivienda de Uso Turístico) — can make the difference between a compliant income-generating asset and an illegal one. Urban-planning affectations, community-of-owners constraints, and title issues buried in the Land Registry are easy to miss but expensive to fix after you have signed.
For cross-border owners, Cataluña's succession and inheritance tax framework adds a further layer of planning that has to be local, precise, and commercially aware.
Property Law & Conveyancing
In Barcelona, conveyancing has to go well beyond the deed. Before you commit, you need a clear picture of title status, any charges registered against the property (known as cargas), community-of-owners rules, and any planning or use restrictions that could affect value or future use. That includes checking whether the asset sits in a tensioned rental zone, whether a tourism licence is transferable, and whether any renovation work has the correct planning approvals.
Missing any of these points at the due-diligence stage can cost significantly more to resolve later. You can read more about buying property in Barcelona to get a clearer sense of the process before your first consultation.
Oscar handles property law and conveyancing matters for clients across Barcelona and the broader Catalan market — view Oscar's profile to find out more.
Inheritance, Wills & Succession
Catalan succession law operates separately from the national Spanish framework, and that distinction matters when a Barcelona property passes to heirs. Catalonia applies its own rules on forced heirship, usufruct rights, and the tax reliefs available to beneficiaries — and those rules can produce very different outcomes to what your family might expect based on experience elsewhere.
Where heirs or assets sit in different countries, the interaction between Catalan law and EU Succession Regulation 650/2012 adds another layer that needs careful planning. Without a coordinated structure in place, you risk unintended co-ownership, avoidable succession tax exposure, and delays in transferring the property cleanly to the people you intend to benefit.
A well-drafted Spanish will, aligned with your wider estate plan, is the most cost-effective step you can take. Oscar advises on inheritance, wills, and succession planning for international clients across the region — view Oscar's profile for more details.
Immigration, Visas & Residency
If you are relocating to Barcelona for a long stay, remote work, or a family move, your residency pathway needs to be chosen carefully and coordinated with how you intend to hold or use property here. Spain offers several routes depending on your situation: the Golden Visa for qualifying investment, the Non-Lucrative Visa for those with passive income, the Digital Nomad Visa for remote workers, and standard working or self-employed visa routes.
Mismatched residency and ownership planning — for example, holding a property in your own name while your residence status is still unresolved — can create complications with tax liability, mortgage access, and future sale proceeds.
Raffaele advises on immigration, visas, and residency matters for clients moving to Barcelona and the wider region — view Raffaele's profile to find out more.
Family Law
When a Barcelona property is tied to a separation, divorce, or parenting arrangement, the legal work has to protect both occupation rights and future ownership outcomes at the same time. Under Catalan family law, the rules on how the marital home is treated on separation differ from those applied in other Spanish regions, particularly where children are involved.
The right approach is to align the family agreement with the property structure early, so the home does not become a source of ongoing dispute. That means addressing occupation, mortgage liability, and eventual transfer or sale in a single coordinated plan rather than dealing with each issue separately as it arises.
Albert handles family law matters across Barcelona, including separation, divorce, and child arrangements — view Albert's profile for more details.
Business & Corporate Law
If you are holding a Barcelona property through a company, launching a short-term rental vehicle, or structuring a broader investment around Catalan real estate, the corporate framework has to fit the local regulatory environment from the outset. That means choosing the right entity — whether a Sociedad Limitada (SL) or an alternative structure — and making sure your contracts, VAT obligations, and compliance duties are documented clearly before the business starts operating.
Barcelona's tourism and rental regulations impose specific licence and reporting requirements on corporate landlords, and the tax treatment of income generated through a company differs materially from individual ownership. Getting the structure right at formation is far simpler than correcting it later. You can read more about starting a business in Spain as a useful starting point.
Employment & Labour Law
When your move to Barcelona is connected to a local posting, a relocation package, or a workplace dispute, the employment side of the arrangement can directly affect your tax residence status, your housing situation, and your timeline.
Spanish employment law sets clear rules on contracts, severance pay, and termination rights, but those rules interact with your residency position and any property commitments you have already made. If your employment contract is being restructured or ended, the timing of that change can have real consequences for your tax liability in Spain and in your home country. Keeping your employment position and your property or residency planning aligned means one decision does not quietly undermine the other.
Raffaele advises on employment and labour law matters for international clients based in and around Barcelona.
Civil Litigation & Disputes
Barcelona property disputes tend to involve hidden defects discovered after completion, lease conflicts with tenants or landlords, community-of-owners disagreements, or a counterparty who has failed to perform under a contract. Any of those issues can directly affect the value, use, or resale timing of a high-value asset.
The arras contract — the preliminary deposit agreement used in most Spanish property transactions — is a common flashpoint, and disputes over whether a buyer or seller can walk away and on what terms are more frequent than people expect. Early legal analysis of the facts, the documents, and the evidence available to you is the most effective way to manage a dispute before it escalates or becomes harder to resolve.
- Hidden defects and post-completion claims
- Lease conflicts and eviction proceedings
- Community-of-owners disputes
- Contract non-performance and arras disagreements
Albert, Raffaele and Oscar each handle civil litigation and property disputes across Barcelona and the surrounding Catalan region. Get in touch to discuss your situation.
