
Making a Spanish Will — Step by Step
A Spanish will (testamento abierto notarial) costs €60–€90, takes 30 minutes at the notary, and can save your heirs €10,000+ and most of a year. Here's exactly how to draft, sign and register one — and the clauses every foreign retiree should include.
A Spanish will (testamento abierto notarial) costs €60–€90, takes 30 minutes at the notary, and can save your heirs €10,000+ and most of a year. Here's exactly how to draft, sign and register one — and the clauses every foreign retiree should include.
Why bother if you already have a will at home
Your home-country will is valid in Spain, but enforcing it requires apostille, sworn translation, foreign-probate grant, and a Spanish notary's interpretation of foreign succession law — often with conflicting opinions and a frozen property for 8–18 months.
A Spanish will dealing only with your Spanish-situated assets sidesteps all of that. The notary executes it directly, the heirs sign acceptance, the property transfers within 6–10 weeks.
The three types of Spanish will
| Type | Format | When used |
|---|---|---|
| Testamento abierto notarial | Drafted with a notary, kept in archive | Standard choice — 95% of cases |
| Testamento cerrado | Sealed envelope deposited with notary | Privacy-sensitive; rarely used |
| Testamento ológrafo | Handwritten, no notary | Emergency only — risky |
What to bring to the notary
- ✦Passport and NIE (residence permit / TIE if you have one).
- ✦Marriage certificate if married (and any prior-divorce decrees).
- ✦List of heirs with full names, DOBs, nationalities and addresses.
- ✦Inventory of Spanish assets (property addresses, bank-account IBANs, vehicles).
- ✦Existing wills (home country and any prior Spanish will) — to reference or revoke explicitly.
- ✦Any specific bequests (jewellery, art, charitable gifts).
If your Spanish isn't fluent, the notary requires either a sworn translator (€150–€250) or a bilingual will (Spanish + English in parallel columns, €120–€180 surcharge). Most coastal notaries offer the bilingual option in-house.
Essential clauses for foreign retirees
A basic Spanish will template covers the mechanics, but a foreigner's will should include four specific clauses. Ask the notary for each by name — they are standard and they will know them.
- ✦Nationality election (Brussels IV / Reglamento 650/2012): elects the law of England and Wales, Germany, etc. This disapplies Spanish forced heirship.
- ✦Universal heir clause: name your spouse/partner as heredero universal so they inherit everything not specifically bequeathed.
- ✦Cláusula de sustitución vulgar: names backup heirs if primary heirs predecease you.
- ✦Cross-reference to home-country will, confirming this Spanish will only disposes of Spanish assets and does not revoke the foreign will.
Step-by-step process
- ✦Step 1: Contact a notary (any notary — they have national jurisdiction; you don't need a local one). Many have English-speaking staff in coastal towns; ask in advance.
- ✦Step 2: Send your inventory and instructions by email. The notary's clerk drafts the will (3–7 days).
- ✦Step 3: Review the draft before the appointment. Confirm names spelt correctly, the nationality clause is present, and bequests are clear.
- ✦Step 4: Attend the notary appointment (30 min). The notary reads the will aloud, you confirm, all parties sign. Fee €60–€90 payable on the day.
- ✦Step 5: The notary automatically registers the existence of the will with the Registro Central de Últimas Voluntades in Madrid.
- ✦Step 6: Keep the simple copy (copia simple) you receive in a safe place. The original stays in the notary's protocol archive forever — heirs request a certified copy at the time of death.
Updating and revoking
A new Spanish will automatically revokes any prior Spanish will. Major life events to trigger an update: marriage, divorce, new property purchase, birth/death of beneficiary, change of residence (especially if you move regions within Spain — different inheritance tax rules).
Cost of a new will is identical to the first (€60–€90). There is no penalty for revising — many retirees update every 5–10 years as circumstances change.
After death — what your heirs actually do
- ✦Obtain death certificate from the Civil Registry (Registro Civil) — 24–48 h.
- ✦Request the Certificado de Últimas Voluntades from Madrid (€3.86, online, 10 working days after death) — confirms which will is the most recent.
- ✦Notary issues certified copy of the will.
- ✦Heirs sign the escritura de aceptación y adjudicación de herencia (acceptance deed) at the notary.
- ✦File Modelo 650 (inheritance tax) within 6 months of death — Valencia's 99% reduction applied here.
- ✦Property registered in heirs' names at the Land Registry — typical total cost €1,500–€3,000 in notary, tax-filing and registry fees.
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