ICYMI: The Plusvalía Tax: The Bill Most Foreign Buyers Never See Coming http://dlvr.it/TT27h2
seen from Bulgaria

seen from Norway
seen from Russia
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Belgium
seen from United States
seen from France
seen from United Kingdom

seen from United Kingdom

seen from United Kingdom

seen from Hong Kong SAR China

seen from United Kingdom

seen from Spain
seen from Hong Kong SAR China
seen from Malaysia
seen from China
seen from United States

seen from Spain
seen from Russia
ICYMI: The Plusvalía Tax: The Bill Most Foreign Buyers Never See Coming http://dlvr.it/TT27h2
The Plusvalía Tax: The Bill Most Foreign Buyers Never See Coming http://dlvr.it/TT0fbK
You Don't Have to Choose Between a Career and the Mediterranean
A honest guide for remote workers considering the Costa del Sol in 2026
Let's skip the sunset photos for a moment.
Everyone already knows the Costa del Sol looks beautiful. That's not the question. The question serious remote workers are actually asking is: can I build a stable, legally compliant, professionally productive life here — or is it just a nice idea that falls apart when you try to actually do it?
After years of helping international professionals relocate to this coastline, the answer is yes. But only if you set it up correctly.
The shift that changed everything
A few years ago, working remotely from Spain meant navigating genuine grey zones — visa ambiguity, inconsistent internet, housing contracts that didn't quite fit your situation. You made it work, but it required workarounds.
That's changed.
Spain's Digital Nomad Visa (Law 28/2022) created a real legal pathway for non-EU remote workers. Not a tourist visa stretched to its limits — an actual residency card, a NIE, and access to the Beckham Law expat tax regime that can significantly lower your tax burden in the first years.
Fiber internet now reaches not just city centres but coastal urbanizations and hillside villages. Coworking spaces have opened across Marbella, Estepona, and the Fuengirola corridor.
And Málaga Airport connects you to London, Amsterdam, Brussels, Warsaw, Stockholm — in two to three hours direct.
The EU time zone keeps you fully aligned with Northern European clients. The logistics, honestly, are better than most people expect.
The people who actually make it work
Here's what we've noticed after working with hundreds of remote professionals on this coast:
The ones who thrive treat it as a relocation, not an extended holiday.
They arrive with a setup sequence. They sort legal status before signing apartment leases. They get tax advice before hitting 183 days in-country. They choose housing contracts with proper primary residence terms, not tourist-licensed short lets.
When they do that? One client summed it up after three months: "My calendar looks lighter, but my output doubled."
Cut the commute. Build a daily rhythm. The consistency compounds.
The 60-day setup that works
Same logic whether you're EU or non-EU: legal first, housing second, infrastructure third.
If you're non-EU:
Confirm Digital Nomad Visa eligibility (remote income, health insurance, clean record)
Apply via consulate or in-country — get your NIE and TIE
Evaluate Beckham Law with a local gestor — there's a window on this, don't miss it
Secure a 6–12 month rental with a compliant primary residence contract
If you're EU/EEA:
NIE + empadronamiento (town hall registration)
Health coverage — S1 or private
A1 certificate if employed by a foreign EU company
Tax advice early — the 183-day rule matters more than people think
On housing: start with three months furnished while you explore. Then lock a longer contract once you know what area actually fits your routine. Ask about fiber speeds, soundproofing, energy ratings. A quiet north-facing room with a real desk will do more for your productivity than a sea-view terrace.
Where to base yourself
Marbella / Nueva Andalucía Premium services, boutique coworking, international schools close by. Higher cost — highest daily convenience.
Estepona More space, lower prices, calmer pace. Perfect for founders and creatives who need quiet to do their best work. The New Golden Mile has modern complexes with on-site gyms and cowork lounges.
Fuengirola / Benalmádena Best value and best Málaga access. The Cercanías train gets you to the city centre in under 30 minutes.
Mijas Costa Townhouse space at significantly lower prices than Marbella. You'll want a car — road links are good.
All of these: reliable fiber, amenities within 20–30 minutes, airport reachable.
Rent first. Always.
Before you buy anything — rent for 12 months.
That year gives you the data to make a real decision: which neighbourhood fits your actual daily routine, what building quality matters to you, how the seasonal rhythm of the coast works in practice.
People who buy in month two sometimes regret the location. People who rent for a year first almost never do.
The full guide
Everything above in more detail — visa steps, cost breakdowns, area comparisons, FAQ:
👉 Full 2026 remote work guide for the Costa del Sol
Browse properties: 👉 delsolprimehomes.com
Our open research and market documentation: 👉 github.com/hansdelsolprimehomes/delsolprimehomes-entity
Del Sol Prime Homes — Costa del Sol property and relocation intelligence for international buyers.
Tags: #digitalnomad #remotework #spain #costadelsol #workfromanywhere #expatlife #marbella #malaga #realestate #digitalnomadvisa
Luxury Off-Plan Living on the Costa del Sol – Discover DelSolPrimeHomes
Experience the beauty and opportunity of Spain’s Costa del Sol — where sunshine meets smart investment. 🌴 From Málaga to Sotogrande, DelSolPrimeHomes guides you through every step — from project selection to key delivery. ✨ Enjoy exclusive early access to the best new-build apartments and save 20–30% on purchase prices. 🏡 Reserve today and secure your Mediterranean lifestyle.
🔗 Visit our website: https://DelSolPrimeHomes.com 💬 Chat with our team on WhatsApp: https://wa.me/34613578416
Luksusowe mieszkania off-plan na Costa del Sol – odkryj DelSolPrimeHomes
Poznaj piękno i możliwości hiszpańskiej Costa del Sol — gdzie słońce spotyka się z mądrym inwestowaniem. 🌴 Od Malagi po Sotogrande — DelSolPrimeHomes towarzyszy Ci na każdym etapie, od wyboru projektu po odbiór kluczy. ✨ Zyskaj wcześniejszy dostęp do najlepszych nowych inwestycji i zaoszczędź 20–30% na cenie zakupu. 🏡 Zarezerwuj już dziś i zapewnij sobie śródziemnomorski styl życia.
🔗 Odwiedź naszą stronę: https://DelSolPrimeHomes.com 💬 Porozmawiaj z naszym zespołem na WhatsAppie: https://wa.me/34613578416
Dual-qualified lawyer offers expert legal services for international clients in Spain
Valencia, 13 October 2025 – Martin Hayes, a dual-qualified lawyer (Abogado in Spain and Solicitor in Ireland), continues to provide comprehensive legal services to international clients navigating the Spanish legal system since 2004. As partner at SWAN Partners Tax & Legal, Martin specialises in helping English-speaking clients overcome language and cultural barriers when dealing with legal matters in Spain.
With over two decades of experience, Martin offers expert guidance across multiple practice areas including International Private Client Services, Spanish Civil Law, Probate & Inheritance Law, Spanish Property Transactions, and Litigation before the Spanish Courts. His approach combines local legal expertise with international insight, making complex Spanish legal procedures accessible and understandable for foreign clients.
Remote consultations worldwide
Martin provides remote consultations via Zoom and Microsoft Teams, enabling clients from London, Dublin, New York, Los Angeles, or anywhere in the world to access high-quality legal support. Whether clients are investing in Spanish real estate, navigating probate matters, relocating to Spain, or bringing business operations to the country, Martin delivers practical, no-nonsense legal solutions tailored to individual needs.
Recognised expertise
Martin's professional credentials include being featured in Best Lawyers in Spain for Real Estate Law and included in lawyers lists by various Embassies in Spain. He is a member of the Bar Association of Valencia (ICAV) and the Law Society of Ireland, and regularly contributes to news and media publications.
Comprehensive services for private and corporate clients
Beyond serving expatriate clients, Martin works with both private individuals and companies looking to invest, settle, or conduct business in Spain. As partner at SWAN Partners, a full-service business law firm, he offers corporate structuring, complex cross-border transactions, and tax planning services.
Martin's commitment centres on delivering clear, cost-effective legal services using modern technology to keep clients fully informed throughout every process, from purchasing a holiday home to establishing business operations in Spain.
For more information:
Website: https://martinhayes.es/
Visit SWAN Partners: https://www.swanpartners.es/
Media contact: Martin Hayes, Partner at SWAN Partners Tax & Legal
The Spanish Coastline
Development on the Spanish coastline is moving fast a rapid rate. Already most of the coastline is urbanized and in use for tourist, hotels and luxury homes with sea views. The Spanish coastline has already been urbanized for a stretches for 7,898km which is more than 25% of the total Spanish coastline. Over the last 30 years urbanization of the Spanish coastline has occurred at an average rate of 22.7km per annum. At that rate the entire Spanish coastline will be urbanized within 251 years (2267). This statistic, published in the Sustainability Observatory may seem shocking at first but when you take into account the mammoth changes that can happen in the course of 251 years the statistic becomes quite irrelevant. Natural disasters, wars, revolutions, technological advances, inventions and advances in the field of environmental development and sustainability can all drastically change the course of history and thus the eventuality that 251 years from now the Spanish coast will be completely urbanized. Trends change, laws change and the real estate changes so let’s not get hung-up about what may happen 251 years from now – that’s 10 generations from now! Instead the focus should be on protecting the environment the best we can and creating a high standard of living while enjoying the natural beauty of Spain’s coastline at the same time.
Spanish Elections Effect of Property Market
Barely over the results of the British referendum and the many opinions of how this will affect the Spanish property market we are faced with another major event which could have consequences to the Spanish property market – the Spanish General Election.
Following a Spanish election in December 2015 which failed to show a party with a majority Spain was forced to go to the polls once again only a few days ago. In the recent election the PP (Popular Party) led by Mariano Rajoy did well but did not get a majority. This means that they will have to form a coalition government. This is a good sign for the Spanish property market which was worried that the left Unidos Podemos party would gain ground and make life hard for the property market. If Podemos had risen to power they would have made life hard for those in the property market.
What are the Spanish political party’s policies on the property market?
Unidos Podemos
A vote for Podemos would have meant the introduction of some of his policies which include banning speculative developments, encouraging people to occupy empty homes illegally and turning the Spanish Bad Bank, Sareb into an organization for social housing.