Buying Timeshare in Spain 2026: Costa del Sol, Tenerife & Mallorca Resale Guide for International Buyers

TimeShare Deals editorial team · Updated May 2026 · ~12 min read

Buying Timeshare in Spain 2026: Costa del Sol, Tenerife & Mallorca Resale Guide for International Buyers

Spain is the second-largest timeshare market in Europe after the UK, and uniquely positioned for international buyers: 320+ days of sun on the Canary Islands, mature timeshare infrastructure on the Costa del Sol, and a resale market where the same week from a developer at €18,000 trades secondhand at €4,000-€7,000. This is the practical 2026 guide for British, German, French, and US buyers looking at Spanish resale: where to look, what to pay, what to verify legally, and the cross-border closing process that catches many first-time buyers off guard.

Top regions for timeshare resale in Spain

Not all Spanish regions trade equally on the secondary market. The geography matters because British buyers favor the Costa del Sol and Canary Islands, German buyers favor Mallorca and the Canaries, and French buyers tend toward the Costa Brava. Knowing where buyers concentrate also tells sellers where they can list at better prices.

Costa del Sol (Marbella, Fuengirola, Estepona, Mijas)

The Costa del Sol is the most active timeshare resale market in Spain, dominated by British owners and buyers. Properties from Marriott’s Marbella Beach Resort, Hapimag Marbella, Macdonald Resorts La Ermita Sotogrande, and dozens of mid-tier properties trade frequently. Annual MFs typically €1,000-€1,800. Peak summer weeks (weeks 28-34) command premium resale; off-season weeks 1-12 trade at significant discount.

Canary Islands (Tenerife, Gran Canaria, Lanzarote, Fuerteventura)

Year-round sun makes the Canaries the most consistently demanded Spanish timeshare destination. Anfi del Mar (Gran Canaria), Royal Sunset Beach Club (Tenerife), Diamond Resorts Sunset Bay Club (Tenerife), Diamond Royal Tenerife Country Club, Hapimag Puerto Calma (Mallorca—listed here for completeness), and numerous independent operators. Peak demand weeks 1-15 (winter sun for Northern Europeans) and 26-37 (summer for Spanish residents). Annual MFs €900-€1,600.

Mallorca and Balearic Islands

German and French buyers dominate the Balearic timeshare resale market. Hapimag Mallorca, Robinson Cala Serena, and various independent properties at Cala Millor and Alcúdia. Peak weeks 26-35 sell at solid premium; spring and fall weeks trade well too thanks to milder climate compared to Northern Europe. MFs €1,100-€1,800.

Costa Blanca (Alicante, Benidorm, Calpe, Denia)

Mid-volume resale market. British and Dutch buyers active. Older properties at Benidorm trade at low prices; premium properties at Denia and Calpe hold value better.

Costa Brava and Cataluña

Smaller market dominated by French buyers crossing the border. Roses, Lloret de Mar, Estartit. Lower volume, lower prices, but real demand from the French market for proximity-based weeks.

Real Spanish resale prices by region (2026)

Numbers below come from closed transactions on the public secondary market over the past 12 months. Honest medians, not asking prices.

Premium Costa del Sol (Marriott Marbella Beach Resort, Hapimag, Macdonald)

Property typeAnnual MF (EUR)Resale 2026Time to sell
Marriott Marbella Beach Resort — summer 2BR€1,200 – €1,500€3,500 – €7,00060 – 120 days
Hapimag Marbella — peak week€900 – €1,200€2,500 – €5,50060 – 90 days
Macdonald La Ermita Sotogrande — floating week€700 – €1,000€1,200 – €3,50090 – 180 days
Mid-tier Marbella/Fuengirola — off-season€500 – €900€1 – €1,500120 – 365 days

Canary Islands (Tenerife, Gran Canaria)

Property typeAnnual MF (EUR)Resale 2026
Anfi del Mar (Gran Canaria) — peak winter week€1,200 – €1,600€5,000 – €14,000
Royal Sunset Beach Club (Tenerife) — peak winter€1,100 – €1,500€3,500 – €9,000
Diamond Royal Tenerife — mid-season€900 – €1,300€1,500 – €5,000
Older Lanzarote/Fuerteventura — off-season€600 – €900€1 – €2,000

Mallorca / Balearics

Property typeAnnual MF (EUR)Resale 2026
Hapimag Mallorca — summer peak€1,100 – €1,500€2,500 – €6,000
Robinson Cala Serena — summer week€1,200 – €1,800€3,000 – €7,500
Mid-tier Cala Millor / Alcúdia — spring/fall€800 – €1,200€800 – €3,000
The opportunity for international buyers. Spanish resale is one of the most underpriced segments of the European timeshare market for buyers based outside Spain. A summer week at Marriott’s Marbella Beach Resort costs €18,000+ from the developer; the secondary market trades the same week at €3,500-€7,000. For UK or German buyers who already vacation in Spain regularly, the math is extraordinarily favorable.

Spanish timeshare contracts come in two main legal flavors and the difference matters for both transfer and your long-term rights:

Aprovechamiento por turno deeded (notarial deed)

This is true real-estate ownership of a fractional interest in the property, recorded with notary and registered in the Spanish property registry (Registro de la Propiedad). Equivalent to deeded ownership in the US. Transfers require a notary signature, recording, and Spanish transfer tax (Impuesto sobre Transmisiones Patrimoniales, ITP).

Buyer implication: stronger ownership rights, transferable to heirs, marketable as a real-estate asset. Higher transfer cost (notary + ITP).

Right-to-use contractual model

The owner has the contractual right to use the property for a specified week (or week pool) for a fixed duration (typically 30-50 years), but doesn’t own a recorded fractional deed. Most Hapimag, Macdonald, and modern Spanish timeshare contracts work this way.

Buyer implication: simpler and cheaper transfer (typically just a contract assignment fee €200-€500). The contract has a termination date; some originally 50-year contracts are now in their final 10-15 years and price accordingly.

Critical for buyers: ask the seller (and verify with the resort) what type of contract is being transferred and how many years remain. A 50-year right-to-use contract with 8 years left has dramatically less value than a contract with 35 years left, even at the same resort.

Spanish consumer protection law on timeshare

Spain has comprehensive consumer protection law for timeshare contracts (Ley 4/2012). Provisions include 14-day cancellation rights for new developer purchases, restrictions on upfront payments during the cooling-off period, and required documentation in the buyer’s native language. For resale transactions between private parties, these provisions are different: the cooling-off period and developer-specific rules don’t apply, but standard consumer-contract protections do. Use a Spanish abogado (or solicitor based in your home country with Spanish expertise) for any contract above €5,000.

Cross-border closing process: UK, Germany, USA buyers

Buyer in the UK purchasing Spanish timeshare

  1. Browse listings on a real marketplace; contact seller through platform.
  2. Negotiate price, deposit, closing timeline.
  3. Sign a private purchase agreement (compraventa privada). Solicitor or abogado review recommended above €5,000.
  4. Wire deposit to a Spanish escrow account (cuenta de depósito) or solicitor’s client account. Never directly to the seller.
  5. Spanish closing company prepares notarial documentation. Buyer either signs in Spain (in person at notary) OR via Spanish power of attorney granted to the closing agent.
  6. Notary records the deed in the Registro de la Propiedad (deeded contracts only).
  7. Spanish transfer tax (ITP, typically 6-10% of purchase price) paid at closing.
  8. Funds release to seller; new ownership confirmed.

UK-specific considerations: Brexit didn’t change the legal mechanics of buying Spanish property — UK citizens still buy freely, just under the same rules as other non-EU citizens. NIE number (Spanish tax ID for foreigners) required to register the deed; obtainable through Spanish consulate UK. Currency exchange GBP→EUR adds 0.5-1.5% cost.

Buyer in Germany or France purchasing Spanish timeshare

Easier than UK in 2026 due to EU citizenship: NIE still required but the obtaining process is faster, and ITP rates are identical. Many German buyers use German-speaking abogados in Mallorca and the Canaries who specialize in cross-border transactions.

Buyer in the USA purchasing Spanish timeshare

Possible but requires extra steps:

  • NIE required (Spanish consulate in your US state).
  • Power of attorney via Spanish consulate or apostilled US notary if you can’t travel to Spain for closing.
  • FATCA reporting may apply to certain Spanish accounts; consult a US tax advisor.
  • USD→EUR exchange adds 0.5-1.5% on transfer.
  • If you plan to actually use the timeshare regularly, factor in transatlantic flight cost annually.

Browse Spanish timeshare resale listings

Verified Spanish resort listings searchable in 5 languages. Listings include legal contract type (deeded or right-to-use), years remaining, full disclosure of MF and special assessments.

Browse Spanish listings →

Spanish taxes and fees on timeshare transfer

Cost stack for a typical timeshare resale in Spain (deeded contract):

Cost itemTypical 2026 amountPaid by
Notary fee€300 – €800Buyer (typical)
Property registry recording (Registro de la Propiedad)€200 – €500Buyer
ITP (Impuesto sobre Transmisiones Patrimoniales)6% – 10% of purchase priceBuyer
Plusvalía municipal (capital gain tax)Varies, typically €200 – €1,500Seller (typical)
Closing company / abogado fees€500 – €1,500Often split
Resort transfer fee€200 – €500Often split

For right-to-use contracts (no notarial deed required): notary fee, registry fee, and ITP are typically waived or much lower. Total transfer cost is usually €300-€800. Significantly cheaper to transfer.

5 pitfalls specific to Spanish resale

Pitfall 1 — The Mexican wire scam targeting Spanish property buyers

UK and US buyers in particular are targeted with offers to “buy your Spanish timeshare” (or “sell you one”) that involve wiring money to a Mexican or offshore account for “Spanish notary registration.” There’s no such thing — Spanish notarial fees are paid in Spain, in euros, at closing. Anyone asking you to wire money to Mexico, Cyprus, or Panama for a Spanish transaction is running a scam. See our complete scam guide.

Pitfall 2 — Right-to-use contracts running out

Spanish right-to-use contracts have termination dates. A contract originally signed in 1990 with 50-year duration expires in 2040 — meaning the buyer in 2026 has 14 years of use remaining. Always verify the original contract date and total duration. Contracts with under 10 years remaining have very limited resale value because future buyers will face the same dwindling timeline.

Pitfall 3 — Special assessments at older properties

Some older Spanish properties have had recent or pending special assessments to fund deferred maintenance, structural repairs, or updates required by recent Spanish building regulations. Always ask the seller (and verify with the resort administration) about: any pending special assessments, scheduled fee increases for the next 24 months, current resort financial reserves.

Pitfall 4 — Ignoring NIE and tax registration

Buyers who don’t obtain a Spanish NIE before closing can’t complete the deeded transfer. Some buyers try to use the seller’s NIE or a friend’s — this creates serious problems years later when selling or inheriting. Always obtain your own NIE through your country’s Spanish consulate before starting the closing process.

Pitfall 5 — Failing to verify with the actual property registry

Spanish deeded contracts are recorded in the Registro de la Propiedad (Spanish Property Registry), and any qualified abogado can request a “nota simple” for the property to verify ownership history, mortgage encumbrances, and any liens. This costs €15-€25 and is the single most important due-diligence step before any deeded purchase. Skip this and you may discover at closing that the seller doesn’t actually have clean title.

Browsing Spanish listings on TimeShare Deals

TimeShare Deals operates from Spain and specializes in cross-border resale between Spanish properties and international buyers. Specifically:

  • Translated listings. Spanish property listings appear in English, French, German, Italian, and Spanish so international buyers find them organically.
  • Legal contract type disclosed. Each listing specifies whether the contract is deeded (notarial), right-to-use, or club-membership, plus years remaining for time-limited contracts.
  • Verified ownership. Sellers upload Spanish documentation (deeded escritura or right-to-use contract). Listings without verification are clearly marked.
  • Spanish-based support. Our team is in Fuengirola (Costa del Sol) and operates in Spanish, English, and basic French/German for buyer questions.
  • Closing partner network. We work with licensed Spanish abogados and closing companies for buyers who need cross-border transaction support.
  • No exit-company business. We help match buyers and sellers; we don’t sell timeshare exits.

Frequently asked questions

Can a UK buyer still purchase Spanish timeshare after Brexit?
Yes, completely. UK citizens buy Spanish timeshare under the same rules as other non-EU citizens. The legal mechanics didn’t change — you still need an NIE (Spanish tax ID), a closing process at a Spanish notary (or via power of attorney), and you pay the same Spanish transfer taxes. The currency exchange GBP-EUR adds a small cost. Practically, the only annoyance is that obtaining the NIE may take 4-8 weeks via the Spanish consulate, so plan ahead.
What’s the difference between deeded and right-to-use Spanish timeshare?
Deeded (aprovechamiento por turno notarial) is true fractional ownership recorded in the Spanish Property Registry. Right-to-use is a contractual right for a fixed duration (typically 30-50 years from the original contract date). Deeded is more secure and transfers like real estate; right-to-use is simpler and cheaper to transfer but has a termination date. Always verify which type before buying.
How much do I pay in taxes when buying Spanish timeshare?
For deeded contracts: ITP (transfer tax) is 6-10% of the purchase price depending on the autonomous community. For right-to-use contracts: typically much lower or no ITP, depending on the contract structure. Plus notary fees, property registry recording, and resort transfer fees. Total transfer cost typically 8-13% of purchase price for deeded; 3-6% for right-to-use.
Do I need to physically travel to Spain to close?
No, you can close via Spanish power of attorney granted to your closing company or abogado. The power of attorney is granted at a Spanish consulate in your country, or in any country’s notary with apostille. Many international buyers complete closings without ever traveling to Spain.
Can I rent my Spanish timeshare to other vacationers?
Yes, in most cases. Spanish timeshare rental income is taxable in Spain (typically as non-resident income tax for foreign owners). The resort may have its own rules about commercial renting. Many owners rent for $1,500-$4,000 per peak week, which more than covers annual MFs.
What about properties at Anfi del Mar in Gran Canaria?
Anfi del Mar is one of the largest Spanish timeshare resorts and trades actively on the secondary market. Peak winter weeks (December-March) hold strong value (€5,000-€14,000 resale). Off-peak summer weeks at Anfi trade at much lower prices. The contracts come in various legal forms; verify before purchase whether you’re buying deeded ownership or right-to-use.
Is Spanish timeshare a good investment for a US buyer?
Not as an investment (timeshares typically don’t appreciate). As a usage decision for a US family that vacations in Spain regularly, the math is favorable: a peak summer week at Marbella Beach Resort that costs €18,000 from the developer trades resale at €3,500-€7,000. For US buyers who’ll actually use it 3+ times in 5 years, the savings vs hotel costs justify the purchase.
What documents will the closing company need from me?
Your NIE (Spanish tax ID for foreigners), copy of passport, your home country tax residency proof, the seller’s ownership documentation (deeded escritura or right-to-use contract), the property’s nota simple (recent), and your wire confirmation to the escrow account. The closing company coordinates with the notary and registry directly.
Are there Spanish timeshare scams I should watch for?
Yes — especially scams targeting British and German buyers with offers to “buy your Spanish timeshare” that involve wiring money to non-Spanish offshore accounts. Real Spanish closings are paid in euros to Spanish accounts (escrow or notary client account). Anyone requesting wires to Mexico, Cyprus, Panama, or other offshore destinations for a Spanish transaction is running a scam.
How long does a Spanish timeshare resale take to close?
For right-to-use contracts: 30-60 days typical. For deeded contracts: 60-120 days due to additional notarial and registry steps. Cross-border closings (international buyer + Spanish seller) add 15-30 days for NIE processing and document apostille. Pricing realistically and providing complete documentation accelerates closing significantly.
TS

TimeShare Deals editorial team

We are the team behind timeshare.deals, an independent timeshare resale and rental marketplace based in Spain. We specialize in cross-border resale between Spanish properties and international buyers, do not sell timeshare exits, do not charge upfront listing fees, and have no developer affiliation. Data in this article reflects observed market activity from listings closed on our platform and the public Spanish secondary market in 2024-2026.