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Legal tip 1515. Spanish Wills vs Your Home-Country Will — Short Guide for EO readers
Thursday, September 11, 2025 @ 5:02 PM
If you own a place in Spain (or plan to), it helps to know how a Spanish will differs from a UK/US (or other) will. A few tweaks now can save your heirs time, cost and stress later.
Key points (quick read)
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Which law applies?
Spain has forced heirship by default. Under EU Succession Reg. 650/2012, most expats can choose their national law in a Spanish will (e.g., England & Wales, Scotland, your US State), restoring the freedom you’re used to.
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Formality
Spain’s standard is an open notarial will (signed before a notary, recorded and traceable). UK/US wills are private documents with witnesses; no mandatory registry.
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Administration
With a Spanish notarial will, heirs usually complete a notarial deed of acceptance in Spain faster. Without one, expect extra steps: declarations of heirs, sworn translations, apostilles, and foreign probate papers.
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Taxes (very brief)
Spain has Inheritance Tax with rates/allowances set by each region. UK has IHT at 40% above its thresholds; the US has high federal thresholds plus some State taxes. Cross-border planning matters.
Often the smoothest setup
Common pitfalls
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No choice-of-law clause when you want UK/US rules.
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A new home-country will that unintentionally revokes the Spanish one.
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Heirs later lacking NIE, translations or apostilles.
Quick checklist
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Spanish notarial will (limited to Spanish assets) with choice-of-law if desired.
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Home-country will updated and consistent.
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Plan for NIE, translations, apostilles, and your region’s tax rules.
Happy to keep this non-commercial and on-thread.
Tell me which jurisdiction your will is from (E&W, Scotland, a US State, Ireland, Canada, etc.) and I’ll outline the practical differences vs a Spanish will and what your heirs would face here.

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