Tax Adviser Spain Expat: Finding the Right Asesor fiscal
Anyone emigrating to Spain will quickly come across a term: Asesor fiscal – which translates roughly as a tax adviser for expats in Spain. Unlike in Germany, however, this title is not legally protected in Spain. That means anyone can call themselves one, regardless of their qualifications or licensing. For expats dealing with Beckham Law, IRPF, Modelo 720, or the Balearic wealth tax, choosing the right adviser is therefore not a mere formality – it is a genuinely critical decision. In this guide you will find out which qualifications really matter, what services a reputable Asesor covers, what a mandate in Mallorca costs, which typical mistakes expats make – and how to compare providers concretely before you sign anything.

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What is an Asesor fiscal – and why the difference from Germany matters
In Germany the title 'Steuerberater' carries a clearly defined licence, a chamber system, and mandatory professional indemnity insurance. In Spain this kind of statutory protection for the title Asesor fiscal is entirely absent. That does not mean there are no qualified tax experts – but you need to look more actively.
Qualified tax and legal advice in Spain is typically provided by two professional groups:
| Professional group | Spanish title | Chamber / oversight |
|---|---|---|
| Lawyer specialising in tax law | Abogado fiscalista | Colegio de Abogados |
| Auditor / business economist | Economista / Graduado Social | Colegio de Economistas |
| Independent tax adviser without chamber membership | Asesor fiscal | No mandatory membership |
| Legally protected German tax adviser | — | Not applicable in Spain |
Please note: A firm that is explicitly registered as Abogados or Economistas is registered and belongs to a Spanish professional body, is subject to codes of conduct and liability regulations. This is an important mark of quality.
As the title Asesor fiscal is unprotected, experienced firms such as Monereo Meyer Abogados expressly recommend having tax law and tax advisory work carried out by law firms specialising in tax law. You need not treat this as dogma – but you should always actively verify your adviser's qualifications.
What services an Asesor fiscal for expats should cover
A solid Asesor fiscal for expats in Mallorca or elsewhere in Spain covers far more than the annual income tax return. The following overview shows the typical range of services:
| Service | Relevant for |
|---|---|
| IRPF tax return (income tax for residents) | All tax residents |
| Modelo 210 (non-resident tax) | Property owners without residence in Spain |
| Modelo 720 (declaration of assets held abroad) | Residents with foreign assets > 50.000 € |
| Beckham Law / Régimen especial impatriados | Newly arrived employees & self-employed individuals |
| Wealth tax (Impuesto sobre el Patrimonio) | Residents & non-residents with assets in Spain |
| Property transfer tax ITP | When purchasing property |
| Inheritance and gift tax | Estate planning & transfers |
| Corporation tax / bookkeeping SL | Self-employed individuals, business owners |
| NIE application, empadronamiento | Newcomers |
| Tax representation / fiscal representative | Non-residents for correspondence from authorities |
| Appeals against tax assessments | When the AEAT carries out an audit |
Important: Not every asesor covers all areas. Anyone with complex international structures – for example, income from Germany, a GmbH, and Spanish rental income all at the same time – needs an adviser with proven experience in international tax law.
The Beckham Law: Why timing with your adviser is crucial
The Beckham Law (officially the Régimen especial para trabajadores desplazados a territorio español) is one of the most frequently asked-about topics among expats. Under certain conditions, it allows a flat tax rate of just 24 % on employment income up to €600,000 per year, instead of the normal progressive IRPF rate of up to 47 %.
Since the 2023 reform, the following core requirements apply:
| Criterion | Requirement |
|---|---|
| Previous residence in Spain | Not within the last 5 years |
| Employment | With a Spanish company, or self-employed under certain conditions |
| Foreign income (self-employed) | A maximum of 15 % of total income |
| Family members relocating alongside | Spouse & children under 25 can be included |
| Wealth tax | Only on assets located in Spain |
| Tax rate on income > €600,000 | Standard rate of 47 % |
The crucial point: the application for Beckham status must be submitted within six months of commencing work in Spain. Anyone who misses this deadline can no longer apply for the status for the current year. A good asesor will proactively raise this with you – not only once it is too late.
You can find more details about the Beckham Law in our guide Beckham Law Spain.
Tax rates in the Balearics: what your adviser needs to know
The Balearic Islands have their own regional rates for wealth tax and property transfer tax (ITP). An asesor who only knows the national framework is working with incomplete knowledge. The relevant Balearic rates:
Balearic Wealth Tax (Impuesto sobre el Patrimonio)
Tax-free allowance: 700.000 € per person
| Taxable assets from (€) | Tax rate (%) |
|---|---|
| 0 | 0,28 |
| 170.472 | 0,41 |
| 340.937 | 0,69 |
| 681.870 | 1,24 |
| 1.336.740 | 1,79 |
| 2.727.479 | 2,35 |
| 5.454.958 | 2,90 |
| 10.909.916 | 3,45 |
Practical example: A married couple owns a Finca on Mallorca worth 1,8 Mio. €, encumbered with a 350.000 € mortgage. The net assets amount to 1.450.000 €, or 725.000 € per person. After deducting the tax-free allowance of 700.000 €, 25.000 € remains — on which 0,28 % = 70 € tax per person is due.
Balearic Property Transfer Tax (ITP)
| Purchase price up to (€) | Tax rate (%) |
|---|---|
| 400.000 | 8 |
| 600.000 | 9 |
| 1.000.000 | 10 |
| über 1.000.000 | 11 |
More on tax deductions in the Balearic Islands: IRPF deductions Balearic Islands
Modelo 720: The overseas assets declaration no expat can afford to ignore
Anyone who is a tax resident in Spain and holds assets abroad — bank accounts, securities or property outside Spain — must declare these annually using the Modelo 720, provided the total value per category exceeds 50.000 €. The declaration must be submitted by 31. März of the following year.
A reputable asesor will proactively draw your attention to this obligation. Many expats who have recently moved to Spain have no idea about this reporting requirement — and as a result inadvertently find themselves in the sights of the tax authority AEAT.
Details on the reporting obligation: Modelo 720 reporting obligation
How to identify a reputable asesor fiscal: the checklist
Before you sign a mandate, you should check the following points:
- Clarify professional membership: Is the adviser a member of a Spanish Colegio de Abogados or a Colegio de Economistas? If not: what qualifications can they demonstrate?
- Specialisation in expats: Does the firm have demonstrable experience with international clients, double taxation agreements, and cross-border income situations?
- Language skills: German-language advice is no luxury – tax assessments, contracts, and deadlines are all in Spanish, and an adviser who can bridge both languages prevents misunderstandings.
- Transparent fee structure: Is a fixed annual fee or hourly rate offered? Is there a free or low-cost initial consultation?
- Scope of services in the engagement: What is explicitly included – tax return, correspondence with authorities, fiscal representation, appeals?
- References or reviews: Recommendations from the expat community, Google reviews, or professional association referrals provide useful guidance.
- Digital accessibility: Is a personal online portal or digital file offered? This makes collaboration from abroad much easier.
Typical expat profiles and which advisory focus is the right fit
Not every expat starts from the same position. The following overview helps you identify the right focus points for your conversation with your asesor:
| Profile | Key tax topics |
|---|---|
| Employee from Germany, newly arrived in Spain | Beckham Law, IRPF, Modelo 720, DBA Deutschland–Spanien |
| Self-employed / Autónomo | IRPF, IVA (Modelo 303/130), Beckham Law (where applicable) |
| Retiree from Germany | Double taxation agreement liability, IRPF, Modelo 720, civil service pension where relevant |
| Property buyer without residency | Modelo 210, ITP, fiscal representative |
| Remote worker / digital nomad | Residency status, Beckham Law, 183-day rule |
| Business owner with a Spanish SL | Corporation tax, bookkeeping, payroll |
| US citizen in Spain | IRPF + IRS obligations, FATCA, Foreign Tax Credit |
Anyone working as an Autónomo will find practical guidance in our dedicated article on Modelo 303 & 130. Retirees from Germany should read our chapter on applying for a Spanish pension and on civil service pensions & Spain.
Most common mistakes when changing tax advisers and during initial consultations
Many expats make avoidable mistakes when looking for an Asesor for the first time or switching from an existing one. The most common:
- Acting too late: The deadline for the Beckham Law application (6 months after commencing work) is one of the most frequently missed deadlines of all.
- Choosing the cheapest option: An annual fee of 200 € sounds attractive, but often covers only a single return — without fiscal representation, official correspondence, or appeals.
- Engaging a German tax adviser without a Spanish mandate: Your tax adviser in Cologne cannot file your Spanish IRPF return — they have no mandate in Spain and are unfamiliar with local special rates.
- Forgetting Modelo 720: Anyone moving to Spain for the first time who holds assets abroad needs to be particularly vigilant in the first year.
- Choosing an adviser without expat experience: An Asesor who is well suited to local business owners may be out of their depth when it comes to double taxation issues or the Beckham regime.
- No written confirmation of instructions: Always document the exact scope of services in writing.
What a tax adviser in Spain costs: indicative figures
Detailed price lists are rarely published publicly in Spain. The following indicative figures emerge from the market environment and vary depending on provider, complexity, and location:
| Service | Indicative price (approx.) |
|---|---|
| Initial consultation (30–60 min) | Free to approx. 100–150 € |
| Simple IRPF return (resident) | from approx. 200–400 €/year |
| IRPF with multiple income types | from approx. 400–800 €/year |
| Modelo 210 (non-resident) | from approx. €150–300 per return |
| Modelo 720 (overseas assets) | from approx. €300–600 (initial filing) |
| Beckham Law application (Modelo 149) | from approx. €500–1,000 |
| Annual autónomo mandate incl. IVA | from approx. €800–2,000/year |
| Full mandate SL (bookkeeping + taxes) | from approx. €2,000/year upwards |
Please note: These figures are indicative values based on general market observation. Always obtain at least two concrete quotes and compare the scope of services, not just the price.
German-speaking asesores on Mallorca: what you should know
Mallorca has one of the highest concentrations of German-speaking tax advisers and law firms in the whole of Spain – which makes the search easier, but also calls for caution, as the quality of services on offer varies considerably.
Some well-known names in the market (without endorsement, based on available research):
- Stein & Partner (steuerberatermallorca.com): focus on international clients, Beckham Law, Balearic tax rates
- Garcia Elsener (garciaelsener.com): bilingual (DE/EN/ES), focus on tax returns, property tax, international structures
- Del Canto Chambers, Palma office: Carrer del Sindicat 74, 07002 Palma; Anglo-Spanish firm with a tax focus, tel. +34 910 800 884
- Monereo Meyer Abogados: offices in Madrid, Barcelona, Mallorca, Tenerife, among others; German-speaking partner Gustavo Yanes, over 35 years of experience
- meinrechtinspanien.de: Mallorca (tel. 0034-971 576 689), with a focus on residents and property owners
Please note: This list is not a recommendation but a general guide based on publicly available information. Always verify qualifications, up-to-date status, and scope of services yourself.
What comes next? Tax follow-up topics for expats
Once you have found your asesor, a number of further tax and administrative steps await. Your adviser should guide you through these – or you can prepare yourself in advance:
- Applying for residencia: Without official proof of residence, correct tax residency cannot be established
- Empadronamiento Mallorca: Mandatory for everyone living permanently in a municipality
- Apply for a Certificado Digital: Without a digital certificate, electronic communication with the AEAT is not possible
- Opening a bank account in Spain: A prerequisite for tax payments and refunds
- ETF & index funds taxation in Spain: Capital gains taxation in Spain differs considerably from Germany
- Spanish will: Estate planning is part of tax planning – make sure to address it early
Checklist: Finding and onboarding an Asesor fiscal
Use this checklist before your first consultation:
- Adviser's qualifications verified (professional association membership, training)
- Experience with expats / international clients confirmed
- German-language advice confirmed
- Scope of the engagement requested in writing
- Fee structure (flat rate vs. hourly rate) clarified
- Initial consultation appointment arranged (free of charge where possible)
- Own documents compiled: NIE, passport, recent tax returns DE/AT/CH, proof of income, overseas bank statements
- Deadlines noted: Beckham application (6 months), Modelo 720 (31 March), IRPF (generally until end of June)
- At least two quotes obtained and compared
- Engagement confirmed in writing
Conclusion
Finding the right tax adviser in Spain as an expat is not simply a matter of Google search results alone – it is about understanding the qualifications behind the title Asesor fiscal. Since this term is not a protected designation in Spain, the duty of care lies with you. Key criteria include professional association membership, demonstrated expat experience, German-language capability, and a transparent scope of services. Anyone who finds a good adviser early on – ideally before arriving in the country – can make use of the Beckham Law, submit the Modelo 720 on time, apply the Balearic tax rates correctly, and avoid costly mistakes from the outset.
Official sources
- AEAT (Agencia Estatal de Administración Tributaria) – Spanish tax authority, forms, deadlines, Beckham Law application (Modelo 149): https://www.agenciatributaria.es
- ATIB (Agència Tributària de les Illes Balears) – Balearic tax authority, ITP rates, wealth tax Balearen: https://www.atib.es
- BOE (Boletín Oficial del Estado) – Official Gazette of Spain, including Ley 35/2006 (IRPF), Ley 19/1991 (wealth tax): https://www.boe.es
- Consell de Mallorca – Local government Mallorca: https://www.conselldemallorca.net
- Govern de les Illes Balears – Regional tax law Balearen: https://www.caib.es