Legal & Finance in Mallorca
418 businesses found
Spanish law sits closer to German civil law than many expect — code-based rather than case-based — but the details diverge: mandatory notarisation on property purchases, separate inheritance regimes for residents and non-residents, different deadlines, different authorities. Anyone buying a finca, setting up a company, filing tax returns or settling an estate on Mallorca needs a bilingual law firm or asesoría — a translation error in a contrato de arras can cost five figures. mallorca.com lists over 400 providers across law, tax and insurance — many English-speaking, specialised in the needs of international owners and residents.
The sector has three pillars: law and tax (lawyers/abogados, notaries, gestorías, tax advisors/asesores fiscales), insurance (home, car, professional liability, health — usually arranged through local brokers), and interface providers like translation offices (own sub-category under IT/Media/Education) and sworn translators/traductor jurado for official documents.
Island-specific: those spending 183+ days a year on Mallorca are tax residents and file the annual declaración de la renta (IRPF) in Spain by end of June. Non-residents pay IRNR on rental income and a deemed income tax on cadastral value. On property purchase, ITP (transfer tax) runs 8–13% by price band, plus 1–2% notary and registry fees. Inheritance in the Balearics has, since the July 2023 Decret Llei, benefited from substantially reduced ISD rates for close relatives (groups I/II) — the exact bonifications and conditions change and should be checked at ATIB before relying on a figure; many consultations currently revolve around how non-resident heirs can apply the rule.
Providers listed here are grouped by discipline. Insurance brokers typically compare the three largest Spanish insurers (Mapfre, Mutua, Línea Directa) plus international providers; pure legal mandates (criminal, family law) go to specialised Palma firms. Filter below by region, language or sub-category.