• 8 min de lectura

Real Estate Auctions in Spain in 2026: The Definitive Guide to Investing Without Costly Mistakes

Investing in public auctions in Spain involves distinct markets, despite common misconceptions that treat them as one unified system. Public auctions for assets like properties fall into separate categories—judicial auctions, Tax Agency (AEAT) auctions, Social Security (TGSS) auctions, and notarial auctions—each governed by unique legal frameworks.

Real estate auction in Spain

Photo by Tierra Mallorca on Unsplash

Buying a property in a judicial auction is completely different from buying in a Tax Agency (AEAT) auction, a Social Security (TGSS) auction, or a notarial auction. Each regime has different rules, different risks, and—most importantly - very different consequences for you as the final buyer.

With the entry into force of Organic Law 1/2025, the entire landscape has changed.
Strategies that worked a few years ago can now result in losing your deposit, locking up capital for months, or buying a legal problem instead of a property.

This guide is written for investors who are not lawyers but want to do things properly.
Here you will understand:

  • What the law actually says
  • What it means in real life
  • The most common investor mistakes
  • What can realistically happen to you as the buyer
  • How to choose the right type of auction for your profile

No academic language.
This is how an experienced investor would explain it to a friend.


1. The New Auction Landscape After Organic Law 1/2025

Justice system and auctions

In Spain, several different auction regimes coexist, even though many of them are published on the BOE auction portal.

The key difference is who sells the asset and under which legal framework:

  • Courts → Judicial auctions
  • Tax Agency → AEAT auctions
  • Social Security → TGSS auctions
  • Notaries → Notarial auctions
  • Other public bodies → ORGA, regional and local entities

The reform introduced by Organic Law 1/2025, which amended the Civil Procedure Act (LEC), radically transformed judicial auctions by increasing:

  • Required deposits
  • Payment deadlines pressure
  • Financial discipline for bidders

The result is clear:
many investors are moving to administrative auctions without fully understanding that the risks are completely different.


government building navarra

Photo by David Vives on Unsplash

Judicial auctions arise mainly from:

  • Mortgage enforcement proceedings
  • Court judgements ordering payment of debt

They are regulated by the Civil Procedure Act (LEC) and, after the 2025 reform, they are no longer accessible to everyone.

2.1 The 20% Deposit: A Major Capital Barrier

Previously, bidders only needed to deposit 5% of the auction value.
Today, the general rule is:

  • 20% of the auction value
  • Absolute minimum of €1,000

Real example:

  • Property auction value: €300,000
  • Required deposit: €60,000

What does this mean in practice?

  • Small investors are pushed out
  • Competition drops significantly
  • Well-capitalized investors gain an advantage

Fewer bidders usually means better prices

2.2 Only 20 Days to Pay: Financing After the Auction Is No Longer Viable

After being awarded the property, you have 20 business days to pay the remaining balance.

Practical consequence:

  • Mortgage financing after the auction is unrealistic
  • You need cash or pre-approved credit
  • Failure to pay means losing the entire 20% deposit

This is one of the most expensive mistakes seen since 2025.

2.3 The Key Advantage: Possession and Court-Ordered Eviction

This is the core strength of judicial auctions.

Under Article 675 of the LEC:

  • The court can order eviction
  • No separate lawsuit is required
  • Possession is handled within the same procedure

Why is this so important?

Because in all other auction types:

  • You become the owner
  • But then you must start a new eviction process

That can take 12 to 24 months, seriously affecting profitability.


3. Tax Agency (AEAT) Auctions: Accessible, but With Hidden Risks

Spanish Tax Agency building

AEAT auctions are regulated by the General Collection Regulation (RD 939/2005).

They are the most popular entry point for individual investors.

3.1 The 5% Deposit: Easy Access

The required deposit remains 5%.

Example:

  • Property value: €200,000
  • Deposit: €10,000

This allows investors to:

  • Participate in multiple auctions
  • Diversify risk
  • Learn without immobilizing large capital

3.2 Direct Award Phase: Real Opportunities

If an auction receives no bids, the property may move to a direct award phase.

During this period:

  • Offers are submitted privately
  • Discounts can be very significant
  • Approval depends on the Tax Agency

This is where many of the best deals appear.

3.3 The Main Problem: Possession

The Tax Agency cannot evict occupants.

If the property is occupied:

  • You become the legal owner
  • But not the physical possessor

You will need:

  • A lawyer
  • A separate eviction lawsuit
  • Between 8 and 18 months on average

This is the most common and costly mistake among beginners.


4. Social Security (TGSS) Auctions: High Returns, Extreme Risk

Industrial warehouse

TGSS auctions are regulated by RD 1415/2004 and are operationally the toughest.

4.1 Deposits of 25% to 30%

It is common to see:

  • 25% deposits
  • Sometimes up to 30%

This drastically limits competition.

4.2 Five-Day Payment Deadline

After winning the auction, you typically have 5 business days to pay.

No extensions.
No excuses.

Failure means losing the deposit.

4.3 Why Do Professionals Enter This Market?

Because TGSS auctions often include:

  • Industrial warehouses
  • Commercial premises
  • Business-related assets

At discounts rarely found elsewhere.


5. Notarial Auctions: Speed Without Enforcement Power

Notary office in Spain

Regulated by the Notarial Act, these auctions usually come from:

  • Extrajudicial mortgage enforcement
  • Voluntary sales
  • Division of jointly owned property

Advantages

  • Faster procedures
  • Real-time registry transparency

Key Limitation

Notaries cannot order evictions.

If the property is occupied:

  • You must go to court

6. Common Hidden Risks Across All Auctions

Legal documentation

6.1 Prior Charges

Charges registered before the enforced debt remain in place.

Classic mistake:

  • Cheap purchase price
  • Ignored prior mortgage
  • Six-figure surprise later

6.2 Property Tax (IBI) and Community Fees

The buyer is always liable for:

  • IBI: current year + previous year
  • Community fees: current year + previous three years

These costs are not included in the auction price.

6.3 Regional Pre-Emption Rights

In some regions:

  • Public authorities can step in
  • Buy the property at the same price

You get your deposit back, but lose time and capital availability.


7. Which Auction Type Fits You Best?

  • Judicial auction → Maximum legal certainty if you have liquidity
  • AEAT auction → Best entry point with proper analysis
  • TGSS auction → Only for experienced, liquid investors
  • Notarial auction → Local or opportunistic strategies

8. Final Conclusion: The Risk Is Not the Auction, It’s Not Understanding It

Public auction investing in Spain is not dangerous.

What is dangerous is:

  • Not understanding the procedure
  • Ignoring documentation
  • Miscalculating deadlines
  • Underestimating hidden costs

Today, manual analysis is slow and error-prone.

Advanced technology allows investors to:

  • Detect hidden risks
  • Understand the real legal situation
  • Save weeks of work
  • Avoid five-figure mistakes

We were born to democratize knowledge in public auctions.
We help you detect these risks with a single click.

More information at: https://subastai.app


Comparative Table of Real Estate Auctions in Spain (Practical Summary 2025)

Key VariableJudicial AuctionAEAT Auction (Tax Agency)TGSS Auction (Social Security)Notarial Auction
Main legal frameworkCivil Procedure Act (LEC) + Organic Law 1/2025General Collection Regulation (RD 939/2005)Social Security Collection Regulation (RD 1415/2004)Notarial Act
Origin of the debtMortgage enforcement / court judgmentTax debtsSocial Security contributionsExtrajudicial mortgage / private agreements
Required deposit20% (min. €1,000)5%25–30%Variable
Entry barrierVery highLowExtremeMedium
Payment deadline20 business days~15 days5 business daysAccording to terms
Post-auction financingVery difficultPossibleImpossibleDifficult
Possession deliveredYes (Art. 675 LEC)NoNoNo
Eviction includedYesNoNoNo
Occupation riskLowHighHighMedium
Competition levelLowHighVery lowMedium
Typical assetsResidentialResidential, garages, retailIndustrial, commercialResidential / mixed
Legal certaintyVery highMediumMediumHigh
Ideal investor profileInstitutional / patrimonialRetail / diversifiedProfessional / liquidLocal / opportunistic
Main advantageImmediate possessionAccessibilityDeep discountsSpeed
Main riskDeposit loss if unpaidEviction delaysDeposit lossNo enforcement power