Yes, a British expat living in Spain can get a UK mortgage. Building a life on the Costa del Sol, in Alicante, Valencia or inland does not stop you buying, keeping or remortgaging property back in the UK, it narrows which lenders will look at you and changes how they read your income. Because so many British people live in Spain, most expat lenders see these cases often and the euro is a currency they handle without difficulty, so the lender list tends to be wider than for a country they rarely fund. If you want the full picture first, start with our hub on whether an expat can get a UK mortgage, then come back here for the Spain detail.
Expats in Spain we help
- British nationals living in Spain, buying or remortgaging in the UK.
- Paid in euros, whether employed, self-employed or running a business.
- Keeping a UK home to return to, or letting it out while abroad.
- Retirees and part-year residents splitting life between Spain and the UK.
- Dual nationals and long-settled residents on the Costas or inland.
Why Spain is a familiar country for lenders
Lenders group countries by how comfortable they are lending to residents there, and Spain is a place most expat lenders see regularly. A large, long-settled British community, clear documentation and the euro, a mainstream currency an underwriter can read without difficulty, all count in your favour. That does not make a case automatic, your income, deposit and residency still have to stack up, but it does mean more lenders are willing to start the conversation than for a country they rarely fund. The result is a wider lender list and, often, more competitive terms than expats in less familiar places are offered.
How euro income is assessed
If you are paid in euros, a lender converts your pay to sterling and applies a reduction, often in the region of a fifth to a quarter, to allow for the exchange rate moving against the loan, then works from that lower figure. The euro is a mainstream currency that almost every expat lender accepts, so the question is rarely whether a lender will take it, but how large a reduction it applies. That haircut varies from lender to lender, which is why the lender you choose changes your borrowing more than the exchange rate on the day does. Matching your currency to a lender that reads it generously is the single biggest lever on the amount.
Want to know the figure a lender would actually assess from your euro pay? Tell us how and where you are paid.
Start the 60-Second CheckBuying a UK home, or letting one out from Spain
What you are buying changes how the loan is built. A home you will live in or return to is sized on your income and an affordability test, and our guide to residential mortgages for expats covers how that works from overseas. A property you let out is sized mainly on the rent it earns and a rent cover test, so your salary matters far less. Many expats in Spain do one of three things: keep the home they left and remortgage it, buy a place to return to one day, or buy to let while they are away. Be clear which case is yours before you settle on a figure, because the two are worked out in entirely different ways.
Deposit and what to plan for
Expect to put down more than a UK resident would. Expat lenders commonly look for a deposit in the region of a quarter of the property value, sometimes more, with the firmer end common on buy-to-let and on larger loans. A stronger deposit widens the lender choice open to you, sets a better loan-to-value band and can ease the affordability test, so it is worth knowing where you stand before you commit. Our guide to the expat mortgage deposit covers how much to plan for and why it sits higher than for a borrower based in the UK.
Residency, the European Union and your UK ties
Lenders want to understand your situation as a whole, not just your payslip. Whether you hold Spanish residency, a residence card or a visa shapes which lenders fit, and a clear set of ties back to the UK, a credit footprint, a previous address or an existing property, helps your case read well. Leaving the European Union changed your status in Spain more than it changed the UK mortgage, but a lender will still want your current residency documented plainly. None of this is a barrier on its own, though an overseas pay structure takes a little more documenting than a settled UK one. Knowing how a given lender will treat your residency before you apply saves a false start later.
From Spain, your UK mortgage rarely turns on whether you qualify. It turns on matching your euro pay, your residency and your deposit to a lender that funds expat cases as routine.
Arranging it from Spain
Spain runs just one hour ahead of the UK, so there is no awkward time gap to work around and we can talk through where you broadly stand in normal working hours. Most of the groundwork, the fact-find, gathering payslips and bank statements, and submitting the case, is handled remotely, so distance is rarely the obstacle. You must be on UK soil to receive advice, so we confirm your residency and circumstances properly before recommending anything. In practice a trip back is about timing rather than a hurdle, and a great deal is settled before you ever board a plane.
How does Mortgage One help?
Mortgage One is a countrywide UK mortgage broker with access to plans from the whole of market, and we arrange expat cases as a regular part of the business, not an exception to it. We work out which lenders are comfortable with a Spanish residence and how you are paid, count bonus or self-employed earnings properly, settle whether your case is residential or buy-to-let, and put it in front of a lender that treats overseas borrowers as routine, with the evidence an underwriter needs. You must be on UK soil to receive advice, so we confirm your circumstances properly before recommending anything.
Ready to know where you stand on a UK mortgage from Spain rather than guess from abroad? Let an adviser review your case.
Check Your OptionsFrequently asked questions
Can a British expat in Spain get a UK mortgage?
Yes. British nationals living in Spain arrange UK mortgages regularly, both to buy and to remortgage. Living in Malaga, Alicante, Valencia or anywhere else along the coast or inland does not stop you owning property here, it narrows which lenders will look at you and changes how they read your income. So many British people live in Spain that most expat lenders see these cases often, so the lender list tends to be wider than for a country they rarely fund. The work is matching your euro pay, your Spanish residency and your deposit to a lender that treats overseas borrowers as routine.
How does euro income affect what I can borrow?
A lender converts your euro pay to sterling and applies a reduction, often in the region of a fifth to a quarter, to allow for the exchange rate moving against the loan, then works from that lower figure. The size of that reduction varies between lenders, so the lender you choose changes your borrowing more than the rate on the day does. The euro is a mainstream currency that almost every expat lender accepts, so the task is rarely whether a lender will take it, but finding the one that applies the smallest haircut to it.
Does living in the European Union after Brexit change my UK mortgage options?
For the UK mortgage itself, not greatly. A lender is concerned with your residency, how you are paid and your ties to the UK, rather than whether Spain is inside or outside the European Union. What did change is your status in Spain, many British residents now hold a residence card or a visa rather than relying on freedom of movement, and a lender will want that residency documented clearly. We help you set out where you stand so an underwriter can read it without difficulty.
Can I get a UK mortgage from Spain to let the property out?
Yes. Many expats in Spain buy or keep a UK property to let, and that is sized mainly on the rent the property earns and a rent cover test rather than on your salary. A property you will live in or return to is sized on your income instead. The two are worked out in entirely different ways, so be clear which case is yours before you settle on a figure, and expect a buy-to-let from overseas to ask for a larger deposit than a UK-resident landlord would.
How big a deposit will I need as an expat in Spain?
Plan for more than a UK resident would put down. Expat lenders commonly look for a deposit in the region of a quarter of the property value, sometimes more, and a larger deposit widens the lender choice open to you and can ease the affordability test. Our guide to the expat mortgage deposit covers how much to plan for and why it sits higher.
Do I have to fly back to the UK to arrange the mortgage?
You can do most of the groundwork from Spain, and with only an hour between us it is easy to talk things through in normal working hours. You must be on UK soil to receive advice, so we confirm your residency and circumstances properly before recommending anything. Much of the paperwork is handled remotely, so a trip back is usually about timing rather than a barrier to getting started.
See if a UK mortgage from Spain fits
Tell us how you are paid, where in Spain you live and the property you have in mind, and a Mortgage One adviser will review your answers.
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