Buying a New-Build Property in Spain from the US (Remote Step-by-Step, 2026)

A practical guide for US citizens buying off-plan or new-build homes in Spain: NIE, banking, Power of Attorney, contracts and notary completion.

A good Spanish agency can coordinate viewings, floorplans, spec sheets and developer communication remotely, but the point of this article isn’t to sell you on that. It’s to make the process clear, predictable, and low-drama, especially for buyers looking at Costa Blanca developments and off-plan apartments.

This guide covers the practical steps for a US citizen buying a new build home in Spain remotely from NIE and a Spanish bank account, to Power of Attorney, contracts, staged payments, and the notary completion so that when you do speak to an agent, lawyer or bank, you already know what.

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Step 1: Get your NIE from the US (so you can buy remotely)

NIE is your foreigner ID number in Spain. If you’re buying remotely, you don’t need to “wait until you’re in Spain” — you can apply from your country of residence through a Spanish consulate.

In most consulate processes you’ll see:

  • EX-15 form (Application for Foreigner’s Identification Number), and
  • Modelo 790-012 fee form (plus passport copies and supporting documents).

Timing reality: consulate timelines and appointment availability vary, and can be weeks rather than days, so treat NIE as a first-week task, not a last-minute admin detail.

Practical tip: if you’re serious about a specific development, start your NIE application before you pay a reservation deposit. It removes friction later, especially for banking and completion.

Step 2: Opening a Spanish bank account as a non-resident (or agree a clean payment route)

You can pay from the US, but many buyers open a Spanish non-resident bank account because it keeps the process tidy: reservation deposits are simpler, stage payments are easier to track, and after completion you can pay community fees and utilities without constant back-and-forth.

What to expect is fairly standard. Banks vary, but non-resident accounts usually come with two realities: identity checks and compliance questions. That doesn’t mean anything is “wrong”, it’s just the normal anti–money laundering process, and it can take longer than people assume.

Typical documents banks may ask for (varies by bank):

  • Passport (and sometimes a second ID)
  • Proof of address in the US (recent utility bill or bank statement)
  • Your NIE (sometimes required early; sometimes accepted later, depends on the bank)
  • Proof of funds / source of funds (basic explanation + supporting statements)
  • In some cases, a non-resident certificate or additional forms for non-resident status

Don’t leave banking until the last month before completion. Set it up early, so you’re not trying to open an account and move funds at the same time.

And whichever route you choose — Spanish account or US transfers — keep a clear paper trail for every payment (bank references, receipts, and confirmations). That’s what makes remote buying feel straightforward rather than stressful.

Step 3: Use a Power of Attorney to make the purchase genuinely “remote”

If you don’t want to fly to Spain for every signature, a Power of Attorney (PoA / poder notarial) is what makes a remote purchase workable. It allows a Spanish lawyer (or another trusted representative) to sign documents and handle key steps on your behalf including contract signing and, in many cases, the notary completion.

For US buyers, the important thing is that a PoA signed outside Spain usually needs to be prepared in a way Spanish institutions will recognise. That typically means it’s notarised, then legalised (often via a Hague Apostille), and sometimes translated by a sworn translator depending on how and where it’s used.

What a PoA can usually cover (keep it specific):

  • Signing the reservation contract and the Private Purchase Contract (PPC)
  • Paying taxes and fees connected to the purchase
  • Signing the title deed (escritura) at the notary
  • Handling post-completion admin (utilities, community set-up, registrations)
  • If relevant, limited banking actions connected to the purchase

What to do in practice:

  • Ask your Spanish lawyer to draft the PoA wording, so it matches what the notary, land registry and (if relevant) the bank will accept
  • Keep the scope tight and purchase-focused – enough to complete the transaction smoothly, without handing over broad, open-ended authority
  • Start early: PoA paperwork can be quick, but the apostille/translation steps can add time depending on your state and schedule

Done properly, PoA doesn’t make the purchase “risky”, it makes it structured. The goal is simply that you’re not forced into last-minute travel because one signature can’t be done remotely.

Remote buying: what usually slows people down

Most delays aren’t about the build.
They’re about admin: NIE timing, bank compliance checks, and paperwork that arrives late.
If you start those early, the rest of the timeline becomes far more predictable.

With new-build and off-plan property in Spain, the sensible approach is to treat the visuals as a starting point and the paperwork as the decision-maker.

From the US, you’re often choosing based on floorplans, specs, and developer updates rather than frequent site visits, so the legal check is what keeps the purchase grounded in what’s actually being sold and built.

At Spaces & Places Exclusive Property S.L., a Valencia-based real estate agency specialising in new-build homes, we typically help buyers organise the information properly: we gather the developer documents for the chosen unit, clarify what’s included in writing (parking, storage, upgrades), and coordinate the questions that your independent lawyer will then verify. The goal is simple: fewer assumptions, fewer surprises.

What your lawyer should typically review (and what you should request copies of):

  • Proof of developer/land ownership and title status
  • The project’s planning position and licence status (what’s approved vs what’s still pending)
  • The specification and inclusions for your unit (parking, storage, appliances, upgrades)
  • Clauses that allow changes to layouts/materials and how “equivalent” is defined
  • The delivery date terms and what happens if there’s a delay
  • How stage payments are protected and documented (covered in the next step)

A useful rule of thumb: if something matters to you — sea view line, parking space, terrace size, fixtures — it needs to appear in the written pack, not just in a brochure or a video call.

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Step 5: Reservation Contract (Contrato de Reserva)

This is usually the first moment you’re asked to pay money, so it’s also the first moment you find out how organised the transaction really is. A reservation contract is normal for new build home in Spain but you want it to do one simple job: tie your payment to a specific unit on clear terms, with no vague “we’ll confirm later” gaps.

Before you send a reservation deposit, ask for these points in writing (email is fine):

  • The exact unit reference (block, floor, number) and the purchase price basis
  • Confirmation of whether the advertised price is “+ IVA” (very common on new builds)
  • Whether the reservation is refundable, and exactly when (for example: failed legal checks, mortgage refusal, developer changes)
  • The timeline for the next contract (usually the PPC (Private Purchase Contract) and what happens if that date slips
  • A simple payment schedule: what you pay, when you pay it, and what triggers each payment

If something matters and it isn’t written down, treat it as a proposal, not a promise.

Step 6: Stage payments during construction (how you keep them safe)

With off-plan apartments, staged payments are standard — you’re funding the build in instalments rather than paying everything on completion day. The question isn’t “are stage payments normal?” The question is “what protects your money while the home is still being built?”

Spain has a framework requiring amounts paid in advance for homes under construction to be protected, commonly through a bank guarantee or an insurance-backed structure (with the modern rules in place since 2016). The detail that matters for buyers is practical: your payments should be traceable, contract-linked, and protected in the way your lawyer can confirm in writing.

What to do as a buyer

Treat each instalment like a formal transaction, not an informal transfer. Ask your lawyer to confirm:

  • what guarantee/protection mechanism applies to your purchase, and
  • how each payment should be made and evidenced (references, receipts, and the correct beneficiary)

If those two answers are clear, stage payments stop feeling risky, they become a controlled part of buying new property in Spain from a distance.

Stage payments: the safe way to treat them

Every instalment should be tied to the contract, sent to the correct beneficiary, and backed by the correct protection mechanism (your lawyer confirms this). If a payment can’t be clearly evidenced, don’t rush it.

Step 7: PPC (Private Purchase Contract): Where the deal really becomes fixed

After reservation, you typically sign the PPC. This is where:

  • the full payment plan is locked in,
  • specifications are formalised,
  • delivery dates and delay terms are clarified,
  • completion process is set (including notary mechanics)

Remote buyers often sign the PPC via PoA once the legal review is complete.

Step 8: Notary completion (the final signing)

Completion happens when the title deed (escritura) is signed at the notary and the purchase funds are released. If you’re not there, your representative signs via PoA.

Before completion, you’ll want:

  • final “completion statement” figures in writing (price, IVA, AJD, fees)
  • confirmation of what you receive on handover (keys, manuals, warranties, snagging protocol)
  • a plan for utilities/community set-up post-completion.

A simple remote-buying checklist (US buyers)

  1. NIE application started via consulate (EX-15 + 790-012)
  2. Spanish bank account opened (or payment route confirmed)
  3. PoA drafted correctly, notarised, apostilled where required, and translated if neededLegal review completed before PPC
  4. Reservation and PPC terms are clear and written
  5. Stage payments are protected under the applicable framework
  6. Completion logistics and handover steps agreed in advance
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In practice, remote buying works when you treat it like a documented process: get your NIE started, set up a clean payment route, use PoA if you want to avoid travel, and keep every key term in writing. From there, the steps are straightforward and the FAQ below covers the questions US buyers most often ask.

FAQ

Quick answers for foreign buyers:

Yes, many buyers complete remotely using Power of Attorney, provided the document is correctly prepared and accepted in Spain.

You can apply through a Spanish consulate in your country of residence, using the standard forms and requirements set out by the Spanish foreign ministry/consulates.

It varies by consulate workload and appointment availability; plan for weeks rather than days and start early.

Not always, but it often makes payments and post-completion admin simpler. Banks have their own compliance steps, so don’t leave it to the last minute.

There’s a legal framework requiring protection/guarantees for amounts paid in advance for homes under construction (commonly via bank guarantee or insurance structures). Your lawyer should confirm the mechanism used in your contract.

We specialise in Costa Blanca and Valencia-area developments. Our core role is to help you select credible projects, organise meaningful viewings, obtain and interpret the developer’s documentation, and keep communication moving between all parties. Additional support – such as mortgage assistance or very hands-on completion services – can be arranged as separate, paid options if you want a more “done-for-you” approach.

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About the author

Olga Verzhykovska - founder of the real estate agency in Spain
Co-Founder & Managing Partner
SPACES & PLACES Exclusive Property S.L.
Olga works directly with Costa Blanca developers, reviewing planning documents, licences, specifications and construction updates for international buyers. With a background in supporting overseas clients through the full purchase process, she focuses on clear, practical guidance for anyone considering a new-build or off-plan home in Spain.

Information in this article is intended for general guidance only. Development details, pricing and availability may change; please verify all information directly with the developer or your trusted adviser before making any purchase decisions.

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