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Home insurance in Spain: How does it work and what does it cover?

Home insurance in Spain has policies which may differ from what you're used to in your home country. Here's why Spanish home insurance may surprise you in terms of what it covers, what it costs, key info and whether it's worth getting.

Home insurance in Spain: How does it work and what does it cover?
Find out what Spanish home insurance covers and whether you should consider getting it. (Photo by OSCAR DEL POZO / AFP)

If you’re moving to Spain and purchasing a property or even renting, one of the first and most important factors to consider is purchasing home insurance.

According to the latest data available, approximately 23 percent of households in Spain are uninsured. That percentage corresponds to around 6 million homes.

But with low prices and the wide range of situations Spanish home insurance covers, there’s little reason not to get it.

Contracting home insurance is only essential in Spain when you acquire a mortgage. The current Mortgage Law requires you to take out this insurance if you are going to buy a house with a loan and is an essential requirement for banks to grant you the money.

If you’re renting in Spain, you’re not obliged to contract home insurance, but it still may be a good idea.

Your landlord may have buildings insurance, but you may still want to take out some type of insurance to protect your own belongings or the contents of the property. 

In the UK, home contents insurance covers your personal possessions against theft, fire or other damage, while buildings insurance covers the structure of your property if the tiles on your roof are broken in a storm for example, the outside is damaged by fire or a tree falls on part of your property.

In Spain, home insurance works slightly differently. Like in the UK and other countries there are different types of insurance. 

READ ALSO: Is getting rental default insurance worth it for landlords in Spain?

What types of home insurance are there in Spain?

The most basic is seguros de daños or damage insurance which is similar to buildings insurance in the UK. This will only protect the structure of your property. This would be damage caused by major events such as fires, explosions, flooding, acts of vandalism or subsidence and you should still check the smallprint to be sure of the conditions. With flooding for example, most insurers cover flooding damage caused by rainfall greater than 40 litres per square metre per hour.

The second tier is seguros multiriesgo or multi-risk insurance. This covers both your building and its contents and is one of the most comprehensive types of home insurance in Spain.

This type of insurance not only covers big incidents like fire or theft, but it also covers a whole range of minor issues, which is very different from the type of contents insurance in the UK.

Home insurance is only essential in Spain when you acquire a mortgage. Photo: Louis Hansel /Unsplash
 

It can cover for everything from a blocked sink to a burst pipe in the wall or a broken radiator. Sometimes it may even cover the breakdown of your white goods such as washing machine and fridge, depending on how old they are and what your specific policy says.

It’s also especially useful for flat owners as it covers against damage to your neighbours’ property if something inside your apartment is at fault.

For example, if your shower or toilet breaks and starts leaking into the flat downstairs, your insurance should cover the damage to your neighbour’s ceiling so that you won’t have to fork out a fortune for fixing someone else’s property.

Many major cities in Spain have historic quarters and some of its nicest-looking apartment buildings are some of the oldest too, so it’s particularly useful if your property is old and prone to needing fixing regularly. 

The third and highest type of home insurance coverage in Spain is all-risk home insurance, which has extended coverage that includes robbery on the street, damage to extra storage rooms outside the main property or coverage for cosmetic damage.

What you need to know

Keep in mind that when you do claim or after you have claimed a couple of times, it’s normal that the insurance company won’t want you to be their client anymore and will terminate your contract.

This shouldn’t be a problem, however, you will simply contract a new home insurance policy with a different company. It helps to go with a broker so that they can present you with different options to choose from, so you know what’s the best.

Be aware that every insurance company will have a slightly different policy so just because a certain item may have been covered on your old policy, it doesn’t mean that will be on the new one or be covered to the same amount of money.

What are some of the most popular home insurance companies in Spain?

There are many different companies that offer multi-risk insurance policies in Spain, both international and national companies. Some of the most popular are:

  • AXA Home Insurance
  • Generali
  • Zurich
  • Mapfre
  • Caser
  • El Corte Inglés 

How much does home insurance cost in Spain?

As the multi-risk policies cover so many different aspects, you would imagine that they’re very expensive. Surprisingly though, these are quite affordable at under €200 per year according to the Organisation of Consumers and Users (OCU).

The price isn’t too different from what you’d pay in the UK. Money Supermarket says that a combined home and contents insurance policy in the UK costs around £140 per year, but usually it will cover a lot less. 

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PROPERTY

War pushes Polish people to buy homes in Spain in record numbers

Increasingly affluent Polish nationals are buying up more second homes than ever in Spain, especially on the Costa Blanca, with the threat of war spilling over from next-door Ukraine spurring many to have a place in the sun to escape to.

War pushes Polish people to buy homes in Spain in record numbers

Amid the backdrop of the war in Ukraine but also growing household wealth, Poles are buying properties in Spain in record numbers.

Poles in 2023 bought the highest numbers of properties in Spain on record, beating the old record from the year before in 2022, according to figures from Polish outlet Bizblog.

Poles bought 3,118 properties in Spain in 2023, and their share in the Spanish property market is growing fast.  As recently as 2019 it was 1.6 percent of property purchases by foreigners, but by 2023 that number had risen to 3.6 percent.

In areas such as Marina Baixa and Alta in the Costa Blanca, Polish buyers are investing in new builds more than Spaniards

Poles tend to pay cash rather than taking out a mortgage when they buy property in Spain, and are more likely to choose flats (65 percent of total transactions) compared to houses or villas (35 percent).

Even though Polish buyers are still not among the main foreign population groups who snapped up the most Spanish homes in 2023 (Brits, Germans and French), their increasing presence is noticeable.

READ MORE: Foreigners buy up homes in Spain in record numbers

Agnes Marciniak-Kostrzewa, a property estate based on the Costa del Sol, told CNN that the surge interest has mirrored concerns in Poland about the ongoing war in Ukraine.

“I experienced two waves of rapidly growing interest in buying properties. The first was in February 2022, immediately after the outbreak of the war. The second has been since February 2024,” Marciniak-Kostrzewa said, referencing the period when Russia picked up its offensive and began making territorial gains again.

More recently, former U.S. President Donald Trump’s comments on Russia caused more Polish nationals to consider having a second home abroad. “After Trump’s statement and after Tusk’s interview, we got calls – I don’t even know how many – with people asking if they can come within three days and buy the property, and how long the whole procedure takes to get the keys,” Marciniak-Kostrzewa said.

But it’s not just fear pushing this trend, it’s also growing spending power.

This comes following news that Poland overtook Spain in terms of average household wealth. The wealth index, referred to as ‘actual individual consumption’ (AIC), combines goods and services consumed per household, as well as services provided by the government.

According to Eurostat, AIC is a better measure of household consumer wealth than GDP per capita, which gives a broad stroke view of the overall economic health of a country rather than individual households.

Over the past three decades, Poland has experienced an “economic marvel” which has seen its GDP increase tenfold nominally, sixfold when corrected for the cost of living.

That is to say, decades after the fall of communism Poles are getting richer and richer and looking abroad to buy property abroad as a back up plan should, in the unlikely event it does happen, the war in Ukraine spills over into Poland.

52,882 Poles are registered as living in Spain as of 2022, according to latest population data from Spain national stats body (INE).

READ ALSO: Who are the typical foreign nationals buying property in Spain?

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