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PROPERTY

What to consider before hiring a builder to renovate your Spanish home

Finding trustworthy builders to revamp your Spanish property can be challenging, apart from the paperwork, language barrier and other important considerations.

What to consider before hiring a builder to renovate your Spanish home
Asking friends and colleagues to recommend a trustworthy builder is a good option. (Photo by Nasim ISAMOV / AFP)

So you’ve bought your dream house in Spain and finally made the move. Often in Spain the real bargains can be found in the country or inland, and they usually come with lots of space but could also require some work.

Let’s assume you aren’t going to do the job yourself. Whether it be some some light touch reforms or a full renovation, you’re probably going to need a builder to help.

Now you need to find a reliable builder to get to work on your new home. 

Important vocabulary

Firstly, understanding some of the key vocabulary will also help you in the search process, depending on what exactly you need.

In Spanish the word most generally used for a builder is el albañil, although this also means bricklayer in more specific circumstances. 

If you’re going for a full renovation you might also need an architect (arquitecto), carpenter (carpintero), electrician (electricista), plumber (fontanero) and perhaps also a surveyor to oversee and advise on the wider process (usually just referred to as el inspector in Spanish).

READ ALSO: How much does it cost to renovate your kitchen in Spain?

Finding a good builder

Do your research. Whether it be online or through good old fashioned word of mouth (boca a boca in Spanish) you need to be sure that someone, whether a friend or in an online review, can vouch for their services. 

Ideally you’d also see some evidence of their work. Nowadays many self-employed builders and construction firms have social media accounts or websites showing off their skills. Though, of course, as with anything online, remember that it’s not always representative .

Experience obviously plays a role in this. Find out how long they’ve been working as a builder. Are they a generalist or do they specialise in something? Will you need to hire other workers to help them?

READ ALSO: Do I need a permit to put a shed or wooden hut in my garden in Spain?

Through a company 

This may be the easiest way, depending where you are. Spain has many renovation and building companies with entire teams of employees of different trades that between them can reform your house. 

Sometimes the companies themselves are basically subcontractors, who will find and arrange tradesmen for you.

Self-employed tradesman

You could also hire a self-employed builder or tradesman, who, if you’re doing a full renovation, will probably have to arrange different tradesmen to help him (bricklayers, electricians, plumbers, carpenters, plasterers, and so on).

Many self-employed builders may have their own firms, and often this can work out cheaper than going through a company as there are no intermediaries involved. 

Get various quotes

One thing that will help you decide on a company or builder is an idea of how much they’ll charge. As in every country, prospective clients will first contact a builder for a quote (presupuesto in Spanish) of how much they think the job will cost and how long it will take.

Shop around a bit to see what the going rate is on the market. This is especially true for foreigners in Spain, as some Spanish builders may try to take advantage of any language barrier to overcharge.

Before signing any contracts or parting with any money, it’s always advisable to get a detailed breakdown of any quotes you receive.

They should include a detailed description of each of the jobs to be done; detailed measurements so you can check the work once it’s completed; itemised prices, so you can see exactly what you’re paying for; and the VAT (known as IVA in Spanish) as it’ll probably be a fairly large amount for a full renovation.

How will you pay them?

So you’ve decided on a builder, next you need to think about money – specifically, how you’re going to pay them.

Piecework (output pay)

Piecework or output-based pay is essentially when you pay according to how the work progresses. 

Before the work begins, the two parties agree on a total price for the work and payment is made according to progress on the job.

Weekly payment

Weekly pay (pago semanal) is when two parties fix an amount to be paid per week.

Of course, if you’re paying weekly then be sure to supervise the project and set some goals for the project so it doesn’t take long. Spain, like in every country, has its fair share of cowboy builders who will try to drag out jobs to get paid for longer!

Pay per m/2

Less common but some builders ask to be paid by m/2, whether weekly or monthly. Depending on the job, it could also be cubic metres or linear metres.

Contract 

Obviously, all this should be put in a contract before any work takes place or money exchanges hands. If the company or tradesman is serious, they should request a contract anyway.

If they refuse a contract, you should probably restart your search. 

The contract should include:

  • Your name, and the name of the company and company owner, or self-employed tradesman.
  • Detailed description of the work to be carried out.
  • Total cost of the renovations, with itemised pricing.
  • The planned start and end date for the work.
  • An outline of the form of payment and payment schedule.
  • In Spain it is also normal for the contract to indicate who is applying for the relevant building permits from the town hall.

READ ALSO: What you should know before hiring a gardener in Spain

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BARCELONA

Can Barcelona really ban all Airbnbs?

Barcelona’s mayor recently announced plans to get rid of all tourist flats in the next four years as a means of controlling rent hikes. It’s the most drastic measure so far in Spanish cities’ battle against Airbnb - but will it actually happen?

Can Barcelona really ban all Airbnbs?

In late June, Barcelona mayor Jaume Collboni made national headlines when he announced plans to revoke the licence of more than 10,000 tourist apartments in the Catalan capital. 

It would “be like building 10,000 new homes,” Collboni argued, alluding to Spain’s need to build huge amounts of social housing to counteract the shortage and price rise of regular long-term rentals for locals. 

Tourism’s impact on Barcelona and the subsequent animosity from residents has been around for over a decade, whereas in other places where anti-mass tourism protests have been held, such as Málaga and Canary Islands, it’s a more recent phenomenon. 

READ ALSO: ‘It kills the city’ – Barcelona’s youth protest against mass tourism

So it’s perhaps no surprise that the Catalan city is the first place in the country to truly aim at cutting out tourist apartments altogether. 

Spain’s Housing Minister Isabel Rodríguez has lauded Collboni’s “bravery” in the fight against the proliferation of tourism lets (up by 60,000 new Airbnb-style beds in just a year in Spain). 

However, there are plenty of voices which oppose the move to make Barcelona holiday let free.

“It’s unconstitutional,” Marian Muro, president of Barcelona Association of Tourist Apartments, told business daily Expansión.

“What Barcelona City Council is doing is expropriating the rights of the holders of tourist licences,” she claimed. 

Apartur is planning legal action against the measure on three levels: through the Constitutional Court, the administrative court and the Court of Justice of the European Union (CJEU).

According to Muro, Collboni knows that the legislation he’s promised will be “revoked”, and criticises that “no analysis or study has been provided” to justify the move. 

Her association has also told the Spanish press that Barcelona stands to lose “up to 40 percent of its tourists” with said blanket ban.

Collboni’s right-hand man Jordi Valls, in charge of economy and tourism at the city council, has openly admitted that “it’s clear that there will be a legal battle”, adding that “sectors linked to tourist flats appeal to compromise but also threaten legal battles”.

“Amsterdam and New York are doing it, all cities impacted by tourism are trying to get residential harmony to exist again,” Valls told national radio RNE. 

The key for him is to strike a balance between housing being a “financial asset” and serving a “social function”.

“We can’t give up on controlling it,” Valls concluded.

Crucially, the Barcelona councillor has said that since the tourist apartment ban was announced on June 21st, the sale of flats with tourist rental licences has fallen, something also reported in Catalan daily El Periódico, which stated that such sought-after properties were selling for €100,000 above the standard appraisal. 

For economics professor at Barcelona University Gonzalo Bernardos, tourist flats don’t represent enough of Spain’s housing market for a ban to have a sufficient impact.

“Eighty percent of tourist flats in Catalonia are owned by people with just that flat”, Bernardos claimed on La Sexta, so the ban would not have a great impact on “large investment funds or people who want to speculate” with property prices.

READ ALSO: VUT, AT or VV? Why Spain’s holiday let categories matter to owners

Barcelona’s progressive revocation of tourist let licences until 2028 may be endorsed by local and national authorities currently, but it will be a struggle for them to win the many legal battles they are set to face in the coming years from groups with financial interests in the Airbnb market.

Last year, the European Parliament approved new data-sharing rules that clamp down on illegal short-term rentals, as a means of protecting residents of European cities who face shortages of affordable housing.

However, EU lawmakers have not yet considered a blanket ban on Airbnb. 

The EU Charter of Fundamental Rights does state that “The use of property may be regulated by law in so far as is necessary for the general interest”, but completely eliminating the right of Spaniards and Europeans to let out their homes to tourists will be a monumental task. 

READ ALSO: Good tourists, bad tourist – How to travel responsibly in Spain

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