Jean Galea

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Navigating Through Life’s Scams, Quackery, Fake Science and Outright Bullshit

Last updated: April 03, 20242 Comments

One thing I’ve realized during the past 5 years or so is the mind-boggling amount of crap information that’s passed around as absolute truth. Of course, the arrival of the internet only hugely magnified this problem, so we live in an age where it can be extremely difficult to know what’s true and what’s not.

It seems like everyone around is trying to manipulate our thinking, taking advantage of human biases and weaknesses in logic to convince us to believe what they are trying to sell. Politicians do it, companies do it, religious organizations do it, etc etc.

In this post, I’ll list a number of great resources that have helped me in this journey to really understand how things work and cut through the crap. I’ll keep updating this list over the years.

Health & Medicine

  • Science-Based Medicine – Discusses popular health-related topics like vaccines, homeopathy etc.
  • PainScience.com – All about pain and associated treatments. Learn what works and what doesn’t.
  • Examine.com – Research about supplements and nutrition
  • FoundMyFitness – More exotic topics well examined
  • Athlean-X – Favorite site for building muscle

Science & Philosophy

  • LessWrong – Deep resource into philosophical arguments, rationality and logic.
  • Skeptic.com – Many topics covered and also a great podcast (Science Salon)
  • Skeptoid.com
  • Skeptical Science
  • Skeptical Enquirer
  • Neurologica
  • Center for Enquiry
  • Snopes.com
  • Rationalwiki
  • Sloww
  • Raptitude.com

I also recommend the Science Salon podcast hosted by Michael Schermer.

Economics & Politics

  • Behavioral Scientist – Discusses many current topics from a behavioral science perspective.
  • The Library of Economics & Liberty
  • American Institute for Economic Research
  • Mises Institute
  • Libertarianism.org

[Read more…]

Filed under: Thoughts & Experiences

Avoiding Smartphone and Social Media addiction

Last updated: March 12, 2026Leave a Comment

Update March 2026 — I’ve moved on from the dual-phone approach. These days I use a browser extension to strip the addictive elements out of social media instead. See: How I Stripped Social Media Down to What Actually Matters.

Smartphone usage and social media have become very detrimental to our attention spans and the ability to engage in deep work. We are constantly tempted to pick up our phones to get our next dopamine hit by checking Instagram or Facebook likes, or engaging in pointless chatter on apps such as Whatsapp.

The effects of social media and smartphones were the subject of the documentary The Social Dilemma. I have no doubt about the effects of social media and devices. I have got enough of a digital marketing education background as well as practical experience to understand how these mechanisms work in influencing us. I have also recognised that I am not immune to these effects, even though I know exactly how they are pushing me to do what I don’t really want to do.

These days, I keep off any social network. That’s the only thing that works for me. Yes, there are costs for doing so, but those can be mitigated by maintaining a healthy network of close friends who are also well-informed about the world. All important news eventually gets to you unless you live a completely isolated lifestyle. For the kind of news that is related to investments, where there is a strong argument for alpha being available on social media, I have found that being in a curated group of top players in your field of investment actually gives you better results and better conversations. So that is what I am doing now instead. This is also part of my experiment with building online communities.


In 2019 I ran a little experiment that I described below:

It’s been a while since I abandoned Facebook, and even longer since I stopped reading newspapers and online news sites. Over the past year, however, I’ve noticed that my phone had become a really serious distraction for me.

On several occasions, I have asked my wife to put away the phone so we could have a more engaging conversation, and she’s done the same to me, probably even more frequently. Since having our first child, it seems that we can’t take the phone out of our hands, and somehow it seems justified. We want to immortalize the memories of every little thing he does and then share it with our family on Whatsapp. Things recently got to a head and I decided I need to take serious action about this.

The thing is, our modern-day smartphones keep us addicted in a similar way to slot machines (see video below). We’re fighting a lost battle if we think it’s just a question of having more discipline.

YouTube video

Here’s how I solved this problem.

I love my iPhone 6S Plus (an older model of the iPhone that still works perfectly) and I use it a lot when I’m out and about with my bicycle or car and listen to podcasts or music while also using maps to get to my destination. I also use Calm for meditation and Spotify for music. So getting rid of the smartphone was out of the question. I needed to find a better solution than that.

What I did was resurrect an older Nexus 5 which runs Android OS, which I have since become quite unfamiliar with, plus it’s a slower phone that is moderately annoying to use.

I then moved all the apps that I qualify as addictive onto this older phone:

  • Whatsapp (the biggest culprit)
  • Instagram
  • Facebook
  • Wallapop
  • Facebook Messenger

I then informed my family that I would still remain accessible via another messaging app, where they could contact me when needed. I work at home so communication with my wife is not an issue, we’re always within meters of each other in our apartment. I check the family group on Whatsapp once a day and that’s enough for catching up with any events of the day and commenting when needed. For more in-depth conversations I have a Skype call with them.

I also set up Freedom.to on all my devices and made sure that social media and other distracting websites are blocked during the majority of the day, so even if I wanted to I would not be able to access them. Again, the idea is not to rely on my weak self-discipline, but to put in hard blocks that will eventually remove that trigger to check updates from my brain.

So far so good, I’ve noticed a huge improvement in productivity and mental well-being after having gone through this process and tested it for a few weeks.

The one remaining issue for me comes from an old friend who I thought would be quite benign: email. With the other stuff out of the way, my email still remained a constantly open window on my computer and something I check frequently on my phone. But while I was on retreat earlier this month and trying to keep off the internet, it immediately became apparent to me how dependent my mood and task list was on email. I kept getting triggered by my brain to check email, and even felt the dread of receiving an email from a problematic person, knowing that if I opened my mail and found his email with the imagined content, it would really ruin my day. I then realized that I actually check the email app on my phone several times and even have the habit of hitting refresh in Gmail even though the app itself refreshes every few minutes itself. That’s how bad my addiction to email is.

That is, therefore, my next target: to become less reliant on email. I plan to check email around twice a day and also make sure that I don’t take immediate action on email requests unless it takes 2 minutes or less. I plan to allocate half an hour in the morning and another half an hour in the evening or afternoon for email. I’ll report on that later after concluding my experimentation.

Related books about this topic

  • Deep Work by Cal Newport
  • Digital Minimalism by Cal Newport
  • Essentialism by Greg McKeown

All great books, but Digital Minimalism really hit the nail on the head and spurred me to try the two phones idea. There are also other ideas that are worth exploring, such as putting your phone in greyscale mode.

Useful Apps

  • Screen Time
  • Freedom

Let me know what’s your experience with smartphone and social media usage, have you felt addicted and how have you dealt with it?

Filed under: Thoughts & Experiences

Expat Guide to Spanish Taxation – Welcome to Europe’s Tax Hell

Last updated: March 11, 20268 Comments

One of the most common mistakes expats make is not researching the tax situation of their new country before they move there. This can lead to some very bad news further down the road.

Let’s have a look at Spain, which has a lot of taxes that people coming from other countries might not be familiar with. For example, having previously lived in Malta, many of the Spanish taxes were simply new to me and have no equivalent in Malta. There is no property tax, exit tax, or wealth tax there, just to mention a few examples.

Spain certainly seems to reward those who feed on government funds rather than encouraging people to set up businesses, invest, or save.

It’s important to understand this unfortunate fact before you move to Spain. I am definitely not a fan of the Spanish tax system, work culture, or politics, but there are also lifestyle benefits of living in Spain that you will have to weigh up.

Spain – Europe’s Tax Hell

Unfortunately, while Spain remains an amazing country with friendly people and all the ingredients to sustain an incredible lifestyle, it has been plagued by bad politics for several years now, and that has paved the way for the decline of this country.

Spain has a complex tax system where taxes are levied by the central, regional, and local governments. Stamp duties, transfer, wealth, and inheritance taxes are administered and regulated by 19 regional governments. Regional governments can also approve additional taxes and set the regional income tax brackets and rates, representing 50 percent of the overall income tax, while the other 50 percent is set by the central government.

Madrid is by far the best region tax-wise, while Catalonia sits on the opposite side of the spectrum. Madrid is the only region that does not levy wealth tax on its citizens — although as you’ll see below, the national government has since taken steps to make that advantage meaningless.

The truth is that wealth taxes never worked. When a region sets a higher wealth tax, taxpayers move out. It’s as simple as that. Others set up structures to avoid the tax. At the end of the day, even if wealth taxes worked, they would collect little revenue. At the same time, they disincentivize entrepreneurship, harming innovation and impacting long-term growth. With so many countries having abandoned the wealth tax, regions in Spain should repeal the tax instead of asking Madrid to harmonize with the rest.

The same is true for inheritance and gift taxes. They only raise 0.58 percent of Spain’s total revenue while they harm entrepreneurial activity, savings, and employment. In some cases, they have proven to be confiscatory. Regional statutory tax rates can reach levels as high as 81.6 percent, depending not only on the amount inherited but also on the pre-inheritance wealth of the inheritor and their familial closeness to the deceased. A recent study revealed that inheritances can in fact reduce wealth inequality, as transfers are proportionately larger relative to pre-inheritance wealth for households lower in the wealth distribution.

With that background in place, it’s time to get practical and look at the various questions and doubts foreigners have when dealing with the Spanish taxation system.

A Guide to Spanish Taxation

Let’s start with the basics. One of the first things to note is that taxation in Spain affects not only residents but also non-residents. The most classic example is tax on rental income from property one owns in Spain. Another point of confusion is how to determine whether you’re actually a resident or not for tax purposes.

Click here to get in touch with my tax advisors

Am I a tax resident in Spain?

In general terms, tax liability in Spain is determined by the concept of permanent residence, not citizenship. An individual is considered a permanent resident in Spain in any of the following circumstances:

  • You have spent more than 183 days in Spain within a single calendar year, regardless of whether you are formally registered.
  • Your primary professional activities are conducted in Spain — essentially if you are self- or otherwise employed in Spain.
  • Your main interests (e.g. your spouse or children who are still dependent on you) live in Spain.

Note that if the spouse and underage children reside permanently in Spain, your residence is presumed unless sufficient proof is provided to the contrary.

These criteria apply for personal income tax, wealth tax, inheritance tax, and gift tax, although for inheritance and gift tax some exceptions may apply.

What is the tax year-end?

December 31. Unless the taxpayer dies on a day other than December 31.

What do you need in order to submit the return?

You will need to obtain a digital certificate by filling in the form found here and going to the nearest office to verify your identity. Once verified, you will receive the digital certificate via email, which you will then need to install in your browser so that you can access the Hacienda website and fill in your tax forms.

If you are enlisting help from a tax consultant or accountant (which I recommend if it’s your first time), they will be able to submit all forms on your behalf. You will only need to provide information about your income and assets, a copy of your NIE, and answer any further questions to ascertain whether you can make use of certain tax deductions.

When are tax returns due?

The due date for filing the tax return and making a payment for tax residents and individuals taxed under the special expatriate regime is normally from April 6 to June 30 of each year for income obtained in the previous year.

Specific filing deadlines apply to non-residents. As a general rule, non-residents must report income and pay taxes on a quarterly basis (first 20 days of April, July, October, and January for income accrued in the previous quarter). Non-resident returns related to deemed income from holding real estate must be submitted by December 31 of the following year.

There is no possibility of claiming a filing extension. If the tax return is not filed on time, penalties will be imposed. These penalties vary depending on whether the return is filed late voluntarily or as a result of a tax inspection.

Income Tax (IRPF)

General Income Tax Rates

Spain’s personal income tax (IRPF — Impuesto sobre la Renta de las Personas Físicas) is split equally between the national government and your autonomous community. This means your total effective rate depends heavily on where you live.

The combined state + regional rates for the two most relevant regions for expats are as follows:

Madrid (lowest in Spain):

  • Up to €12,450: 19%
  • €12,451 – €20,200: 24%
  • €20,201 – €35,200: 30%
  • €35,201 – €60,000: 37%
  • €60,001 – €300,000: 43%
  • Over €300,000: 45%

Catalonia (among the highest in Spain):

Top marginal rates in Catalonia reach 50%, making it one of the most expensive regions in which to earn a high income. The bracket structure mirrors the national framework, but the regional surcharges push the combined rate significantly higher than Madrid across every band.

For reference, the Basque Country and Navarre operate under their own tax regimes (foral territories) and are not governed by the national IRPF framework.

Savings Income Tax Rates

Investment income — dividends, interest, and capital gains — is taxed separately from general income under the savings tax scale. This scale is national and does not vary by region.

As of January 1, 2025, the rates are:

  • Up to €6,000: 19%
  • €6,001 – €50,000: 21%
  • €50,001 – €200,000: 23%
  • €200,001 – €300,000: 27%
  • Over €300,000: 30%

The two new upper bands (27% and 30%) are worth noting. The 30% top rate replaced the previous ceiling of 28% and now applies to savings income exceeding €300,000. If you have substantial investment income or are planning a large asset sale, this matters.

Note that if the spouse and underage children reside permanently in Spain, your residence is presumed unless sufficient proof is provided to the contrary. The savings tax scale applies uniformly — a significant advantage over general income tax if you can structure your income around dividends and capital gains rather than salary.

Key Tax Forms and Obligations

Modelo 100

This is the declaración de la renta, the standard annual income tax return. Most residents need to file this every year. You will automatically receive a draft (borrador) from Hacienda, which you need to check and add to where necessary. Once correct, you submit it and either pay any balance owed or receive a refund for excess tax withheld (retenciones) during the year.

If you are married and file jointly, you benefit from an allowance of €3,400. You will only pay tax on earnings above €5,500 during the fiscal year. As a general rule, joint filing is advantageous when one spouse earns little or nothing.

You can use TaxDown to prepare your declaration, or if you need assistance in English, I can connect you with my tax advisor.

Modelo 720

Tax residents are obliged to declare the following assets and rights located outside Spain to the Tax Authorities:

  • Bank accounts in which the individual is the titleholder, representative, authorized person, or beneficiary, or over which they have disposal powers.
  • Securities, rights, insurance, and life or temporary annuities.
  • Real estate or rights over real estate.

There is no reporting obligation where the aggregate value of each category of assets is below €50,000. The filing deadline is January 1 to March 31 of the year following the one being reported.

Important update: In January 2022, the Court of Justice of the EU ruled that Spain’s original penalty regime for Modelo 720 was excessive and violated EU law. Penalties have since been reformed. The standard fine is now €20 per missing or incorrect data point, with a minimum of €300 and a maximum of €20,000 — and there is now a four-year statute of limitations. This is a significant improvement from the previous regime, under which penalties could reach 150% of the value of undeclared assets.

The form still exists and must still be filed. It is simply less of a sword of Damocles than it once was.

For more information, read my post about the Modelo 720 form in Spain.

Modelo 721 — Crypto Declaration

Since 2023, there is a separate declaration specifically for cryptocurrency assets held outside Spain: Modelo 721.

If you hold crypto on foreign exchanges or custodians and the total value exceeds €50,000 on December 31, you must file this form between January 1 and March 31 of the following year. The obligation is triggered by custody — who holds your private keys. Self-custodied wallets (where you control the private keys) fall outside the scope of the foreign reporting obligation, though you still pay income tax on any gains.

Modelo 721 is not a tax in itself. It is a disclosure obligation.

From 2026, the EU’s DAC8 directive requires all EU-based crypto service providers to automatically report client balances and transactions to tax authorities, who then share this data across member states. If what you declare in Modelo 721 does not match what the exchanges report, an automatic assessment will be generated. The days of anonymity in crypto are effectively over.

Penalties for non-filing are €200. For incorrect filing, €150.

ETE Form

Residents need to use this form to inform the Bank of Spain of economic transactions and balances of financial instruments held abroad that exceed €1 million at year-end. Any natural or legal person resident in Spain (other than payment service providers) whose aggregate financial balances and total transaction amounts exceed €1 million must submit this form.

Modelo D6

Another Bank of Spain form. Its purpose is to report marketable securities deposited abroad — fixed income, variable income securities, and collective investment holdings — even if the issuers are Spanish. The deadline is January 31 for positions of the preceding year. There is no minimum exempt threshold.

The D-6 must be filed when any of the following apply:

  1. The resident’s interest in share capital before or after the operation reaches 10%.
  2. The resident investor belongs to its governing body.
  3. The amount of the transaction exceeds €1,502,530.26.

Wealth Taxes

wealth tax spain

Spain has two overlapping wealth taxes. Yes, two. This was the outcome of the central government’s attempt to override Madrid’s longstanding decision to grant its residents a 100% wealth tax discount.

Impuesto sobre el Patrimonio (Regional Wealth Tax)

The regional wealth tax applies to both residents (on worldwide net assets) and non-residents (on Spanish-located assets). There is a general exemption of €700,000 per person, plus an additional €300,000 deduction for your primary residence if you are resident in Spain.

National framework rates range from 0.2% to 3.5%, but autonomous communities set their own rates. Madrid currently grants a 100% rebate, meaning Madrid residents pay zero regional wealth tax. Catalonia’s rates go up to 3.48%, with no such rebate.

Impuesto Temporal de Solidaridad de las Grandes Fortunas (ITSGF)

Introduced in 2023 as a supposedly temporary measure — and made permanent in 2025 — this national solidarity tax was designed specifically to circumvent Madrid’s and Andalusia’s wealth tax exemptions.

The ITSGF applies to net assets over €3 million (with the €700,000 personal allowance deducted, the effective threshold is approximately €3.7 million). Rates are:

  • 1.7% on net wealth between €3M and €5.35M
  • 2.1% on net wealth between €5.35M and €10.7M
  • 3.5% on net wealth above €10.7M

The mechanism is designed so that any regional wealth tax already paid is deducted from the ITSGF. In practice, this means residents of Catalonia and other regions that levy wealth tax largely offset the ITSGF through their existing payment. Madrid residents, who previously paid nothing, now pay the full ITSGF amount.

So much for regional autonomy.

This is another populist move dressed up as solidarity. High-net-worth individuals and entrepreneurs will do what they always do when confiscatory taxes are introduced: they will leave, restructure, or both. Wealth taxes have been scrapped across Europe precisely because they destroy more value than they collect.

Property Taxes

Property taxes are an important issue for expats in Spain. Spanish VAT (IVA), document fees, and sales transfer taxes are payable on purchase. Rates vary according to property type, value, and region.

Transfer tax of 6% is payable when purchasing a resale property, while a yearly local tax (IBI) is levied on real estate at up to 1.3% of the cadastral value, varying depending on the municipality and the category of real estate.

Capital Gains Tax

Capital gains tax (CGT) on the sale or transfer of qualifying assets is taxed under the savings income scale detailed above. As of 2025, rates run from 19% on the first €6,000 of gains up to 30% on gains exceeding €300,000. Exemptions are available depending on your personal circumstances. The scale is national and does not vary by region.

Inheritance Tax

Unlike many other countries, Spain levies inheritance tax even between close relatives. Regional rates and exemptions vary significantly — Andalusia, for example, has dramatically reduced its rates for direct family. For detailed information, I would suggest consulting a specialist, as the rules differ widely between regions and the amounts involved can be substantial.

Gift Tax

In Spain, you pay tax on any donations you receive while being a resident. Some regions have much lower rates — Andalusia being a notable example. Catalonia, predictably, is at the other end of the scale.

Exit Tax

Since January 1, 2015, Spain has levied an exit tax on individuals who have been permanent residents for at least ten years during the previous 15 years and cease to be residents. The tax applies to unrealized capital gains on shares or interests in any type of entity.

Taxation applies when either:

  • The total value held in those assets exceeds €4 million; or
  • The individual holds a stake of at least 25% in an entity and its value exceeds €1 million.

The unrealized gains are taxed at the savings income rates (currently 19%–30%).

If the change of residence is temporary and certain requirements are met, the tax due can be deferred for five years with a bank guarantee. If the taxpayer later reestablishes Spanish residence, they can claim a refund.

If the taxpayer moves to another EU/EEA country, the gain only needs to be declared and paid if the shares are sold within the next ten years or the taxpayer moves outside the EU/EEA.

Leaving Spain — Modelo 030

When you take up fiscal residence in another country after having been resident in Spain, you need to inform the Spanish tax authority. Obtain a certificate of tax residence from your new country to be safe if Hacienda later questions your departure.

The form to file is Modelo 030.

Special Tax Regimes for Expats

The Beckham Law (Régimen de Impatriados)

Spain’s so-called Beckham Law allows qualifying individuals who become tax residents in Spain to opt for a flat 24% rate on Spanish-sourced employment income up to €600,000 (income above that threshold is taxed at 47%), rather than the standard progressive IRPF scale. Foreign income is largely exempt, and wealth tax applies only to Spanish assets.

The regime is available for six years.

The Startup Law (Law 28/2022), which came into force on January 1, 2023, expanded the Beckham regime significantly:

  • The required prior non-residence period was reduced from 10 years to 5 years.
  • The window to apply after relocating was extended from 6 months to 12 months.
  • Eligibility was extended to new groups: digital nomads, innovative entrepreneurs, and highly qualified professionals.

Note that the Beckham Law does not apply to individuals who move to Spain to work as self-employed (autónomo). It is designed for employees and, under the Startup Law expansion, remote workers employed by foreign companies.

Digital Nomad Visa

Also introduced under the Startup Law in January 2023, Spain’s Digital Nomad Visa allows non-EU nationals who work remotely for foreign companies or clients to live legally in Spain for up to five years, with a path to permanent residency. Holders of the Digital Nomad Visa can apply for the Beckham Law tax regime, paying the flat 24% rate on income up to €600,000.

This is, in principle, a good development. In practice, the administrative process to obtain the visa remains cumbersome, as is the norm with Spanish bureaucracy.

Self-Employment (Autónomo)

self employed in spain

If you move to Spain and want to offer your own services — whether teaching, consulting, freelancing, or selling goods and services online — you will most likely need to register as self-employed (autónomo).

If you’ll be employed by a Spanish company, they will handle everything for you.

Another option is to open a company. This is more complex and only makes sense if you earn more than around €60,000 per year. At that level, corporate structures can result in meaningfully lower overall tax.

There are two other cases worth mentioning.

If you are a professional stock trader or otherwise operate in the markets as your main activity using your own capital, you do not need to register as self-employed. You will declare your profits and losses in your annual tax return and pay the corresponding savings income tax. You do not need to register as autónomo unless you are also managing other people’s money.

If you are an entrepreneur or investor who has moved to Spain to enjoy the lifestyle while a management team runs your company back home, the position is this: if you are genuinely retired and not providing services to anyone, you do not need to register as self-employed. You declare dividends and asset sales each year and that’s it.

If, however, you provide consultancy services to your company from time to time, or receive any remuneration for work performed — speaking engagements, advisory fees — you will need to register as autónomo and invoice accordingly.

These two income streams are taxed differently. General income (salary, consultancy fees) is taxed on the progressive IRPF scale, which goes up to 50% in Catalonia. Savings income (dividends, capital gains) is capped nationally at 30%. Structuring your income correctly makes a significant difference.

Social Security Contributions

Spain has a public health system and a state pension, and access to both requires paying social security contributions. Most self-employed entrepreneurs who want access to the public health system register as autónomo and charge their foreign companies a consultancy fee each month.

In 2023, Spain moved to an income-based social security contribution system for the self-employed, replacing the previous flat-rate model. Under the new system, monthly contributions are determined by your actual net income, split across 15 income brackets. The transition runs over nine years (2023–2031), with contributions gradually rising for higher earners.

For 2026, indicative monthly contributions range from approximately €217 for the lowest earners to around €590 or more for those earning over €6,000 per month. These figures are subject to parliamentary approval and annual revision. Higher earners will see the steepest increases as the system converges toward a contribution level proportional to income.

This ongoing reform is increasing the cost of being self-employed in Spain, particularly for those earning well. It is one more item on the list of reasons why Spain is not particularly friendly to entrepreneurs.

Cryptocurrency Taxes

Crypto is taxed as savings income in Spain, meaning gains from trading, selling, or exchanging cryptocurrency are subject to the savings income scale (19%–30% depending on the amount). Mining and staking rewards are treated as general income and subject to IRPF at your marginal rate.

Beyond income tax, there are two declaration obligations to be aware of:

  • Modelo 721 — for crypto held on foreign custodians exceeding €50,000 in value at year-end (see above).
  • Domestic crypto holdings above €50,000 will be covered by a separate domestic declaration obligation (Modelo 172/173), which requires crypto service providers operating in Spain to report customer balances and transactions to Hacienda.

Regional Tax Differences

Where you choose to live in Spain is a tax decision, not just a lifestyle one.

Madrid has the lowest overall tax burden: the lowest effective IRPF rates, a 100% wealth tax rebate (now offset by the national ITSGF for those over €3M), and generally favorable conditions for entrepreneurs.

Catalonia has the highest income tax rates in Spain, reaching 50% at the top bracket. Combined with a full wealth tax, it is by far the most expensive region for high earners.

Andalusia, the Valencian Community, and the Balearic Islands fall somewhere in between and have each made various changes to their wealth tax and inheritance tax treatment in recent years.

If you are a high-income individual or have substantial net worth and you have the flexibility to choose your region, run the numbers carefully before deciding.

Do You Need to Register as Self-Employed When You Move to Spain?

See the autónomo section above for a full breakdown. The short answer: it depends entirely on whether you are receiving income for services rendered, or purely living off investment and dividend income.

Click here to get in touch with my tax advisors

Disclaimer: I’m not a legal expert or tax advisor and the above should not be taken as legal advice. Contact me if you want me to help you find a tax lawyer or accountant for any of the situations described above.

This is a summary of current rules as of early 2026. Tax law changes frequently in Spain. When in doubt, consult a trusted tax advisor.

Click here to get in touch with my tax advisors

Filed under: Expat life

Buying a Mattress in Spain

Last updated: September 11, 20223 Comments

Here are a few notes I made while researching the purchase of a mattress in Spain. The mattress industry is aimed at confusing customers with excess supply, pushy sales tactics and high prices, so you have to be careful.

  • Do not consider any company that offers a trial period of less than 100 days. For example, Dormity only offers a 30 day trial period.
  • Beware of scammy offers. Dormity tends to have their mattresses always marked down by a huge percentage, in the ranges of 50-80% off. That is purely ridiculous, it’s very obvious that the price of a mattress is not €2,791 but €658 in the first place; there is no need to try to induce a sense of urgency in the customer just because you label the mattress with a huge discount. There are lots of gimmicks in the mattress industry, unfortunately.
  • Go to the shops and talk to the representatives, you’ll easily get an idea which are the good brands. If they just talk about the technical and complex details of the mattresses without talking about you and your needs, just walk away. The representative needs to be 100% focused on you and how you will use your mattress. He should ask you to lie down on various mattresses and check your spine’s alignment as well as discuss other factors such as your preferred sleeping positions and any injuries or problems you have at the moment.

As a guide range the best mattresses cost between 700 and 1000 euros.

If you’re unsure about what size of mattress to buy, check this link and this one.

For more information about the mattress industry read this and this.

The best brands I found:

  • Sonpura
  • Flex
  • Pikolin
  • Emma

Filed under: Expat life

How to Evaluate Private Real Estate Investment Proposals

Last updated: March 22, 20203 Comments

Peer to Peer and crowdfunding real estate platforms are an excellent way to get into the property investment game, but as you get more involved into this industry, you are likely to come across private off-market investment opportunities.

By private I mean off-market opportunities that are typically reserved to a much smaller pool of investors and are found through connections in the real estate world. By writing about real estate crowdfunding and talking about it to my friends and connections at conferences, I eventually got in touch with some big players who deal in specific types of property investments.

While the crowdfunding platforms tend to offer a wide variety of properties, such as student housing, new developments, buy-to-sell, buy-to-rent etc, typically the private investment scene tends to be more specific in type and geographical region.

The reason is simple. You will typically find a person or small team who have been working in the industry for many years and have become experts in the market of a particular city or region as well as a specific type of property.

To take Barcelona as an example, I know real estate experts who specialize in obtaining some of the most dangerous and untouchable properties in the city (occupied by squatters, drug dealers, etc), clearing them out and totally refurbishing them to go on and sell for a tidy profit.

Others focus on foreign buyers who tend to be looking for higher-end finishing and specific locations and types of apartments when compared to the local buyers. Since most local developers focus on the local buyers’ needs, there is a niche that opens up that presents nice profits if you manage to meet the high needs of the foreign buyers as well as be able to market to them.

These are real niches with lower competition due to the extra skills needed to succeed. In the first case, you need to be able to know how to deal with very difficult and possibly dangerous people and probably employ people who will do some brute forcing to clear the spaces, and you need to be good at marketing to convince buyers that these black spots are now a great buy.

In the second case, you need to have knowledge of the traits of foreign buyers and speak their language. This will make it much easier to design an apartment for that specific buyer profile as well as know where to market it and then be able to seamlessly tour the apartment with potential buyers and deal with any concerns they might have.

[Read more…]

Filed under: Money, Real estate

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Jean Galea

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