Newly Renovated Two-Bedroom Apartment in Historic Gràcia
€559,000€7,453/m²
2
bedrooms
2
bathrooms
75 m²
interior
Apartment
property type
29 May 2026
listed
The Habio take
AI summaryThis beautifully renovated two-bedroom apartment offers 75 m² of modern living space within a charming 1936 stately building. Situated in the vibrant district of Gràcia, Barcelona, you will enjoy a blend of classic architecture and contemporary amenities.
- city
- historic
- walkable
Highlights
- Newly renovated
- Located in a historic building
- Two bathrooms
- Spacious 75 m² area
- Vibrant Gràcia neighbourhood
Worth knowing
- Limited outdoor space inferred
- No lift mentioned
Good fit for: Ideal for urban professionals or couples seeking modern living in a historic area.
Lifestyle scores
- Beach
- 50
- Walkable
- 85
- Remote work
- 70
- Family
- 60
- Retirement
- 55
- Airport access
- 75
- Investment
- 80
- Luxury
- 70
- Value
- 65
About this place
This wonderful newly renovated apartment is located in a stately building from 1936, combining traditional architectural charm with contemporary comfort.
Buying property in Spain
Spain welcomes foreign buyers with no nationality restrictions. The buyer needs an NIE (Número de Identidad de Extranjero) before completion, and most buyers open a Spanish bank account to handle the deposit and ongoing charges. An independent lawyer (abogado) is strongly recommended — the notario only checks the deed, not the wider title.
- 1
Get an NIE
Apply for the foreign-resident tax number at a Spanish consulate, police station, or via a representative with power of attorney.
- 2
Open a Spanish bank account
Needed for the deposit, taxes, mortgage payments, and utilities.
- 3
Engage an independent lawyer
Lawyer runs title, debts, planning, and community-of-owners checks — the notario will not.
- 4
Reservation contract
Small deposit (€3,000–€10,000) takes the property off the market while due diligence runs.
- 5
Sign the contrato de arras
Private purchase contract with a 10% deposit. If the buyer pulls out they lose it; if the seller pulls out they pay double.
- 6
Sign the escritura pública
Final public deed signed before a notario; balance and taxes paid; keys handed over.
- 7
Register the property
Lawyer registers the deed at the Registro de la Propiedad and arranges utility and IBI transfers.
Spain ended its Golden Visa property route in April 2025. Non-resident mortgages are widely available, typically 60–70% LTV. Non-resident sellers face a 3% withholding from the sale price (retención), claimable against capital gains tax. Always check community-of-owners (comunidad) debts and outstanding IBI before completion — they transfer with the property.
General guidance only — confirm specifics with a qualified local lawyer or tax adviser. Reference









