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Challenging Your Cadastral Value in Spain: The Appeal Process for an Overvalued Catastro Assessment (2026)

Challenging an overvalued cadastral value in Spain: the appeal cascade, deadlines, evidence and a worked savings example across IBI and imputed income tax.

Rais Rafikov · Founder, Listyco 12 min read

Photo by Kelly Sikkema on Unsplash

The cadastral value the Catastro assigns to your Spanish property drives your IBI bill, your imputed income tax as a non-resident, and the base for wealth tax calculations. When the Catastro overvalues your property, you pay more across all three levies simultaneously. Spanish law gives you a structured appeal cascade to challenge an overvalued assessment: an optional administrative reconsideration, an independent tribunal review, and finally the courts. Each stage has a strict deadline, and the one-month window for the first two is the shortest and most important.

What is the cadastral value appeal cascade in Spain?

The appeal cascade for a cadastral value challenge runs through three tiers, governed by the texto refundido de la Ley del Catastro Inmobiliario (Real Decreto Legislativo 1/2004) and the General Tributaria (Ley 58/2003). The first tier is the recurso de reposicion, an optional administrative appeal to the Gerencia del Catastro that issued the assessment. The second tier is the reclamacion economico-administrativa, an appeal to an independent Tribunal Economico-Administrativo. The third tier is the recurso contencioso-administrativo, a judicial appeal to the administrative courts.

The Catastro’s own published guidance confirms that the recurso de reposicion and the reclamacion economico-administrativa are alternative first steps, not sequential ones. You choose one or the other. Filing both simultaneously is not permitted. The recurso de reposicion is filed with the local Gerencia del Catastro and is governed by Articles 123 to 124 of Ley 39/2015, which set a one-month deadline and a one-month resolution period. The reclamacion is filed with a Tribunal Economico-Administrativo and is governed by Articles 235 to 240 of Ley 58/2003, with a one-year resolution target.

The tribunal tier depends on the cadastral value at stake. For values exceeding EUR 1,800,000, the claim is heard by the TEAC (Tribunal Economico-Administrativo Central). Below that threshold, the regional TEAR handles it. This threshold is set by the Catastro’s own published procedure. If both administrative routes fail, the final step is the jurisdiccion contencioso-administrativa within two months under Article 46 of Ley 29/1998.

For the broader framework of how the Catastro arrives at values in the first place, see our guide to catastro and cadastral value in Spain. For the general property tax appeal system covering IBI and plusvalia, see our guide to appealing property tax in Spain.

How long do you have to challenge a cadastral value?

The deadline framework is strict and unforgiving. Article 29.7 of the TRLCI sets the one-month period for both the recurso de reposicion and the reclamacion economico-administrativa. The clock starts the day after notification, or after the ten-day comparecencia period closes if you were notified by public edict rather than direct communication.

The Catastro uses three notification methods. The first is direct electronic notification through the Sede Electronica, mandatory for legal entities and certain colectivos. The second is personal notification by postal mail or direct delivery. The third is notification by edict: if direct notification fails after two attempts, or one if the recipient is listed as unknown, the Catastro publishes an announcement in the BOE with a list of pending notifications, and the owner has ten days to comparecer at the Gerencia or Ayuntamiento. If the owner does not comparecer within ten days, the notification is deemed produced on the day after the period closes, and the one-month appeal clock starts then.

This deadline structure matters because missing the one-month window bars the administrative appeal route permanently. The only remaining option is the judicial contencioso-administrativo route, which must be filed within two months of the final administrative act. That route requires a lawyer and procurador for claims above EUR 2,000 and typically runs 12 to 24 months. The administrative routes, by contrast, are free.

A practical point: if you file a recurso de reposicion and it is rejected within its one-month resolution period, you then have one month from that rejection to file a reclamacion. If you file a reclamacion directly and it is rejected, you can appeal to the TEAC via recurso de alzada ordinario within one month, or go directly to court. The choice of first route is tactical: the reposicion is faster but goes back to the same office, while the reclamacion is slower but independent.

What taxes does a successful cadastral challenge reduce?

The valor catastral is the shared base for multiple levies, which is why a single successful appeal can save a property owner money across several taxes at once. The table below sets out the main ones.

TaxWho paysBaseRate or calculationCollecting authority
IBI (Impuesto sobre Bienes Inmuebles)Property owner on 1 JanuaryCadastral value0.4 per cent to 1.1 per cent (municipal rate within legal limits)Town hall (Ayuntamiento)
Imputed income tax (IRNR, Modelo 210)Non-resident owner of a non-rented second homeCadastral value1.1 per cent (revised post-2012) or 2 per cent (older), then taxed at 19 per cent (EU/EEA) or 24 per cent (others)Agencia Tributaria
Wealth tax (Impuesto sobre el Patrimonio)Owner above thresholdsNet wealth, property valued at the higher of acquisition cost or cadastral value (multiplier applied)Progressive regional ratesAgencia Tributaria
Plusvalia municipal (IIVTNU)Seller on transferCadastral value of the landTown hall percentage on the land-value gainTown hall

The IBI is the most visible. Town halls set the rate within limits established by Article 72 of Real Decreto Legislativo 2/2004, the consolidated Haciendas Locales law. The statutory band for urban property runs from 0.4 per cent to 1.1 per cent of the cadastral value. A flat with a cadastral value of EUR 120,000 in a town charging 0.65 per cent pays roughly EUR 780 a year. If a successful appeal reduces the cadastral value to EUR 90,000, the same rate produces EUR 585, a saving of EUR 195 per year that compounds every year until the next revision.

For non-residents, the cadastral value also drives the imputed income calculation. The Agencia Tributaria confirms that the imputed rent is 2 per cent of the cadastral value in general, falling to 1.1 per cent for properties whose cadastral values were revised through a general collective valuation that entered into force on or after 1 January 2012. That notional income is then taxed at 19 per cent for EU/EEA residents and 24 per cent for the rest. A reduction in the cadastral value directly reduces the imputed income base. Our guide to annual property taxes for non-residents in Spain covers this mechanism in detail.

What is the difference between rectificacion and an appeal?

This distinction matters because many physical errors do not require a formal appeal at all. The Catastro offers a rectificacion procedure for correcting factual errors in its records, which is separate from the appeal cascade and does not carry the one-month deadline.

A rectificacion is the right route when the Catastro’s description of your property is factually wrong: the surface area is incorrect, the construction year is wrong, a feature is missing, or the use class is misassigned. These are physical description errors that the Catastro can correct administratively without a valuation challenge. The Sede Electronica del Catastro lists rectificacion as one of its available procedimientos, alongside the recurso de reposicion. The normalised representation document, approved by the Resolucion of 10 September 2020, is valid for both procedures.

An appeal, by contrast, is the route when the physical description is correct but the assigned value is too high. The challenge targets the valor catastral itself, arguing that it exceeds market value (which Article 23.2 of the TRLCI prohibits) or that the ponencia de valores has been misapplied. This requires evidence of overvaluation, not just a factual correction.

In practice, a property owner who discovers both a physical error and an overvaluation should file the rectificacion first to correct the description, then assess whether the corrected value is still too high. If it is, the appeal cascade follows. The rectificacion can be filed at any time, while the appeal is bound by the one-month deadline from notification.

What evidence supports a successful cadastral value challenge?

The strength of an appeal depends almost entirely on the evidence. The tribunal or court does not reconsider the assessment from scratch. It reviews whether the evidence you provide shows the assessment is wrong.

The most powerful evidence is a tasacion performed by a valuer registered with the corresponding professional body. A valuation showing the market value is below the assigned cadastral value directly attacks the legal ceiling set by Article 23.2 of the TRLCI: the valor catastral cannot exceed market value, and the coefficient of reference to market is 0.5 at the point of approval. The Catastro’s own FAQ confirms this 0.5 coefficient, meaning a property worth EUR 1,000,000 on the open market should receive a cadastral value in the region of EUR 500,000 when the ponencia is approved. If your cadastral value has crept above market value through coefficient updates or a poorly calibrated ponencia, a tasacion proving the gap is the strongest single document you can file.

Comparable sales data from the same municipality supplements the tasacion. Notarial records and Land Registry data provide objective transaction evidence. Physical errors in the Catastro’s records, wrong surface area, incorrect construction quality, missing features, are corrected through the rectificacion procedure, which strengthens the valuation challenge by ensuring the base data is accurate.

The ponencia de valores, the document that sets the valuation rules for each municipality, is the benchmark the tribunal uses. Your evidence should reference the ponencia’s own modules and coefficients to show where the misapplication lies.

How does the three-stage cascade work in practice?

StageFiling bodyDeadlineResolution targetCostSuspends the value?
Recurso de reposicionGerencia del Catastro (same body)1 month from notification1 monthFreeNo (automatic suspension with guarantee)
Reclamacion economico-administrativaTEAR or TEAC (independent)1 month from notification1 year (first instance)FreeNo (Article 29.6 TRLCI)
Recurso de alzada ordinario (to TEAC)TEAC1 month from TEAR resolution1 yearFreeNo
Contencioso-administrativo (judicial)Administrative court2 months from final admin act12 to 24 monthsLawyer and procurador above EUR 2,000Court may order suspension (medidas cautelares)

A critical structural point: Article 29.6 of the TRLCI states that the interposition of a reclamacion economico-administrativa does not suspend the notified value. This means your IBI bill continues at the existing cadastral value while the appeal is pending. If the appeal succeeds, the excess IBI paid during the proceedings is refunded. You may request suspension by providing a guarantee, but this is a separate step.

The judicial route, by contrast, can suspend the challenged act. Under Articles 129 to 136 of Ley 29/1998, the court may order medidas cautelares (provisional measures) that suspend enforcement of the administrative act while the main case proceeds. This is the one structural advantage the judicial route holds over the administrative routes, though it comes at the cost of legal fees and a longer timeline.

A worked example: the multi-tax impact of a successful cadastral appeal

Consider a non-EU resident who owns a holiday apartment in Marbella. The Catastro has assigned a cadastral value of EUR 200,000 following a collective revision, but the owner commissions a tasacion that shows the market value is EUR 280,000. At the 0.5 coefficient of reference, the cadastral value should be around EUR 140,000, meaning the Catastro has overvalued by approximately EUR 60,000.

The owner files a recurso de reposicion within one month of notification, submitting the tasacion and comparable sales data. The Gerencia rejects the recurso, so the owner files a reclamacion economico-administrativa with the TEAR (the value is below EUR 1,800,000). The TEAR upholds the challenge and reduces the cadastral value to EUR 145,000.

The annual savings across three levies are:

TaxBefore (EUR 200,000 VC)After (EUR 145,000 VC)Annual saving
IBI at 0.65 per centEUR 1,300EUR 942.50EUR 357.50
Imputed income (2 per cent at 24 per cent)EUR 960EUR 696EUR 264
Wealth tax (illustrative, multiplier-dependent)VariableVariableProportional reduction
Total annual savingEUR 621.50+

The IBI and imputed income savings alone amount to EUR 621.50 per year. Over the typical nine-year period before the next collective revision, that is EUR 5,593.50 in cumulative savings from a single appeal, against a filing cost of zero (the administrative routes are free) and the cost of the tasacion (typically EUR 300 to EUR 600). The appeal pays for itself in the first year and compounds thereafter.

The plusvalia municipal benefit is separate: when the owner eventually sells, the cadastral land value component is lower, which can reduce the plusvalia base. The Spanish property tax calendar shows when each of these levies falls due.

What happens after a collective revision notification?

A collective revision (procedimiento de valoracion colectiva de caracter general) is the event most likely to trigger an appeal, because it revalues every property in a municipality simultaneously. Article 28.3 of the TRLCI requires at least five years between general revisions, and the new values take effect on 1 January of the year following notification.

The phased IBI reduction after a collective revision softens the impact. A nine-year decreasing reduction applies to the taxable base: 90 per cent reduction in year one, declining to zero in year ten. This means the full IBI increase does not land in a single bill but is phased in over a decade. However, the imputed income tax applies to the full new cadastral value immediately, with no phasing, which is the reason non-resident owners should check their revised value promptly.

The notification arrives individually and includes the agreement, the property characteristics and an explanation of the data. You can comparecer electronically on the Sede Electronica del Catastro or in person at the Gerencia or Ayuntamiento. The one-month appeal clock starts the day after you receive the notification, or after the ten-day edict period closes.

For a detailed explanation of how collective revisions work and the phasing schedule, see our guide to the cadastral revision in Spain. Andalusia-specific property matters, including the LISTA occupation regime that can interact with cadastral descriptions, are covered in our guide to illegal builds and land checks on the Costa del Sol.

This guide is general information, not legal or tax advice. Rules change and individual circumstances differ. Verify current requirements with an independent lawyer (abogado) or tax advisor (gestor/asesor fiscal) before acting.

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Frequently asked questions

How long do I have to appeal a cadastral value in Spain?
You have one month from the day after notification. If you were notified by public edict rather than direct communication, the one-month period starts after the ten-day comparecencia window closes. The deadline is strict and missing it closes the administrative appeal route permanently, leaving only the judicial contencioso-administrativo route within two months.
Can I file both a recurso de reposicion and a reclamacion economico-administrativa?
No. Under the TRLCI and Ley 58/2003, the recurso de reposicion and the reclamacion economico-administrativa are alternative first steps, not sequential ones. You choose one. The reposicion goes to the same Gerencia that issued the value and resolves in one month. The reclamacion goes to an independent Tribunal Economico-Administrativo and resolves in around one year.
What evidence do I need to challenge my cadastral value?
The most powerful evidence is a tasacion performed by a valuer registered with the corresponding professional body, showing the market value is below the assigned cadastral value. The law prohibits the cadastral value from exceeding market value. Comparable sales data from the same municipality and proof of physical errors in the Catastro's records, such as wrong surface area or construction year, also support a challenge.
Which tribunal hears my cadastral value appeal?
For cadastral values below EUR 1,800,000, the regional Tribunal Economico-Administrativo (TEAR) handles the reclamacion. For values exceeding EUR 1,800,000, the claim goes to the Tribunal Economico-Administrativo Central (TEAC). This threshold is set by the Catastro's own published procedure, not by a discretionary rule.
Does filing an appeal suspend my IBI bill while it is pending?
Filing a reclamacion economico-administrativa does not suspend the notified value automatically. Under Article 29.6 of the TRLCI, the interposition of the reclamacion does not suspend its executiveness. You may request suspension by providing a guarantee, but the IBI continues to be billed on the existing cadastral value until the appeal resolves. If you win, the excess is refunded.
Can I correct a physical error in my Catastro record without a formal appeal?
Yes. Physical errors such as wrong surface area, incorrect construction year or missing features are corrected through a rectificacion procedure at the Catastro, not through the appeal cascade. The rectificacion is a separate, simpler process that does not require a recurso de reposicion. It is available through the Sede Electronica del Catastro and can be filed at any time.

Sources and data

Rais Rafikov

Founder, Listyco

Rais Rafikov is the founder of Listyco and has led marketing and technology for luxury real-estate sales teams on the Costa del Sol. He writes about Marbella-area property, Spanish tax and the mechanics of buying internationally, working from primary sources and verified market data.

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