A complete legal guide to anti-money laundering obligations, source of funds documentation and SEPBLAC requirements for international investors buying property in Spain with cryptocurrency.
Published 27 May 2026 · Vicox Legal · 4,200 words · 17 min read
AML compliance for crypto-funded real estate in Spain is governed by Ley 10/2010 and supervised by SEPBLAC. Every investor must provide documented proof of the origin of cryptocurrency funds — including wallet history, exchange records and the crypto-to-fiat conversion chain — before the Spanish notary can execute the escritura. Anonymous crypto, privacy coins and unregulated exchange proceeds are not acceptable sources of funds under Spanish AML law.
The single most common cause of a Spanish property transaction collapsing — after the buyer has identified the property, negotiated the price and signed the arras — is a failure to satisfy AML source of funds requirements at the notarial stage.
For international investors using cryptocurrency proceeds to fund acquisitions in Spain, the AML compliance challenge is structurally different from a conventional fiat transaction. Cryptocurrency is not inherently suspicious — it is a legitimate asset class that can be used to acquire Spanish real estate — but its pseudonymous nature means that the evidentiary burden on the investor to demonstrate the legitimate origin of funds is substantially higher than for a wire transfer from a regulated bank.
Spain operates one of the most rigorous AML frameworks in the European Union, built on the transposition of the EU’s Fourth and Fifth Anti-Money Laundering Directives into domestic law through Ley 10/2010 de prevención del blanqueo de capitales y de la financiación del terrorismo and its implementing regulation Real Decreto 304/2014. Spanish notaries, real estate agents and legal advisors are classified as sujetos obligados (obligated subjects) under this law and carry personal civil and criminal liability for failures in due diligence.
The entry into full force of MiCA (Regulation EU 2023/1114) and the implementation of DAC8 (Directive 2023/2226/EU) from 2026 have fundamentally changed the regulatory landscape. Crypto transactions above €1,000 on MiCA-regulated exchanges are now automatically reported to SEPBLAC and relevant home-country tax authorities. This makes retroactive structuring of the crypto acquisition chain impossible and reinforces the need for pre-transaction legal planning.
The Spanish AML Legal Framework
Spain’s anti-money laundering regime is among the most comprehensive in the EU. The primary statute is Ley 10/2010, de 28 de abril, de prevención del blanqueo de capitales y de la financiación del terrorismo, which transposed the EU’s Third AMLD into Spanish law and was subsequently amended to incorporate the Fourth and Fifth AMLDs. The law is complemented by its implementing regulation Real Decreto 304/2014, which establishes the specific due diligence procedures, documentation requirements and reporting obligations.
The law identifies three tiers of due diligence, each with progressively higher documentary and verification requirements: standard due diligence (diligencia debida normal), simplified due diligence (diligencia debida simplificada) and enhanced due diligence (diligencia debida reforzada). Crypto-funded real estate acquisitions will virtually always trigger enhanced due diligence regardless of transaction value — a position confirmed by SEPBLAC guidance and consistent with the risk-based approach mandated by the FATF Recommendations adopted in Spain.
Key Regulatory References
| Regulation | Scope | Relevance to Crypto Real Estate |
|---|---|---|
| Ley 10/2010 | Primary AML statute — Spain | Defines obligated subjects, due diligence tiers, reporting obligations, sanctions |
| Real Decreto 304/2014 | Implementing regulation | Specific procedures for customer identification, beneficial ownership, PEP screening |
| 6th EU AMLD (2021/C 494/01) | EU-level criminal law harmonisation | Expanded predicate offences; personal criminal liability for compliance officers |
| MiCA (EU 2023/1114) | Crypto-asset regulation — EU | Regulates CASPs; links crypto exchange compliance to AML/CFT requirements |
| DAC8 (Directive 2023/2226) | Automatic tax information exchange | All qualifying crypto transactions reported to SEPBLAC and home-country authorities |
| Reglamento de Notarías (RN) | Notarial professional rules | Notary’s obligation to refuse escritura if funds origin cannot be established |
Who Are the Obligated Parties in a Crypto Property Transaction?
Under Artículo 2 of Ley 10/2010, a broad range of professionals involved in real estate transactions are designated as sujetos obligados. In a crypto-funded acquisition, multiple obligated subjects operate simultaneously, each with independent due diligence and reporting obligations. The investor must satisfy the requirements of all of them — not just the notary.
Notario Público
The notary is a sujeto obligado under Art. 2.1(n) Ley 10/2010. Cannot execute the escritura without satisfying source of funds verification. Has personal liability for failures. Will refuse the deed if documentation is insufficient.
Agente Inmobiliario / API
Real estate intermediaries are sujetos obligados under Art. 2.1(ñ). Must carry out independent KYC and source of funds checks before introducing a buyer. Many will decline to work with crypto buyers without prior legal advisory.
Abogado / Gestoría
Lawyers and tax advisors acting in real estate transactions are sujetos obligados. Responsible for preparing the AML file, verifying documentation and flagging suspicious patterns to SEPBLAC where required.
Crypto-Asset Service Provider
Under MiCA, CASPs operating in Spain must apply FATF Travel Rule requirements to transfers above €1,000, screen for sanctions and PEPs, and report qualifying transactions to SEPBLAC under DAC8 from 2026.
Entidad de Crédito
The receiving bank where crypto-to-fiat conversion proceeds are deposited will independently apply its own AML screening. Many Spanish banks apply enhanced scrutiny to inbound transfers from crypto exchanges and may require additional documentation.
Financial Intelligence Unit
Spain’s Servicio Ejecutivo de la Comisión de Prevención del Blanqueo de Capitales. Receives STRs from all obligated subjects, coordinates with EUROPOL and FATF, and can block transactions pending investigation.
KYC vs AML: Understanding the Distinction in Spanish Real Estate
The terms KYC and AML are frequently used interchangeably by investors, but they refer to legally distinct processes with different purposes, timelines and consequences in a Spanish property transaction context.
KYC (Know Your Customer) is the identity verification component of the due diligence process. Under Artículos 3–10 of Ley 10/2010, every sujeto obligado must verify the identity of the customer, the beneficial owner (if different), and — where applicable — the person acting on behalf of a legal entity. KYC for crypto buyers involves: government-issued photo ID, proof of address, beneficial ownership declaration, PEP screening (Politically Exposed Person), and sanctions list screening against the EU Consolidated Sanctions List and OFAC.
AML (Anti-Money Laundering) compliance is broader. It encompasses not only KYC but the entire risk assessment of the transaction: the purpose and intended nature of the business relationship, the origin of the funds used, the economic rationale for the transaction structure, the customer’s overall risk profile, and ongoing monitoring obligations. AML compliance in a crypto property transaction specifically requires an evidentiary trail demonstrating that the cryptocurrency assets derive from a legitimate source and that the crypto-to-fiat conversion was conducted through a regulated channel.
| Aspect | KYC | AML Source of Funds |
|---|---|---|
| Purpose | Verify who the customer is | Verify where the money came from |
| Key documents | Passport, utility bill, PEP declaration | Wallet history, exchange records, tax returns, income evidence |
| Legal basis | Arts. 3–10 Ley 10/2010 | Arts. 11–12, 26 Ley 10/2010; SEPBLAC guidelines |
| Timing | Before the business relationship begins | Before and during the transaction; continuing obligation |
| Failure consequence | Transaction refused; STR filed | Transaction blocked; STR filed; potential criminal investigation |
| Enhanced triggers | High-risk jurisdictions, PEP status | Crypto assets, cash components, complex structures, offshore origins |
Source of Funds Documentation for Crypto-Funded Acquisitions
The source of funds verification is the central compliance challenge in any crypto-funded real estate acquisition. Spanish notaries and legal advisors apply a chain of custody standard: the investor must demonstrate, with documentary evidence, the complete journey of the assets from their legitimate origin to the fiat proceeds used to fund the property purchase.
SEPBLAC does not publish a definitive exhaustive list of required documents — it applies a risk-based approach requiring obligated subjects to obtain sufficient evidence to satisfy themselves that funds are not proceeds of crime. In practice, the documentation package for a crypto-funded acquisition in Spain is structured around three layers: the original acquisition of the cryptocurrency, the holding and custody history, and the conversion to fiat.
Layer 1 — Original Acquisition of Cryptocurrency
The investor must demonstrate how the cryptocurrency was originally acquired. Acceptable acquisition methods include: purchase through a regulated exchange (with exchange receipts and bank transfer records), receipt as salary or service payment (with employment contracts or invoices), proceeds from a regulated token sale or ICO (with participation agreements), and inheritance or gift (with probate or gift documentation). Each of these acquisition routes has a different documentary footprint and carries different risk ratings under the SEPBLAC framework.
Layer 2 — Custody and Transaction History
The investor must provide a complete transaction history of the wallet(s) from which the crypto proceeds originated. This typically takes the form of a wallet address statement generated by the exchange or custodian, showing all inbound and outbound transactions, counterparty addresses (where known), dates and values. For self-custody hardware wallets, a signed declaration of the complete transaction history may be required, supported by on-chain blockchain data.
Layer 3 — Conversion and Transfer to Property Purchase
The crypto-to-fiat conversion must be conducted through a MiCA-regulated exchange or equivalent regulated CASP. The conversion record — showing the exact amount of crypto sold, the fiat proceeds received, the date, the applicable exchange rate and the destination bank account — must be provided in full. The receiving bank account must be in the buyer’s name, and the subsequent transfer to the seller or notary’s escrow account must be traceable to that bank account.
Complete Documentation Package — Reference List
| Document | Purpose | Source | Risk Level |
|---|---|---|---|
| Passport / National ID | Identity verification (KYC) | Investor (government-issued) | Standard |
| Proof of address (≤3 months) | Residence verification | Utility bill, bank statement | Standard |
| Exchange account statements (24 months) | Crypto acquisition and holding history | MiCA-regulated exchange | Enhanced |
| Bank transfer records — crypto purchase | Fiat origin of crypto assets | Investor’s bank | Enhanced |
| Wallet address history / blockchain explorer | On-chain transaction verification | Exchange / self-generated | Enhanced |
| Crypto-to-fiat conversion confirmation | Conversion chain documentation | Exchange (official certificate) | Enhanced |
| Receiving bank account statement | Fiat proceeds receipt confirmation | Investor’s Spanish/EU bank | Enhanced |
| Tax returns (2–3 years) | Income origin corroboration | Tax authority / investor | Enhanced |
| NIE number | Spanish tax identification | Spanish Dirección General de la Policía | Standard |
| PEP / sanctions declaration | Politically exposed person screening | Investor (signed declaration) | Standard |
| Beneficial ownership declaration | UBO verification (if purchasing via entity) | Investor / corporate documents | Enhanced (entity) |
| Blockchain analytics report | Wallet risk scoring (Chainalysis/Elliptic) | Legal advisor / compliance tool | Recommended |
Acceptable vs Unacceptable Sources of Crypto Funds
Not all cryptocurrency is equally acceptable as a source of funds for a Spanish property acquisition. Spanish notaries and legal advisors apply a risk-based assessment that considers the origin of the crypto assets, the jurisdiction of the exchange used, the transaction history of the wallet and the investor’s overall profile. The following framework represents the practical standard applied by compliance professionals in Spain.
| Source of Crypto | Acceptability | Documentation Required | Risk Assessment |
|---|---|---|---|
| Purchase on MiCA-regulated EU exchange (Coinbase, Kraken, Bitstamp) | Acceptable | Exchange statements, bank transfer records, KYC confirmation | Low — regulated CASP with FATF-compliant AML |
| Purchase on regulated non-EU exchange (Coinbase US, regulated UAE exchange) | Acceptable | Exchange statements, proof of regulation, bank records | Low-medium — subject to enhanced doc review |
| Crypto received as salary / service payment (documented) | Acceptable | Employment contract or invoice, payment confirmation, declared on tax return | Low — with full income documentation |
| Mining proceeds (declared) | Conditionally acceptable | Mining operation evidence, declared income, power/hardware records | Medium — requires income corroboration |
| DeFi yield / staking rewards (declared) | Conditionally acceptable | Protocol records, wallet history, declared on tax returns | Medium — complex chain; additional scrutiny likely |
| Token sale / ICO proceeds (regulated) | Conditionally acceptable | Participation agreement, token allocation records, declared income | Medium-high — depends on jurisdiction of issuer |
| P2P exchange (LocalBitcoins etc.) | Problematic | Counterparty KYC, transaction rationale, additional verification | High — no regulated intermediary; likely refused |
| Unregulated / offshore exchange (no KYC) | Not acceptable | N/A — transaction will be refused | Very high — cannot establish legitimate origin |
| Privacy coins (Monero, Zcash unshielded) | Not acceptable | N/A — untraceable; FATF red flag | Very high — automatic red flag under SEPBLAC |
| Anonymous wallet / no KYC history | Not acceptable | N/A — cannot establish chain of custody | Very high — transaction will be blocked |
| Mixer / tumbler outputs | Not acceptable | N/A — deliberate obfuscation of origin | Critical — SEPBLAC STR mandatory |
SEPBLAC: Spain’s Financial Intelligence Unit and Its Role
The Servicio Ejecutivo de la Comisión de Prevención del Blanqueo de Capitales e Infracciones Monetarias (SEPBLAC) is the Spanish Financial Intelligence Unit (FIU), operating under the Comisión de Prevención del Blanqueo de Capitales chaired by the Secretary of State for the Treasury. SEPBLAC fulfils three functions relevant to crypto-funded real estate transactions: supervisory authority for sujetos obligados, recipient of Suspicious Transaction Reports (STRs), and operational intelligence unit coordinating with EUROPOL and the Egmont Group.
SEPBLAC’s Supervisory Powers
SEPBLAC has the authority to inspect any sujeto obligado — including notaries, real estate agents and law firms — and to impose administrative sanctions for failures in AML compliance. Sanctions range from written warnings to fines of up to €10 million for serious infractions, and up to five times the amount of the transaction in the most severe cases. Since 2022, SEPBLAC has significantly increased inspection activity of notaries in high-value coastal property markets including Marbella, Ibiza and Barcelona, specifically targeting crypto-funded transactions.
The Suspicious Transaction Report (STR) Obligation
Under Artículo 18 of Ley 10/2010, every sujeto obligado must file a Suspicious Transaction Report (Comunicación por Indicios — operación sospechosa) with SEPBLAC within 30 days of becoming aware of facts that may indicate money laundering or terrorist financing. The STR filing obligation arises not when criminality is proven but when there are reasonable grounds for suspicion. In a crypto-funded transaction context, the following circumstances typically trigger an automatic STR filing: use of privacy coins, mixer-processed funds, wallet interactions with sanctioned addresses, refusal to provide source of funds documentation, and structuring of multiple smaller crypto-to-fiat conversions to avoid reporting thresholds.
Filing an STR does not automatically block a transaction — SEPBLAC has 10 business days to respond to an STR before the obligated subject may proceed with a withheld transaction, unless SEPBLAC issues a blocking order under Article 18.3. However, the filing creates a permanent record that can be accessed in subsequent due diligence by other obligated subjects.
AML Transaction Flow: From Wallet to Escritura
The following seven-step process represents the AML compliance workflow for a crypto-funded property acquisition in Spain. Each step must be completed sequentially and documented before proceeding to the next.
Before any property is identified or any professional is engaged, the investor should commission a blockchain analytics report on all wallets from which crypto proceeds will originate. Tools such as Chainalysis Reactor, Elliptic Investigator or TRM Labs assess wallet risk scores based on historical transaction patterns, sanctions exposure and protocol interactions. A clean report (risk score below 15% on standard scales) substantially reduces the documentary burden at later stages and gives the investor advance warning of any problematic wallet history that must be addressed.
The investor engages a Spanish legal advisor specialising in crypto real estate. The legal advisor conducts the complete KYC process: identity verification, PEP screening, sanctions list check and beneficial ownership analysis. The legal advisor also prepares the AML risk assessment of the specific transaction and client profile, which will be shared with the notary and, if required, the receiving bank. This KYC file is the foundation for all subsequent AML compliance steps.
The complete source of funds documentation package is assembled: exchange account statements covering at minimum 24 months, bank transfer records showing the original fiat-to-crypto purchase, wallet address history, tax returns for 2–3 years, and any supplementary documents supporting the legitimate origin of the assets. For investors with complex crypto histories (multiple exchanges, DeFi activity, token sales), the legal advisor will structure the documentation narrative to present a clear, coherent chain of custody to the notary.
For transactions above €500,000, it is strongly advisable to obtain pre-clearance from the receiving Spanish bank before executing the crypto-to-fiat conversion. This involves submitting the AML file to the bank’s compliance team and receiving written confirmation that the proposed inbound transfer will be accepted. Without bank pre-clearance, there is a risk that the conversion proceeds are blocked upon arrival at the bank, leaving the investor unable to complete the property purchase and potentially losing the arras deposit.
The conversion must be executed on a MiCA-regulated exchange (or equivalent regulated CASP). The investor obtains an official conversion certificate from the exchange showing: the exact cryptocurrency amount sold, the gross and net fiat proceeds, the applicable exchange rate, the date and time of the conversion, and the destination bank account. The certificate, combined with the exchange account statements, completes the conversion layer of the source of funds file. For large conversions above €500,000, it may be advisable to execute over 2–3 business days to reduce price impact and exchange risk.
The notary conducts their own independent AML review of the complete documentation package provided by the legal advisor. Under Instrucción de la DGRN de 10 de noviembre de 1999 and subsequent notarial practice guidelines, the notary has the authority — and the obligation — to refuse the escritura if they are not satisfied that the source of funds has been adequately established. A well-prepared AML file, assembled by specialist legal advisors with experience in crypto transactions, substantially reduces the risk of notarial refusal. The escritura is executed and the property is transferred.
Following notarial execution, the escritura is presented to the Registro de la Propiedad for inscription. The AML file is retained by all obligated subjects for a minimum of 10 years under Article 25 of Ley 10/2010 — a statutory record-keeping obligation that survives the completion of the transaction. The investor should also ensure that all tax declarations arising from the crypto conversion and the property acquisition are filed on time, as inconsistencies between tax filings and the AML documentation are a frequent trigger for SEPBLAC enquiries.
MiCA, DAC8 and the New Automatic Reporting Landscape
The regulatory environment for crypto-funded real estate in Spain changed fundamentally in 2025–2026 with the full entry into application of MiCA and the implementation of DAC8. These two regulatory frameworks, operating in tandem, have effectively ended the era of structuring crypto transactions to avoid AML and tax scrutiny.
MiCA and Its AML Implications
Regulation EU 2023/1114 (MiCA), which became fully applicable in December 2024, requires all crypto-asset service providers operating in the EU to obtain authorisation, implement FATF-compliant AML/CFT programmes, apply the Travel Rule to transfers above €1,000, and screen all customers against EU sanctions lists and PEP databases. For Spanish property buyers, MiCA means that any conversion executed on an EU-regulated exchange will leave a complete compliance record that is accessible to SEPBLAC and other competent authorities — making retroactive opacity impossible.
MiCA also introduces the concept of asset-referenced tokens (ARTs) and e-money tokens (EMTs) — the regulatory categories covering major stablecoins such as USDC and USDT. Stablecoins used in property transactions are subject to the same Travel Rule and AML requirements as other crypto assets, meaning that USDC or USDT transfers above €1,000 between wallets must include originator and beneficiary information under MiCA Article 68.
DAC8 and Automatic Information Exchange
Council Directive EU 2023/2226 (DAC8), transposed into Spanish law and operational from January 2026, requires all MiCA-regulated CASPs to report qualifying crypto transactions to the national tax authority (AEAT) annually, beginning with the 2026 tax year. The reported data includes: the account holder’s identity and tax residence, the type and amount of crypto assets acquired and disposed of, the fiat value of each transaction, and the destination or origin of transfers. AEAT automatically shares this data with the FIUs and tax authorities of the account holder’s country of tax residence under the DAC framework.
| Framework | Applicable From | Key AML Obligation | Impact on Crypto Property Buyers |
|---|---|---|---|
| MiCA (full application) | December 2024 | CASP authorisation; Travel Rule; AML programme | All EU exchange transactions leave complete, accessible compliance records |
| DAC8 reporting | January 2026 (for 2026 tax year) | Automatic reporting of all qualifying crypto transactions | AEAT and SEPBLAC receive transaction data; cross-referencing with STRs automated |
| FATF Travel Rule (EU implementation) | MiCA Article 68 | Originator/beneficiary data for transfers >€1,000 | Wallet-to-wallet transfers leave identifiable counterparty records |
| 6th AMLD criminal provisions | December 2020 (transposed) | Extended predicate offences; 4-year minimum sentence for ML | Personal criminal liability for knowingly using criminal crypto proceeds |
Why Spain Is a Leading Jurisdiction for Crypto Real Estate Transactions
Spain’s AML framework, while rigorous, is transparent, well-documented and predictable — providing legal certainty that makes compliant crypto-funded acquisitions entirely achievable for well-prepared investors.
Latin Notarial System — Ex Ante Legal Control
Spain’s notarial system performs legal verification before title transfer — unlike common law jurisdictions where issues emerge post-completion. A notary who approves a transaction provides an independent validation of the legal and compliance chain, giving buyers and lenders certainty.
Transparent and Published AML Standards
SEPBLAC publishes detailed guidance, typology reports and sector-specific AML risk assessments. Investors and their advisors can access the exact risk criteria applied by supervisors, enabling precision compliance preparation rather than guesswork.
MiCA-Ready Infrastructure
Spain has one of the highest concentrations of MiCA-authorised crypto service providers in the EU. Coinbase, Kraken, Bitstamp and multiple local CASPs operate with full EU licensing, providing the regulated conversion infrastructure that AML compliance requires.
Clear AML Liability Framework
The Spanish AML liability framework clearly allocates responsibility between obligated subjects. A well-structured transaction where each professional fulfils their obligations creates a defensible compliance chain that protects the investor from retroactive challenge.
Land Registry Certainty
Spain’s Registro de la Propiedad provides absolute certainty of title, mortgage status and encumbrance history. The registration of a crypto-funded acquisition in the Land Registry creates an unimpeachable ownership record — a level of security not available in all jurisdictions.
Specialist Legal Advisory Ecosystem
Spain has a developed ecosystem of law firms specialising in the intersection of crypto assets and real estate law — a practical advantage for investors who need advisors who understand both the blockchain and the notarial process.
AML Pre-Transaction Checklist for Crypto Property Buyers in Spain
12 compliance actions to complete before committing to a property acquisition funded with cryptocurrency in Spain.
- Commission a blockchain analytics report (Chainalysis, Elliptic or TRM Labs) on all source wallets — obtain risk scores before engaging notary or agent
- Confirm that the exchange used for conversion is MiCA-regulated or equivalent — unregulated exchange proceeds will not be accepted by Spanish notaries
- Compile 24 months of exchange account statements showing the complete transaction history of the assets to be converted
- Gather bank transfer records showing the original fiat-to-crypto purchase — this establishes the first link in the chain of custody
- Prepare 2–3 years of tax returns from your country of residence — corroborates declared income and consistency with crypto holdings
- Obtain your NIE number before the transaction — Spanish tax identification is required for all property purchases and notarial acts
- Engage a Spanish legal advisor specialising in crypto real estate to assemble the AML file — do not approach the notary directly without prior advisory
- For transactions above €500,000, obtain bank pre-clearance for the incoming fiat transfer before executing the conversion
- Confirm the wallet has no interactions with sanctioned addresses, mixers or privacy coins — any such interaction requires specialist remediation before proceeding
- Ensure the arras contract includes crypto-specific AML clauses — including a force majeure provision for regulatory blocking and a clear allocation of liability if funds are rejected
- Obtain a conversion certificate from the exchange at the time of the crypto-to-fiat conversion — this document cannot be reconstructed retroactively
- Retain all AML documentation for a minimum of 10 years — the statutory record-keeping obligation under Article 25 of Ley 10/2010
Vicox Legal specializes in crypto real estate transactions for international investors acquiring property in Spain through compliant crypto-to-fiat structures coordinated with Spanish notaries and AML-certified advisors.
Buy Real Estate with Crypto — Safely and Compliantly
Vicox Legal manages the full AML compliance process for international investors acquiring property in Spain and Portugal through crypto-to-fiat structures — from blockchain analytics to notarial execution and Land Registry registration.
Start Your TransactionFrequently Asked Questions
What documents prove crypto source of funds for a Spanish property purchase?
The core documentation package for a crypto-funded Spanish property acquisition includes five categories of evidence. First, identity documents: passport, proof of address and a PEP/sanctions declaration. Second, crypto acquisition history: exchange account statements covering 24 months, showing how the cryptocurrency was originally acquired and the bank transfer records confirming the fiat-to-crypto purchase. Third, custody history: a complete wallet address transaction history, ideally supported by a blockchain analytics report with a favourable risk score. Fourth, conversion evidence: an official conversion certificate from the MiCA-regulated exchange showing the crypto sold, fiat received, exchange rate and destination account. Fifth, income corroboration: 2–3 years of tax returns from the investor’s country of residence confirming declared income consistent with the crypto holdings. This documentation is assembled by the investor’s Spanish legal advisor and submitted to the notary and receiving bank as a unified AML compliance file.
What is SEPBLAC and what does it do in a real estate transaction?
SEPBLAC (Servicio Ejecutivo de la Comisión de Prevención del Blanqueo de Capitales) is Spain’s Financial Intelligence Unit (FIU) and the supervisory authority for anti-money laundering compliance. In a real estate transaction, SEPBLAC operates in three ways. As supervisor, it oversees all sujetos obligados — notaries, real estate agents, lawyers and banks — and can inspect their AML files and sanction failures. As intelligence recipient, it receives Suspicious Transaction Reports (STRs) filed by obligated subjects when they have reasonable grounds to suspect money laundering. As operational authority, it can issue blocking orders on transactions under investigation and shares intelligence with EUROPOL, the Egmont Group and other national FIUs. SEPBLAC does not participate directly in individual transactions unless an STR is filed or a blocking order is issued. Its indirect influence is constant: all obligated subjects operate with awareness that their AML files are subject to SEPBLAC inspection.
Can anonymous crypto be used to buy property in Spain?
No. Anonymous cryptocurrency cannot be used to fund a property acquisition in Spain under any circumstances. Under Ley 10/2010 and SEPBLAC guidance, the Spanish notary is legally obligated to refuse the escritura if the source of funds cannot be established with documentary evidence. Anonymous crypto — including funds from wallets with no KYC history, privacy coins (Monero, Zcash), mixer or tumbler outputs, and P2P exchange proceeds with unverified counterparties — cannot meet the chain of custody standard required. Furthermore, using anonymisation techniques to obscure the origin of funds in a transaction above the reporting threshold constitutes a predicate offence under the extended offence list of the 6th Anti-Money Laundering Directive as transposed into Spanish law. Investors with crypto assets whose origin cannot be clearly documented should seek specialist legal advice before attempting a Spanish property transaction.
What happens if the Spanish notary refuses to execute the escritura due to AML concerns?
If the notary refuses the escritura on AML grounds, several consequences follow simultaneously. The transaction cannot complete on its scheduled date, creating an immediate breach of the arras contract unless it contains specific AML force majeure clauses. The notary is legally required to file a Suspicious Transaction Report (STR) with SEPBLAC within 30 days if the refusal is based on suspicion of money laundering — the filing does not confirm criminality but creates a SEPBLAC record. The buyer faces potential loss of the arras deposit (typically 10% of the purchase price) unless the contract’s force majeure provisions protect against regulatory blocking. The seller may be able to retain the deposit and relist the property. To avoid this scenario, the AML documentation package must be reviewed and approved by the notary before the arras is signed and a completion date set — not after.
Is there a difference between KYC and AML in a Spanish real estate context?
Yes — KYC and AML are legally distinct obligations that are often confused but address different questions. KYC (Know Your Customer) focuses on identity: who is the buyer, who is the beneficial owner, and are they on any sanctions or PEP lists? KYC documents include passport, proof of address, beneficial ownership declaration and PEP screening results. AML (Anti-Money Laundering) compliance is broader: it addresses where the money came from, whether the transaction structure makes economic sense, whether there are patterns that suggest criminal proceeds, and whether the transaction as a whole presents an acceptable risk profile. In a crypto-funded transaction, KYC is the baseline and AML source of funds verification is the main compliance challenge. A buyer can pass KYC perfectly and still fail AML compliance if they cannot document the origin of their cryptocurrency assets to the notary’s satisfaction.
Do DeFi wallet proceeds meet Spanish AML source of funds requirements?
DeFi proceeds can meet Spanish AML source of funds requirements, but they require significantly more documentation than proceeds from centralised regulated exchanges. The key challenges with DeFi are: the absence of a centralised custodian who can provide certified account statements; the complexity of transaction trails across multiple protocols and chains; the potential for protocol interactions with sanctioned smart contracts that taint otherwise clean assets; and the difficulty of attributing yield or airdrop income to a declared tax position. Acceptable DeFi proceeds require: complete on-chain transaction history showing all protocol interactions; tax returns declaring DeFi income in the investor’s home jurisdiction; a professional blockchain analytics report demonstrating no exposure to sanctioned protocols or mixers; and a legal memorandum from the Spanish advisor explaining the source of funds narrative to the notary. Complex DeFi positions should be prepared 3–6 months before a planned Spanish property acquisition to allow time for documentation assembly.
How does MiCA change AML compliance for crypto property buyers in Spain in 2026?
MiCA’s full application from December 2024, combined with DAC8 reporting from January 2026, has made the AML compliance environment for crypto property buyers both more demanding and more transparent. More demanding because all EU-regulated exchanges must now apply the FATF Travel Rule to transfers above €1,000 — meaning every crypto transfer leaves an identifiable counterparty record — and because SEPBLAC and AEAT now receive automatic reports of all qualifying crypto transactions. More transparent because the regulatory standards are now codified at EU level, reducing ambiguity about what constitutes adequate compliance. For investors who transact exclusively through MiCA-regulated exchanges, the automatic reporting actually simplifies the documentation process: the exchange-generated compliance records are themselves acceptable evidence for Spanish AML purposes. The practical implication is that investors cannot structure their way around AML compliance through multiple conversions or exchange hopping — every transaction above €1,000 leaves a permanent, reported record.
Vicox Legal advises HNWIs, family offices and crypto investors on compliant property acquisitions in Spain and Portugal, managing the full legal process from AML documentation to Land Registry inscription.
Vicox Legal Team
Vicox Legal is an AI-first international boutique law firm advising HNWIs, family offices and crypto investors on cross-border real estate transactions, wealth structuring and digital asset compliance across Spain, Portugal and Luxembourg.

