keeping a boat in spain

Just as an extra; UK reg car, UK trailer and UK (SSR?) Boat adds up okay. But you can’t mix them, I believe. I.e. Spanish car, UK trailer. Otherwise you may be okay, again get ICC for easiest encounters with Guardia on water. Carry insurance docs too. Are the moorings official?
That’s very interesting, and not something I’d considered.
Moorings aren’t official, we slip the yacht club guy €50 a year to keep the mooring buoy in order, so no paperwork there.
 
If you’re launching and recovering as you visit, with boat/trailer in storage you should be fine. I wouldn’t leave a UK boat on a swing mooring whilst out of Spain, if no regular checks. I know in my area of Spain, Costa Calida, they had a clear out of “abandoned” or un registered boats 4 years ago. Unofficial mooring had ropes cut, boats impounded. Many owners just walked away, as the boats were very low value.
 
If you’re launching and recovering as you visit, with boat/trailer in storage you should be fine. I wouldn’t leave a UK boat on a swing mooring whilst out of Spain, if no regular checks. I know in my area of Spain, Costa Calida, they had a clear out of “abandoned” or un registered boats 4 years ago. Unofficial mooring had ropes cut, boats impounded. Many owners just walked away, as the boats were very low value.

we only leave it on a swing mooring for July and august whilst we are there. It’s a bit of a pain to launch each time as we’re on the Atlantic so its tidal.
Interesting to hear about the clampdown on moorings.
 
I can only speak about the French situation, but there, if you have residence (titre de sejour) and bring in anything from the Uk post Brexit, you are liable to TVA of 20% of the value. I have just run foul of this with a car, thankfully it is more than 30 years old so only liable to 5.5%. With boats it is a little trickier s the need to register them is so variable. But the VAT situation is EU wide, it is simply a case of when you are asked for documents........
 
Hi,im new to the boating world and would like some advice if anyone can help please. I am a UK resident and have a holiday house in mojacar and would like to purchase an 8m boat from a spanish broker in mallorca and moore it in gurrucha marina fulltime and use it when we come out.
1. Is it possible?
2. What are the pros and cons for this?
If anybody can give some advise this would be great. Thanks
 
Hi,im new to the boating world and would like some advice if anyone can help please. I am a UK resident and have a holiday house in mojacar and would like to purchase an 8m boat from a spanish broker in mallorca and moore it in gurrucha marina fulltime and use it when we come out.
1. Is it possible?
2. What are the pros and cons for this?
If anybody can give some advise this would be great. Thanks
It's not a problem, just cancel any Spanish registration and put it on the UK SSR. As long as it's EU VAT paid, the boat can stay indefinitely even if you're restricted to 90/180.
 
I may be looking to take up residency in Spain at some time in the future and understand that VAT would be payable if teh boat goes with me. Fair enough, their country so their rules.. What value is the starting point to calculate tax? Original price of the boat 25 years ago or what I paid for it?
 
I may be looking to take up residency in Spain at some time in the future and understand that VAT would be payable if teh boat goes with me. Fair enough, their country so their rules.. What value is the starting point to calculate tax? Original price of the boat 25 years ago or what I paid for it?

As far as I know, tax would be payable on value when imported. I don't know how they establish value as most boats on the market are advertised at asking price, not actual sale price after negotiations, broker and other expenses paid.
 
I may be looking to take up residency in Spain at some time in the future and understand that VAT would be payable if teh boat goes with me. Fair enough, their country so their rules.. What value is the starting point to calculate tax? Original price of the boat 25 years ago or what I paid for it?
If you import it when you go there I think there is no import duty….
 
I may be looking to take up residency in Spain at some time in the future and understand that VAT would be payable if teh boat goes with me. Fair enough, their country so their rules.. What value is the starting point to calculate tax? Original price of the boat 25 years ago or what I paid for it?
Whatever the customs officer thinks it's worth. If you have a recent sales receipt, probably that, but otherwise, he'll have a book of agreed prices.
 
Thanks. It seems there’s very little definitive answers on this on the web.
The reason for buying in the uk is that prices seem better than in spain. Plus we holiday in north spain (La Coruna) and not too much local stock it seems, unlike in the south.
Nothing in Western France? I have just bought in the South but at one point had a few in La Rochelle on my shortlist to look at
 
VAT is 20% for boats taken in/out of EU or UK. This is the best website I’ve seen so far for explaining different situations;

Buying a boat in Europe after Brexit
That seems a good guide with one exception:

"Just like travelling to the EU, vessels can apply for temporary importation to sail to UK shores."

It is my understanding that a UK resident cannot import an EU vessel under temporary rules, they must pay VAT immediately. This was one of my considerations when I decided to buy in France - I would never bring it to UK
 
Thanks for all the insightful input. It seems there’s still so many issues yet to be ironed out post Brexit.
might just keep looking for a Spanish flagged boat; I think it will be easier in the long run
You may find your insurer will want you to re- register in UK unless one there will insure you. I've just been through this and an waiting to put the final bits through tomorrow
 
I’ve got a while till I have to worry about the 90 day rule; unfortunately I still have to work!
I didn't think I had to consider that, being officially retired, but a former colleague has just persuaded me to do a bit of work for him. Thankfully, I can do it remotely, and part of the renumeration is a nice new MacBook Pro to work on.
 
I didn't think I had to consider that, being officially retired, but a former colleague has just persuaded me to do a bit of work for him. Thankfully, I can do it remotely, and part of the renumeration is a nice new MacBook Pro to work on.
Under the withdrawal agreement, you can only do certain work in each EU member state. I can work in Germany but not in Austria, and only in the Czech Republic if I commute in each day.
 
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