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Old 30th April 2008, 05:56 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by dupree View Post
I am told that in order to sign a lease for a rental property in Madrid that I will have to come up with 1 months rent, 1 or 2 months deposit and 1 months rent for the real estate agent (which is all fine and expected) and, this is the kicker, a bank guarantee for 6 months of rent.

According to the bank, being that I don't own any Spanish assets nor have any credit history in Spain that we will have to deposit 110% of the value of the guarantee and pay 0.5% set-up fee and a fee of 1% each quarter (so I am paying them to guarantee a contract with my own money?). So roughly this comes out to about 20K USD (using an optimistic exchange rate of 1.50)that we have to come up with just to move into an apartment in Spain.

Does this sound right to anyone? Surely there is another way to secure this guarantee...Understanding that I have excellent credit in the US but no collateral to speak of...I do have a car but technically the bank still owns that asset. One agent mentioned an insurance specifically for this but most of the "landlords" of the properties I have seen are unwilling to go this route.

Thanks for sharing your knowledge and experience.
It sounds rough - but seems pretty much what I'd expect.

It's the same way that a US operator wants your credit rating (which as a foreigner you wont have). A US bank will make sure you pay to get it fast! Folk here want their backs protected. Does your US bank have a Madrid branch? - if so have a bit of chat with them!

Depends WHERE in Madrid - if it's a highish demand area - then they wont budge. It can be tough to evict non-paying residents - would take about 6 months as things stand in the courts (maybe longer due to recent strikes). And Insurance companies may also take their own sweet time paying out.

Look outside the City. There are masses of unoccupied flats outside the centre. OK, most may not be in the better areas but the landlords are DESPERATE to fill them - There's been over speculation here and a fair few "smallish builders" who thought they'd backed a winner but got in too late. More availability SOUTH - but North to West is (imo - I live there) nicer.

If you'll be using public transport to get about - expect flats near rail stations to be a bit more hard to find.

Last edited by chris(madrid); 30th April 2008 at 05:58 AM.
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