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Right of Pre-emption and Redemption in Spain: Legal, Conventional and Co-owner (Arts. 1521-1544 CC)
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Right of Pre-emption and Redemption in Spain: Legal, Conventional and Co-owner (Arts. 1521-1544 CC)

Analysis of legal pre-emption (neighbours, co-owners, tenants), conventional redemption, exercise deadlines, right of first refusal and consequences of failure to notify sale.

right of redemptionright of pre-emptionco-owner redemptiontenant pre-emptionright of first refusalart. 1521 CCLAU

Right of Redemption: Concept and Types

The right of redemption (retracto) is the right granted by law or contract to certain persons to step into the shoes of the buyer in a completed sale, acquiring the property under the same agreed terms (same price, place, and payment schedule). It differs from the purchase option (opción de compra) ( which operates prior to the sale ) in that it operates after the fact.

The Código Civil (Spanish Civil Code, hereinafter CC), Article 1521, defines the legal right of redemption as "the right to subrogate oneself, under the same terms stipulated in the contract, in the place of the person who acquires a thing by purchase or payment in kind." It only applies in cases expressly provided for by law.

1. Co-owners' Right of Redemption (Art. 1522 CC)

A co-owner of property held in undivided shares (pro indiviso) has a right of redemption when one of the co-owners sells their share to an outsider. Each co-owner may exercise the right with respect to the share sold, in proportion to their own share.

  • Time limit: 9 days from registration in the Land Registry or from the date the redeeming party became aware of the sale (Art. 1524 CC)
  • The co-owners' right of redemption does not apply if the buyer is already another co-owner
  • If several co-owners wish to exercise the right, the redeemed share is distributed among them in proportion to their respective shares

2. Neighbouring Landowners' Right of Redemption (Art. 1523 CC)

The owner of a rural plot smaller than 1 hectare has a right of redemption when a neighbouring landowner sells their plot to an outsider. It only applies where both plots are rural land and the plot being sold is smaller than 1 hectare.

Time limit: 9 days from registration or from the date of knowledge (Art. 1524 CC).

This right has been heavily criticised in legal scholarship for encouraging the fragmentation of smallholdings (minifundismo) and is rarely litigated in current practice.

3. Tenants' Right of Redemption (LAU and LAR)

#### Urban tenancies (LAU: Ley de Arrendamientos Urbanos, Urban Tenancies Act 29/1994)

The tenant of a primary residence has a right of first refusal (tanteo ( pre-sale preferential acquisition right) and a right of redemption (retracto ) post-sale subrogation right) when the landlord decides to sell the leased property (Art. 25 LAU):

  • Right of first refusal: notification of sale terms → the tenant has 30 calendar days to exercise it
  • Right of redemption: if not notified or if the property was sold on different terms → 30 calendar days from the date the tenant becomes aware of the sale

Exceptions include: the sale of an entire building (where the buyer acquires the whole building, not individual units), a joint sale with other units in the building, or a forced sale at judicial auction.

#### Rural tenancies (LAR: Ley de Arrendamientos Rústicos, Rural Tenancies Act 49/2003)

The tenant of rural land has rights of first refusal and redemption if the owner sells (Art. 22 LAR). Time limits: 60 days from notification for the right of first refusal; 60 days for the right of redemption from Land Registry entry or from the date of knowledge of the sale.

Conventional Right of Redemption (Arts. 1507–1520 CC)

The conventional right of redemption (retracto convencional) is a contractual clause by which the seller reserves the right to recover the sold property by returning the price and the costs of the contract. It is a clause inserted in the sale and purchase agreement itself.

Time Limit

The period for exercising the conventional right of redemption is as agreed by the parties, but may never exceed 10 years (Art. 1508 CC). If no period was agreed, it defaults to 4 years from the date of sale.

Effects

Upon exercising the right of redemption, the seller recovers the property free of encumbrances except those existing at the time of the sale (mortgages, easements). The costs of the sale contract, as well as necessary and useful expenses, are reimbursable to the buyer (Art. 1518 CC).

Right of First Refusal: The Prior Right

The right of first refusal (tanteo) is a preferential acquisition right exercised before the sale, when the owner decides to sell, they must notify the holder of the right of first refusal of the terms of the sale. If the owner fails to give notice and sells to a third party, the holder of the right of first refusal may exercise the right of redemption to step into the purchase.

Failure to give notice of the right of first refusal does not invalidate the sale, but triggers the right of redemption during the applicable legal period.

Procedure for Exercising the Right of Redemption

  1. Claim before the Tribunal de Instancia (Court of First Instance) by filing a redemption claim (demanda de retracto) under ordinary civil proceedings
  2. The claim must be filed within the applicable time limit (9, 30, or 60 days depending on the type, the period is one of lapse, not limitation)
  3. The claimant must lodge or place at the court's disposal the sale price plus costs at the time of filing the claim (Art. 1616 LEC, Ley de Enjuiciamiento Civil, Spanish Civil Procedure Act)
  4. A judgment upholding the redemption claim declares the claimant to be the new owner

Lapse periods: the time limits for exercising the right of redemption are lapse periods (caducidad), not limitation periods (prescripción); they cannot be interrupted, suspended, or waived by conduct.

Conclusion

The right of redemption is a legal institution that restricts the free transfer of property in favour of specific groups (tenants, co-owners, neighbouring landowners). A lawyer advising on sale and purchase transactions must alert their client both to any rights of redemption that may affect them and to any such rights they may be entitled to exercise in their favour.

Lexiel allows you to search case law on tenants' and co-owners' rights of redemption, and to draft redemption claims with verified legal citations.


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Right of Pre-emption and Redemption in Spain: Legal, Conventional and Co-owner (Arts. 1521-1544 CC) : Lexiel