Important Notice
Turner Insurance does not provide inheritance tax advice or services. This information is provided as a rough guide only for educational purposes, accurate as of 2026. Regional tax rules change — always consult a qualified gestoría, abogado or tax adviser for advice specific to your situation.
Basque Country ISD — High Exemptions Under the Concierto Económico
The Basque Country (País Vasco) operates under the Concierto Económico — a special fiscal arrangement giving the three Basque provinces (Álava, Guipúzcoa and Vizcaya) full legislative independence in setting their own ISD rules. The Basque Country does not apply Spanish national ISD at all: it has its own separate system administered by each province's Diputación Foral. ISD in all three provinces is significantly more generous than the national scale for direct descendants.
Three Provinces — Three Sets of Rules
Each province has its own Norma Foral governing ISD. While broadly similar and all generous for close family, there are differences in exact exemption amounts and rates:
Álava (Vitoria-Gasteiz) — Diputación Foral de Álava: Group II exemption of approximately €400,000 per heir. Above the threshold, rates start at around 1.5% and rise progressively. Filing via Diputación Foral de Álava.
Guipúzcoa (San Sebastián) — Diputación Foral de Gipuzkoa: Similarly generous Group II exemptions of approximately €400,000 per heir. Progressive rates above the threshold. Filing via Diputación Foral de Gipuzkoa.
Vizcaya (Bilbao) — Diputación Foral de Bizkaia: Group II exemption of approximately €400,000 per heir. Rates above the threshold range from approximately 1.5% to 20%, significantly lower than the national scale. Filing via Diputación Foral de Bizkaia.
ISD Groups in the Basque Country
Group I (direct descendants under 21): Very generous treatment. High per-heir exemptions plus age-related additional reductions. Effective rate is negligible for most family estates.
Group II (direct descendants 21+, spouse, ascendants): Approximately €400,000 per heir tax-free. Progressive rates apply above this threshold, but remain moderate compared to national scale. For most families the entire inheritance falls within the exemption.
Group III (siblings, nieces/nephews, in-laws): Less generous — standard Foral rates apply with more limited exemptions. Still often more favourable than the national scale.
Group IV (unrelated persons): Higher rates with minimal exemptions under each Diputación Foral's scale.
Key Features of the Basque System
No Spanish national ISD — completely separate Foral system
~€400,000 per-heir exemption for direct descendants and spouses
Rates above threshold from approximately 1.5% — significantly below national rates
95% reduction on habitual dwelling for direct descendants and spouse
95% reduction on business assets and company shares (subject to maintenance)
Filing with the relevant Diputación Foral, not the national AEAT
Filing Requirements
ISD returns in the Basque Country are filed with the Diputación Foral of the relevant province — not with the national tax agency (AEAT). The deadline is six months from the date of death, with extensions available. Each province has its own forms and procedures. A gestoría or tax adviser experienced in Foral law is strongly recommended.
Life Insurance and Basque Country ISD
Life insurance proceeds are included in the ISD base under each province's Foral rules. With the ~€400,000 per-heir exemption, many families find that life insurance proceeds fall entirely within the tax-free threshold — meaning zero ISD on the payout for direct descendants. Name beneficiaries directly in the policy rather than through a will to ensure proceeds are treated as a direct ISD item rather than part of the wider estate. For larger policies or non-family beneficiaries, consult a Basque Foral tax specialist.
Frequently Asked Questions — Inheritance Tax in the Basque Country Spain
No — the Basque Country operates entirely under its own Foral tax system (the Concierto Económico). Each of the three Basque provinces — Álava, Guipúzcoa and Vizcaya — sets its own ISD rules through its Norma Foral. Returns are filed with the Diputación Foral of the relevant province, not with the national AEAT. This is a completely separate system, not a variation of the national ISD.
All three Basque provinces provide per-heir exemptions of approximately €400,000 for direct descendants and spouses (Group II). Above this threshold, rates are progressive but start low — approximately 1.5% in most provinces. For most families, the entire estate falls within the exemption threshold, resulting in zero ISD. Always verify current figures with a local gestoría as Foral rules are updated periodically.
Yes — Álava, Guipúzcoa and Vizcaya each have their own Norma Foral governing ISD. While broadly similar — all offer generous exemptions and low rates for close family — there are differences in exact exemption amounts, rates above the threshold, filing procedures and specific reductions. The province where the deceased was habitually resident for the majority of the preceding five years determines which provincial rules apply.
Both are excellent but work differently. Madrid offers a near-zero rate via a 99% bonification on any liability — effectively 0% regardless of estate size. The Basque Country offers a large per-heir exemption (~€400,000) with low rates above the threshold. For smaller estates (under €400,000 per heir) both are broadly equivalent. For larger estates Madrid may actually produce a lower bill given its blanket 99% bonification. A specialist can model the specific figures for your situation.
Life insurance proceeds are included in the ISD base under each province's Foral rules. With the approximately €400,000 per-heir exemption for Group I and II, many life insurance payouts fall entirely within the tax-free threshold — meaning zero ISD. Naming beneficiaries directly in the policy (not through a will) is still important to ensure optimal treatment. For larger policies the rates above the threshold are moderate, but consult a Basque Foral specialist for complex cases.
Returns are filed with the Diputación Foral of the province where the deceased was habitually resident — not with the national AEAT. Álava: Diputación Foral de Álava. Guipúzcoa: Diputación Foral de Gipuzkoa. Vizcaya: Diputación Foral de Bizkaia. The deadline is six months from the date of death. Each province has its own forms and procedures — a local gestoría with Foral experience is strongly recommended.
The Basque Foral system applies based on the habitual residence of the deceased in the relevant province, not the beneficiary's residence. Non-resident beneficiaries inheriting from a deceased who was habitually resident in a Basque province are generally subject to the applicable Foral rules. Given the complexity of cross-border and non-resident situations under Foral law, specialist advice from a Basque tax lawyer is essential.
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