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Spanish SOCIMI and Luxembourg Investment Vehicles: Key Benefits for Global Real Estate Investors

by | Jul 16, 2025 | Investment funds

The Spanish real estate market continues to attract international investors, family offices, private equity funds, pension funds, and entrepreneurs seeking stable rental income and long-term capital gains. At the center of this opportunity lies the SOCIMI (Sociedad Cotizada Anónima de Inversión en el Mercado Inmobiliario), Spain’s version of a REIT, offering unique tax advantages and investor-friendly regulations.

Combining SOCIMIs with Luxembourg investment vehicles allows investors to build powerful cross-border structures that maximize tax efficiency, enhance governance, and improve capital pooling flexibility.

Understanding SOCIMI: Spain’s Tax-Efficient Real Estate Vehicle

SOCIMIs are publicly listed Spanish real estate investment companies designed to hold and manage rental properties. They benefit from a 0% corporate income tax rate if they comply with certain conditions:

  • At least 80% of assets must consist of urban properties intended for lease or shares in other SOCIMIs.

  • At least 80% of annual income must derive from leasing activities.

  • Mandatory profit distribution: 80% of rental income, 50% of capital gains from property sales, and 100% of dividends from subsidiaries.

  • Must be listed on a regulated market, often BME Growth in Spain.

This tax-transparent structure makes SOCIMIs highly attractive for investors focused on steady rental yields and tax-efficient dividends.

Why Combine SOCIMI and Luxembourg Investment Vehicles?

Luxembourg remains a leading European jurisdiction for cross-border real estate investment structuring, offering both unregulated and regulated vehicles that can complement a SOCIMI structure.

Unregulated Luxembourg Vehicles

The SOPARFI (Société de Participations Financières) is a holding company that is not regulated by the CSSF. It provides tax optimization benefits through the EU Parent-Subsidiary Directive and Luxembourg’s participation exemption regime, potentially reducing Spanish dividend withholding tax when conditions are met.

The SCSp (Special Limited Partnership) is a fully flexible, unregulated partnership structure that is tax transparent. It allows international investors to pool capital, design flexible governance, and maintain direct tax look-through treatment, making it attractive for family offices and private equity investors.

The RAIF (Reserved Alternative Investment Fund) is often misunderstood. Although it operates under an AIFM regime, it is unregulated at fund level — no prior approval from the CSSF is required. The RAIF enables fast market entry, broad investment flexibility (including real estate and shares in SOCIMIs), and benefits from favorable Luxembourg tax treatment (subject only to a 0.01% subscription tax).

Regulated Luxembourg Vehicles

For investors seeking more formal regulatory oversight, Luxembourg offers the SIF (Specialised Investment Fund) and SICAR structures. Both are supervised by the CSSF and target well-informed investors such as institutional and large private investors.

Strategic Advantages of Combining SOCIMI with Luxembourg Vehicles

Using SOCIMI together with Luxembourg investment vehicles provides several strategic benefits:

  • Enhanced tax efficiency: SOCIMI dividends can be routed through a Luxembourg SOPARFI to leverage participation exemptions and reduce overall tax leakage.

  • Flexible capital aggregation: A Luxembourg RAIF or SCSp can act as a feeder structure to pool capital from multiple investors before acquiring SOCIMI shares, streamlining governance and capital management.

  • Pan-European investment platform: Luxembourg vehicles enable easy expansion into other European real estate markets (e.g., French SIIC, Italian SIIQ), creating a consolidated investment hub.

  • Improved exit flexibility: Holding Spanish SOCIMI shares through a Luxembourg structure facilitates partial or full exits and simplifies secondary market transactions.

Damalion: Your Strategic Partner for Cross-Border Real Estate Structures

At Damalion, we help international investors, family offices, private equity funds, and pension funds design and implement efficient cross-border real estate investment structures by combining SOCIMI with Luxembourg vehicles. Our team provides tailored legal, tax, and regulatory support to ensure optimal compliance and maximum value creation.

Whether you are launching a SOCIMI, creating a Luxembourg feeder fund, or building a diversified European property investment platform, Damalion delivers independent, expert guidance at every stage.

Contact us today to learn how to enhance your real estate investment strategy through the powerful combination of SOCIMI and Luxembourg investment vehicles. 

Damalion – Luxembourg

Spanish SOCIMI and Luxembourg investment vehicles — clear benefits for global real estate investors

For international investors, entrepreneurs, family offices, private equity and pension funds. This page explains how a Spanish SOCIMI can work with Luxembourg vehicles (SOPARFI, SCSp, RAIF, SIF/SICAR) in a practical and lawful way.

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Overview

A SOCIMI is Spain’s listed real estate vehicle. It focuses on rental assets and distributes profits. Luxembourg offers flexible holding and fund options. Used together, they help pool capital, manage tax leakage lawfully, and support cross-border growth.

SOCIMI — key points

  • Public company listed on a market (often BME Growth).
  • Mainly rental assets and income (statutory 80% tests).
  • Mandatory distributions on rental income and gains as set by law.
  • Favorable corporate income tax regime if legal conditions are met.
  • Subject to Spanish company, market, and tax rules.

Luxembourg vehicles — where they fit

Vehicle What it is Use with SOCIMI Notes
SOPARFI Ordinary Luxembourg holding company. Holds SOCIMI shares for corporate governance and treaty access where applicable. May access participation exemption under conditions. Normal corporate taxation applies otherwise.
SCSp Special limited partnership (tax transparent). Pools capital from qualified investors before investing upstream. Contractual flexibility. No legal personality. Partnership agreement governs.
RAIF Fund under AIFM regime, not supervised at fund level. Fast setup for well-informed investors to invest in real estate or SOCIMI shares. Subject to AIFM rules via its manager; subscription tax applies on NAV when relevant.
SIF / SICAR CSSF-supervised fund regimes. Used when formal supervision is preferred. Well-informed investor base, product-specific tax treatments.

Legal and tax points to review

  • Spanish SOCIMI law conditions (asset and income tests, distribution rules, listing).
  • EU directives and double tax treaties that may apply to dividends and gains.
  • Luxembourg participation exemption conditions and anti-abuse rules.
  • Beneficial ownership, AML/CFT, sanctions screening, and substance expectations.
  • AIFM scope, depositary, reporting (for RAIF/SIF/SICAR and other AIFs).
  • Market abuse, disclosure, and governance for listed structures.
  • VAT, transfer taxes, and registration formalities on asset deals and share deals.

Governance and reporting

  • Clear board and manager roles. Minutes and registers maintained.
  • Timely financial statements and, where required, statutory audits.
  • Consistent investor communications and disclosures under applicable rules.
  • Documented policies on conflicts, valuation, and risk management.

Timelines and typical costs

  • Holding company: incorporation can be fast after KYC is complete.
  • Partnership or fund: timing depends on documentation, service providers, and any regulatory steps.
  • Ongoing costs: administration, audit, depository (if applicable), market listing, and compliance.

Frequently asked questions

1) Can a SOCIMI be owned through a Luxembourg SOPARFI?
Yes. A SOPARFI may hold SOCIMI shares. Dividend and capital-gains tax outcomes depend on treaty access, participation exemption conditions, anti-abuse rules, and each company’s substance and facts.
2) Does a SOCIMI have to be listed?
Yes. Listing on a regulated or multilateral market is a core legal requirement. BME Growth is a common venue. Listing rules and disclosure duties apply alongside SOCIMI law.
3) What distribution rules apply to SOCIMI profits?
Spanish law sets mandatory payout ratios on rental profits, capital gains, and dividends from subsidiaries. Boards must approve distributions in line with the statute and corporate law.
4) Is a Luxembourg SCSp tax transparent?
Generally yes. The SCSp is treated as tax transparent in Luxembourg, subject to special rules for commercial activities. Investor-level taxation applies according to their own positions and jurisdictions.
5) When is a RAIF appropriate?
When well-informed investors need a flexible fund with AIFM oversight and no product-level authorization. A depositary, valuation policy, and periodic reporting are required under AIFM rules.
6) Are there minimum free float or shareholder tests for SOCIMI?
Market listing and SOCIMI rules include shareholder-spread and other eligibility conditions. Issuers must verify current market requirements before admission.
7) How are SOCIMI dividends to a SOPARFI taxed?
They may benefit from participation exemption or treaty relief when legal conditions are met and no anti-abuse rule applies. Withholding tax in Spain must be checked against the specific investor pathway.
8) Does the GAAR or PSD anti-abuse rule affect the structure?
Yes. EU and domestic anti-abuse provisions apply. Structures must reflect genuine business purposes, decision-making, and adequate substance.
9) Can a RAIF or SIF invest directly in Spanish property?
Yes. Funds can invest in real estate or in SOCIMI shares if their constitutive documents allow it and legal, tax, and regulatory constraints are observed.
10) Are there Spanish REIT-style holding period rules?
SOCIMI legislation includes holding and asset-use rules for qualifying treatment. Non-compliance may trigger adjustments or penalties. Check the current statute before transactions.
11) What substance is expected in Luxembourg?
Boards should meet and decide in Luxembourg. Adequate directors, records, office arrangements, and control over key decisions support substance. Tax authorities assess on facts.
12) How does AIFM apply to an SCSp or RAIF feeder?
If the vehicle is an AIF, the manager must comply with AIFMD. This covers authorization or registration, reporting, risk management, and—where required—depositary and valuation policies.
13) Are related-party leases in a SOCIMI allowed?
They are possible if permitted by law and market rules, with arm’s-length terms, proper approvals, and transparent disclosure.
14) How are asset deals vs. share deals treated for taxes?
They can differ on transfer taxes, VAT, and step-up effects. Parties should model both paths under current Spanish and Luxembourg rules.
15) Can pension funds invest through an SCSp or RAIF?
Yes, subject to their own regulatory limits and the fund’s target-investor rules. Documentation should address governance, reporting, and ESG where relevant.
16) What market disclosure applies after a SOCIMI listing?
Ongoing information duties apply under market regulations and the issuer’s market rulebook, including periodic reports and inside-information handling.
17) Are there currency or sanctions restrictions?
AML/CFT and sanctions screening applies at onboarding and throughout the relationship. Payments involving restricted countries or persons require enhanced checks or are prohibited.
18) Do Spanish CFC rules impact a Luxembourg holding?
CFC and hybrid rules can affect cross-border returns. Groups should assess these rules along with interest-limitation and anti-hybrid regimes.
19) How are management and performance fees handled?
Fees must match the constitutive documents and be disclosed to investors. VAT and transfer-pricing rules apply to cross-border services.
20) What audit requirements apply?
Listed SOCIMIs are audited under Spanish law and market rules. Luxembourg entities follow local audit thresholds and, for funds, product-specific audit requirements.

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