NLS Accredited Agent Program

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About Course

A serious professional designation for real estate agents operating in Spain. Covers Spanish property law fundamentals, listing mandates, AML compliance, ethics, the transaction workflow from offer to escritura, negotiation, NLS data standards, cross-border buyers, and professional risk management. 50 hours of study, a 100-question final exam, and three reviewed case studies.

What you will learn

  • Explain the structure of Spanish property law as it affects everyday agency work
  • Draft, review, and manage listing mandates competently
  • Apply Ley 10/2010 AML obligations at agent level and escalate red flags
  • Apply the NLS Code of Conduct and recognise consumer-protection duties
  • Guide a transaction from first viewing through arras to escritura and inscripción
  • Advise clients on negotiation structure without overstepping into legal advice
  • Submit listings that meet NLS Verified data and media standards
  • Serve non-resident and cross-border buyers competently (NIE, Modelo 720, currency, financing)
  • Manage professional risk including PI insurance, disputes, and complaints
  • Pass the Accredited Agent final exam and complete three reviewed case studies

NLS Verification, Certification, and Accreditation are private professional designations issued by TheNLS.com. They are not government licenses, public regulatory approvals, colegio memberships, or official state certifications.

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Course Content

Module 1: Spanish Property Law Fundamentals
<p>This module gives you the working law you need for daily agency work in Spain. We cover ownership, the Land Registry, planning, taxes, contract forms, and inheritance. The aim is competent referral, not legal practice — you finish able to recognise issues, ask the right questions, and route specialist questions to the right professional.</p>

  • How Spanish Property Law Is Structured
  • Ownership, Co-Ownership and Community Property
  • The Land Registry and the Nota Simple
  • Urban Planning and Licences
  • Property Taxes the Agent Must Recognise
  • Contract Forms: From Reserva to Escritura
  • Inheritance and Succession Issues

Module 2: Listing Agreements & Mandates
<p>Mandates are the legal backbone of agency work. This module covers what a mandate is, how to choose between open, sole and exclusive, how to draft and negotiate it, how to prove authority, how to manage multi-agent situations, and how to terminate cleanly.</p>

Module 3: AML & Compliance
<p>Spanish and EU law treat estate agents as obliged entities for anti-money-laundering purposes. This module turns that obligation into practical routines: customer due diligence, source-of-funds checks, red-flag recognition, PEPs, sanctions, reporting to SEPBLAC, and internal escalation.</p>

Module 4: Ethics & Consumer Protection
<p>Ethics and consumer protection are where reputation is built and lost. This module covers the NLS Code of Conduct in depth, Spanish consumer-protection law (TRLGDCU), data protection (LOPDGDD/GDPR), advertising standards, and conflicts of interest including dual agency.</p>

Module 5: Transaction Workflow
<p>This module walks the transaction end to end — from pre-listing preparation through viewings, offers, reserva, arras, due diligence, escritura, and post-completion duties. The aim is a repeatable, professional workflow that fails predictably and rarely.</p>

Module 6: Negotiation & Client Advisory
<p>This module covers principled negotiation, managing seller and buyer expectations, advising clients without practising law, structuring difficult conversations, and closing deals without pressure tactics.</p>

Module 7: NLS Data Standards
<p>Listings are the product. A property advertised on The NLS competes for attention against thousands of other homes, and the first filter a buyer applies is rarely price — it is <strong>quality of information</strong>. A buyer scrolling on a phone in Manchester at 9pm decides whether to enquire on your villa in Jávea based on six photographs, two paragraphs of text, and a price. If any of those elements is missing, ambiguous, or visibly sloppy, the buyer scrolls on.</p><p>Module 7 sets out the data standards that turn a listing on The NLS into a serious commercial asset. We will cover the three Spanish square-metre measurements that confuse almost every cross-border buyer, the photography rules that separate professional agencies from amateurs, the legal requirement to publish a valid energy certificate, and the data-protection obligations that govern how seller information appears (or does not appear) on the public page. We will also cover listing hygiene: status discipline, freshness, duplicate avoidance, and multilingual content for the coastal markets.</p><p>By the end of this module you will be able to produce a listing that is legally compliant, commercially competitive, and demonstrably superior to the average Costa portal advert. You will also be able to audit colleagues' listings against a shared standard, which is the foundation of consistent agency presentation on the platform.</p>

Module 8: Cross-Border Buyers
<p>A Spanish buyer purchases property roughly in line with the local average price and local local norms. A cross-border buyer — British, Dutch, German, Belgian, Norwegian, French, Scandinavian, increasingly North American — purchases at a different price point, with different financing constraints, different tax exposures, and different documentary requirements. To serve cross-border buyers competently you must understand their journey from the first NIE application to the post-completion tax declarations they will face for as long as they own the property.</p><p>This module covers the practical mechanics of bringing a non-resident buyer through a Spanish purchase: how to obtain the NIE, how to satisfy anti-money-laundering source-of-funds requirements, what mortgage availability looks like for non-residents, what tax declarations the buyer faces after completion, how Brexit changed the picture for British buyers, how Golden Visa and Non-Lucrative Visa pathways intersect with property purchase, and the cultural communication patterns that determine whether a relationship lasts beyond a single transaction.</p><p>A recurring theme runs through every lesson: <strong>specialist questions must be referred to specialists</strong>. Cross-border tax planning is a profession; immigration law is a profession; mortgage broking is a profession. The agent's role is to recognise the question, give the buyer enough context to ask the right specialist, and never to give advice that would constitute regulated activity in another jurisdiction. Get this balance right and you become indispensable; get it wrong and you create liability for yourself and damage for the buyer.</p>

Module 9: Professional Risk & Disputes
<p>The previous modules teach you how to do the job. This module teaches you what to do when something goes wrong — and over a long career in Spanish real estate, something will go wrong. A commission claim from a colleague who introduced the buyer first. A misrepresentation accusation from a buyer whose new kitchen has a hidden defect. A duplicate-mandate dispute with another agency that signed up the same villa a month later. A public review on Google that contains a damaging untruth. Each of these scenarios has happened to every long-serving agent in Spain.</p><p>Risk and disputes is not a depressing topic; it is the topic that distinguishes professionals from amateurs. Professionals expect disputes, document continuously, and resolve issues before they escalate. Amateurs hope nothing goes wrong, keep no records, and discover their professional indemnity insurance lapsed two months ago at exactly the moment they need it.</p><p>This module covers the practical infrastructure of professional risk management: the common dispute scenarios on the Spanish coastal market, professional indemnity insurance (<em>seguro de responsabilidad civil profesional</em>) and what it covers, the complaint-handling pathways inside The NLS and outside it, written-record discipline, de-escalation, when to involve lawyers and mediators, and how the public review economy intersects with the offline complaint world. Every lesson ends with the same principle: the agent who documents everything sleeps well.</p>

Module 10: Final Case Studies & Exam Prep
<p>The final module prepares you for the exam and the three case studies. It covers exam structure, case-study technique, two worked examples, exam-day discipline, and the ongoing obligations of accreditation.</p>

The NLS

NLS Verification, Certification, and Accreditation are private professional designations issued by TheNLS.com.
They are not government licenses, public regulatory approvals, colegio memberships, or official state certifications.

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