What this comparison covers
- Going directly to a Spanish bank – what you actually get
- Working with an independent mortgage broker – what changes
- Side-by-side comparison
- When each route makes sense
- The quiet thing nobody talks about
Going directly to a Spanish bank
You walk into the local branch of the Spanish bank where you already hold an account. They’re polite. They speak some English. They take your documents. A few weeks later, they come back with a single offer.
That offer reflects exactly one bank’s risk appetite, exactly one bank’s product range, and exactly one bank’s view of your country of residence and currency of income that quarter. If the offer is good, you sign. If it isn’t, your only fallback is to start the same process again with a different bank.
This works fine in two specific situations: when you have a deep existing relationship with that bank that meaningfully improves the terms, and when the case is so straightforward that any reasonable offer is acceptable.
Working with an independent broker
An independent mortgage broker submits one set of documents and approaches a panel of lenders, in our case, more than twenty Spanish banks, in parallel. The bank that’s most comfortable with your specific profile makes the most competitive offer. Sometimes two lenders are in close range and we negotiate further.
An independent adviser also handles the file: assembling documents, translating where needed, anticipating what each bank will ask for, presenting the case in a way that pre-empts common objections.
Side-by-side comparison
- Choice: bank direct = 1 offer; broker = up to 20+ in parallel.
- Rate negotiation leverage: bank direct = none; broker = real, because lenders know they’re competing.
- Knowledge of bank-specific quirks: bank direct = limited to that bank; broker = pattern recognition across the panel.
- Country and currency strategy: bank direct = take what they offer; broker = pick the lenders most comfortable with your country and currency.
- Speed of approval: often comparable, sometimes faster with broker (file pre-cleaned).
- Cost: bank direct charges its own fees; broker charges a fee, often offset by better rate.
- Conflict of interest: bank-employed adviser sells their bank’s product; independent broker is paid the same regardless of which bank wins.
When each route makes sense
Go bank direct when
- You have a long-standing relationship at a Spanish bank that genuinely improves your terms.
- Your case is straightforward (resident, EUR income, employed, simple property).
- You value simplicity over a few tenths of a percent on rate.
Use a broker when
- You are a non-resident, especially with non-EUR income.
- Your file has any complexity: self-employed, multi-jurisdiction income, holding-company structure, HNW profile.
- The property is in a region or price band where lender appetite varies.
- You value rate negotiation leverage and want a clean file process in your own language.
The quiet thing nobody talks about
The biggest difference often isn’t rate or product. It’s file presentation. A bank-direct file goes in raw – the bank’s underwriter sees whatever the branch employee assembled. A broker-handled file goes in pre-cleaned: documents in the right order, the right translations, the cover note explaining the unusual elements before the bank can flag them.
Banks reward clean files. Cleaner files get faster approvals, sometimes better terms, and meaningfully fewer surprises before signing. This is invisible from the outside, but it’s where most of the value of a good adviser shows up.