Tax Advantages of Investing in Equity with Urbanitae
Last Updated on 26 November 2025 by Equipo Urbanitae
When comparing equity and debt projects on Urbanitae, investors usually focus on срок and returns. However, another key factor directly impacts the final outcome: when taxes are paid.
Although both types of projects are taxed under the savings tax base, the way taxation is applied can significantly affect net profitability, especially when reinvesting over time.
In Debt Projects, Taxes Are Paid More Frequently
Real estate debt projects generate income through interest, which is considered investment income for tax purposes. These returns must be declared when they are received, usually at the end of the loan term along with the principal.
In some cases, interests are paid periodically, requiring investors to pay taxes multiple times throughout the project. This reduces the amount available for reinvestment.
The applicable tax rate is progressive, ranging from 19% to 30% depending on income level.
In Equity Projects, Profits Are Taxed Only Once
In equity or capital gain projects, investors participate in the project company and receive their returns when the asset is sold or the vehicle is liquidated.
Instead of receiving periodic payments, the entire investment — including profits — remains reinvested throughout the project lifecycle. Taxes are only paid at the end, when profits are realized.
This creates a natural compounding effect, allowing capital to grow uninterrupted.
The main difference lies not in how often taxes are paid within a single project, but in how taxation affects consecutive investments.
By deferring taxes until the end, equity investors keep more capital working for longer, increasing cumulative returns and improving efficiency.
In contrast, debt investments reduce the reinvestment base each time taxes are paid.
Two Strategies, Two Outcomes
| Concept | Investor A. Two consecutive debt projects (15% in 18 months each) | Investor B. One equity project over 3 years (IRR 15%) |
|---|---|---|
| Initial Investment | €10,000 | €10,000 |
| Taxation | Pays taxes twice (each time interest is received) | Pays taxes only once (at the end of the project) |
| 1st operation | Receives €11,500 → pays €285 → reinvests €11,215 | – |
| 2nd operation | Receives €12,897 → pays €319 | – |
| Accumulated net gain | +€2,578 | +€4,212 |
| Final net capital | €12,578 | €14,212 |
| Tax efficiency | Reinvestment base eroded twice | Capital grows uninterrupted throughout the period |
Paying taxes later means your profits remain invested and continue generating returns. This fiscal deferral acts as a performance booster, helping maximize net profitability over comparable timeframes.
In addition, equity investments simplify tax management, as only one declaration is required at project completion.
Profitability, Time, and Tax Efficiency
Beyond the numerical effect, this model has another advantage: it simplifies the investor’s management. While debt investments pay periodic interest (each of which must be declared), equity generates only one gain to declare at the end of the project.
Although debt offers stability and shorter terms, when an investor undertakes multiple projects over the same time horizon, taxation works in favor of equity: you pay taxes only once, allowing all capital — including profits — to accumulate over a longer period.
As José María Gómez-Acebo, Director of Institutional Relations at Urbanitae, explains: “When you invest in equity projects, interest works for you throughout the entire cycle. You don’t withdraw it or fragment it — you let it grow until the end, and that makes all the difference.”
Key Advantages of Equity Investment
Investing in equity projects with Urbanitae allows you to:
- Pay taxes only at the end of the project
- Avoid erosion of capital from repeated taxation
- Benefit from continuous reinvestment of returns
- Achieve potentially higher net profitability
While debt offers shorter terms and greater predictability, equity investments leverage time as a strategic advantage. By allowing profits to accumulate and grow without interruption, tax efficiency plays a decisive role in long-term performance.
When you let your investment mature fully before paying taxes, time works in your favor — not against you. https://crowd.urbanitae.com/3LYrZ3S