Golden Bitcoin coin inside a translucent glass vault, with three threads of light extending toward a key, a document, and a seal icon, against a dark background with golden waves and Japanese candlesticks
Original illustration generated with AI (Adobe Firefly) -- does not represent real data.

Managing Your Bitcoin in Practice: Custody, Inheritance and Taxes in Spain

Market analysis (the Score, MVRV, HODL waves) helps you understand the cycle. But it says nothing about where to keep your keys, what happens if something happens to you, or what you have to declare. This section covers that other half -- the practical one.

Almost all of BlockPulse Analytics answers one question: what phase of the cycle is Bitcoin in? That's a legitimate question, but it leaves out another one that's just as important and far less glamorous: once you hold Bitcoin, what do you actually do with it? Where you keep it, what happens if one day you can't access your own keys, and what obligations you take on with the tax authorities simply by holding it. This section groups the practical guides for those three questions.

Why market analysis doesn't solve this

Custody: the first decision, and the one most often postponed

Where you keep your private keys determines everything else. Keeping your Bitcoin on an exchange is convenient, but it means that, technically, it isn't yours until you withdraw it -- you depend on that exchange staying solvent and letting you take it out whenever you want. Holding it yourself (self-custody, with a hardware wallet or similar) removes that dependency, but shifts the entire responsibility of not losing or exposing the key onto you. Neither option is neutral, and the right choice depends on how much you hold, how much you know, and how much time you want to spend on it. The detailed comparison of custody options in Spain lives in its own guide within this section.

What actually fails without a succession plan

The most common failure isn't technical: it's that no one besides you knows those Bitcoin exist. If you die or become incapacitated without leaving any trail, your heirs have no certificate to claim anywhere -- unlike a bank account, there's no institution they can write to asking for access. The funds are still there, on the blockchain, perfectly intact and perfectly unreachable, forever.

Unlike a bank account, there is no "account recovery" process in Bitcoin: without access to the private key, the funds are unrecoverable, no exceptions. This isn't a limitation of anyone's product -- it's a property of the protocol, the same one that means no one can freeze or confiscate your funds without the key either. The good and bad sides of sovereignty are the same side.

Inheritance: leaving access without leaving exposure

The most common mistake when trying to fix this runs the other way: writing the seed phrase directly into the will. A will becomes an accessible document in the public registry once the succession process opens -- exactly the wrong place for a private key. The real problem isn't "leaving a record that the Bitcoin exists" (that should go in the will, like any other asset), but separating that record from the actual mechanism for accessing the keys, which needs its own channel: physical redundancy across several safe locations, a multisig setup with a trusted third signer, or a specialized digital inheritance service. The full guide, walking through each technical option, is in progress within this same section.

Diagram with three boxes: Custody (where do you keep the keys?), Inheritance (who can access it if you can't?), and Taxes (what do you have to declare?), connected by a line, representing three independent decisions
Original diagram: three practical decisions, independent of each other and of the market cycle.

Taxes: what the tax authorities already know about your Bitcoin

Bitcoin isn't invisible to tax authorities in Spain. It's part of your estate for all purposes: gains from selling it are taxable, and above certain thresholds there's an obligation to declare holdings abroad (Modelo 721). None of these obligations disappear by not looking. The dedicated tax guide, still in preparation, will cover what to declare and when -- with the extra care that any figure someone might use for their own filing demands.

What you won't find in these guides

None of this is personalized legal, tax, or financial advice. What you'll find is a map of the problem and the real options that exist -- whatever you decide to do about your specific case needs a real notary, lawyer, or tax advisor, not an article. We'd rather be clear about this limit than sound more useful than we are.

Before deciding how to protect, pass on, or declare your Bitcoin, it helps to know exactly what's in your addresses. You can analyze any of yours with the address analyzer.

Last updated: 2026-07-15