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EuropeResidency

Spain

EU residency in two to three months through a passive-income or remote-work route, the Beckham Law flat 24% tax regime for working movers, and a lifestyle most countries spend decades trying to copy.

Population
48 million
Language
Spanish (English in business hubs)
Currency
Euro (€)
Time zone
CET / CEST (UTC+1 / UTC+2)
Capital
Madrid
GDP per capita
~US$33K
  1. The lifestyle reference standard

    Long lunches, late dinners, walkable cities, civic safety, public infrastructure, healthcare, and the geographic position to make a weekend in Paris or Lisbon routine. Spain consistently lands in the top ten of global quality-of-life indices for reasons that hold up on month six.

  2. Two practical routes for two profiles

    The Non-Lucrative Visa for retirees and passive-income holders who agree not to work in Spain. The Digital Nomad Visa for remote workers and contractors with foreign-source active income. Both feed the same naturalization clock and unlock the same Schengen mobility from day one.

  3. The Beckham Law tax regime

    Digital Nomad Visa holders who shift Spanish tax residency can elect the Beckham Law regime: a flat 24% rate on Spanish-source income up to €600K and no Spanish tax on foreign-source income for up to six years. For Americans with US-based earnings, this turns Spain from a high-tax country into one of the most efficient European bases.

  4. World-class healthcare

    Spain's universal health service ranks consistently in the global top ten. Most American expats hold the public coverage as residents plus a private top-up for faster specialist access, at premiums that are a fraction of US private-insurance costs.

  5. An established American community

    Madrid, Barcelona, Valencia, Málaga, and Marbella each host substantial American expat communities. International schools, English-speaking healthcare, bilingual legal services, and visa-savvy attorney networks all exist. You arrive into established infrastructure.

  6. Cost-of-living delta outside the capital

    Central Madrid and Barcelona run at western-European prices. Valencia, Seville, Málaga, Bilbao, and most of provincial Spain run 30-50% below US coastal-city benchmarks for equivalent quality of life. The cost story works in the regions, with the capital used for periodic visits.

Programs

Two routes into Spain

Each route below is a live client engagement we have advised. Figures and timelines reflect the current state of each program; we update them whenever policy moves.

  • Non-Lucrative Visa

    Residency

    Long-running residency for retirees and passive-income holders who agree not to work in Spain. One-year initial visa renewable in two-year increments; permanent residency at year five. No purchase required, with the financial threshold scaling modestly for additional dependents.

    Financial requirement
    €30K/yr savings or income
    Timeline
    2 to 3 months
  • Digital Nomad Visa

    Residency

    Launched in 2023 for remote workers and contractors with foreign-source employment or contract income. One-year visa renewable up to five years and convertible to permanent residency. Eligible for the Beckham Law flat 24% regime on Spanish-source income for up to six years.

    Financial requirement
    €2.8K/mo active income
    Timeline
    2 to 3 months
  • Spain editorial photograph

Several routes, several ideal profiles. Which is right for you? The Freedom Consult is where we figure out your ideal path forward – and whether Spain is even the right country.

A taste of Spain

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What happened to the Golden Visa?

Spain abolished its Golden Visa program in April 2025, ending the property-investment route to residency that had operated since 2013. Existing holders retain their status; new applications are no longer accepted. The two remaining structured residency routes for Americans are the Non-Lucrative Visa and the Digital Nomad Visa.

How does the Beckham Law regime work?

The Beckham Law (Special Tax Regime for Inbound Workers) allows new Spanish tax residents who relocate for work to elect a flat 24% rate on Spanish-source employment income up to €600K, with no Spanish tax on foreign-source income, for up to six years. It is available primarily to Digital Nomad Visa holders and to those moving for a Spanish employment contract. Retirees on the Non-Lucrative Visa typically do not qualify since the regime requires demonstrable work activity. We coordinate with US-licensed counsel on the election.

How long until I can hold a Spanish passport?

Ten years of legal residency for most Americans. Spain reduces the clock to two years for nationals of Latin American countries, Andorra, Portugal, the Philippines, Equatorial Guinea, France, and for Sephardic Jews; US citizens do not qualify for the accelerated track. The application requires a B1-level Spanish exam and a Spanish-culture exam.

Do I have to give up my US citizenship for Spanish naturalization?

Spain technically requires renunciation of prior citizenship for naturalizing US citizens, but the United States does not recognize foreign declarations of renunciation as binding on US citizenship. In practice, Americans who naturalize as Spanish citizens retain both passports. The legal nuance is real; we coordinate with US and Spanish counsel together so the position is mapped properly.

Do I have to learn Spanish?

Daily life in central Madrid, Barcelona, Valencia, and the major expat zones runs comfortably in English at most professional and service contexts. Outside those zones, Spanish becomes essential. The naturalization application requires a B1-level Spanish-language exam, which most clients build through immersion plus formal tutoring during the ten-year residency window.

What happens to my US taxes once I move?

The United States taxes citizens on worldwide income regardless of residency. Outside the Beckham Law regime, Spain taxes residents on worldwide income at progressive rates topping at 47%. The US-Spain tax treaty mechanics, properly structured, prevent double taxation in most cases. The interaction is technical; we coordinate with US-licensed counsel.

Can my family come with me?

Yes. Spouses or registered partners, dependent children, and dependent parents qualify under a single application. Each family member receives the same residency rights and the same ten-year clock to citizenship. The income threshold scales modestly for additional dependents.

How life compares

Eight factors, against the US baseline

The dimensions that decide whether a place is workable once the visa lands.

English

Strong in business and tourism

Central Madrid, Barcelona, the Mediterranean coast, and the major business districts run comfortably in English at most professional contexts. Outside those zones, Spanish becomes essential. Regional languages (Catalan, Basque, Galician) layer in their respective regions.

Cost of living

Central capital expensive, regions reasonable

Central Madrid and Barcelona run at western-European prices. Valencia, Seville, Málaga, Bilbao, and most of provincial Spain run 30-50% below US coastal-city benchmarks for equivalent quality of life.

Taxes

Beckham Law where it applies

Outside the regime, progressive resident rates top at 47%. Beckham Law delivers a flat 24% on Spanish-source income (up to €600K) and no Spanish tax on foreign-source income for up to six years, primarily for Digital Nomad Visa holders. US worldwide-income filing continues regardless.

Quality of life

Consistently top-tier globally

Spain ranks in the global top ten on quality-of-life indices. The food, healthcare, civic life, public infrastructure, climate, and cultural depth combine to deliver an outcome most countries spend decades trying to imitate.

Safety

Among Europe's safer

Low violent-crime rates across the country. Petty theft is the urban-tourist standard concern in central Madrid and Barcelona. Residential and provincial areas are statistically safer than most US small cities.

Travel connectivity

Excellent across Europe and the Americas

Madrid-Barajas is a major European hub with daily direct service to most European, North American, and Latin American capitals. Barcelona-El Prat similarly. High-speed rail connects most of Spain in three hours or less.

Infrastructure

EU-standard across the board

Reliable utilities and internet across the country. The AVE high-speed rail network is among the world's best. Healthcare and education infrastructure consistently rank well globally.

Healthcare

Top-ten by WHO

Universal public coverage available to legal residents; most expats add private complementary insurance for faster specialist access. Spanish medical training and outcomes consistently rank among the world's best.

The Spain briefing

The facts, programs, and comparison

A four-page PDF covering everything on this page plus the comparison framework we use internally. Delivered to your inbox, and the next briefing every week.

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