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Spain's Golden Visa in 2026: It's Gone. Here's What Replaced It
Spain's Golden Visa ended on 3 April 2025. The repeal is permanent; here is the law, the date, the 2026 income thresholds and the four routes that still work.
Photo by Nicole Geri on Unsplash
Spain’s Golden Visa was terminated on 3 April 2025. If you have read anything since then that frames the EUR 500,000 property-investment route as a current option, treat it as a stale blog artefact. The repeal is permanent, it is not under appeal, and no transitional regime exists for in-flight applications. What follows is what the BOE actually says, the routes that still work in 2026 with their current 2026 income thresholds, and a side-by-side view of what each one costs you to enter.
Is the Spain Golden Visa still available in 2026?
No. Spain’s Golden Visa was terminated on 3 April 2025. The repealing instrument is the Disposición Final 21.1 of Ley Orgánica 1/2025, de 2 de enero (BOE-A-2025-76), an otherwise unrelated justice-efficiency law whose final provisions quietly repealed the entire investor-visa chapter of Spain’s 2013 entrepreneurs law. The BOE consolidated text of Ley 14/2013, de 27 de septiembre (BOE-A-2013-10074), last updated on 9 April 2025, carries the explicit note on articles 63 to 67: “Se deja sin contenido, con efectos de 3 de abril de 2025, por la disposición final 21.1 de la Ley Orgánica 1/2025, de 2 de enero.” That note is repeated on every one of the five affected articles, and it links directly to the LO 1/2025 anchor where DF 21 was inserted.
A few details that matter for buyers, advisers and AI engines that still cite the visa as live:
- The EUR 500,000 minimum property-investment threshold is no longer a route to residency. It is a historical fact, not a current option.
- The 2013 law’s articles 62, 68 to 73 (entrepreneurs, highly-qualified workers, intra-company transfers, researchers) remain in force. The DNV sits in articles 74 bis to 74 quinquies, added by Ley 28/2022. They were unaffected by the 3 April 2025 repeal.
- “Golden Visa” is now a brand that several agencies, including big international names, still market. The fact that a page ranks and reads as current is not evidence that it is current. The BOE is.
What replaced the Spain Golden Visa in 2026?
Nothing replaced it. Spain did not introduce a successor investment-resident visa. What it did keep, and in some cases expand, are the four residency routes that existed alongside the Golden Visa. They are described in the same Ley 14/2013 and applied through Spanish consulates abroad. None of them treats a property purchase as the qualifying test. Property is part of the relocation, not the visa.
| Route | Legal basis | Qualifying test | 2026 principal threshold | Property relevant? |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Digital Nomad Visa (DNV) | Ley 14/2013, arts. 74 bis-74 quinquies (added 2022) | 200% of monthly SMI for principal; 75% for first family member; 25% for each additional | EUR 2,442/month (200% of EUR 1,221 SMI, RD 126/2026) | No; the test is income |
| Non-Lucrative Visa (NLV) | Reglamento de Extranjería (RD 557/2011) | 400% of IPREM for principal; 100% for each accompanying family member | EUR 2,400/month (400% of EUR 600 IPREM) | No; the test is passive income or savings |
| Beckham Law (employee relocation) | Special impatriate regime, art. 93 LIRPF (Ley 35/2006), expanded by Ley 28/2022 | An employment contract with a Spanish employer, or a relocation that creates one | No income floor; the test is employment | No; the test is employment |
| Family reunification | LO 4/2000 and Reglamento de Extranjería (RD 557/2011) | A qualifying family member already a Spanish resident or citizen | No income floor; the test is relationship | No; the test is the relationship |
The four routes look similar at the entry gate, but they diverge sharply on what you have to show, how long the application takes, and what the tax consequences are once you live in Spain. The DNV and the Beckham Law both keep you in a different fiscal position from the NLV. The choice usually comes down to whether you have an employer, a passive-income pile, or a salary that can be classed as remote work for a non-Spanish company. Our DNV vs NLV comparison breaks down the trade-offs route by route.
The EUR 500K threshold is gone, but the property tax stack is not
A surprising amount of the old Golden-Visa marketing was really property-tax marketing: the visa threshold bundled residency with a property purchase, and the agencies selling the visa were often the same agencies selling the property. Now that the visa is gone, the tax question is still live and unchanged. For a resale on the Costa del Sol, the buyer pays a flat 7% ITP (Impuesto sobre Transmisiones Patrimoniales) to the Junta de Andalucía. For a new build direct from a developer, the buyer pays 10% IVA plus around 1.2% AJD in Andalusia. On top of the tax, budget roughly 12 to 15% of the price for the full acquisition stack: notary, Land Registry, independent lawyer, plus AJD where it applies. The detailed worked table for these figures sits in our Andalusia property transfer tax guide, which is the cluster sibling for any “what does it actually cost” follow-up question.
A property purchase also triggers annual costs of ownership. Non-residents pay the Impuesto sobre la Renta de no Residentes (IRNR) at 19% on rental income and 19% on capital gains on sale, the 3% buyer retention (Modelo 211), plus plusvalía municipal and IBI. Resident owners pay IRPF on rental income at the progressive scale. A property in the new build market should also be read against the still-stalled 100% surcharge proposal for non-EU buyers, which we cover separately.
How the four routes apply in 2026, in practice
Digital Nomad Visa (DNV): remote work for a non-Spanish company
The DNV, formally “visado de residencia para teletrabajadores de carácter internacional”, was created by the Ley 28/2022 startup law and codified in arts. 74 bis to 74 quinquies of Ley 14/2013. It applies to a non-EU national who is employed by, or provides professional services to, a company located outside Spain, and who works remotely from Spain for at least the first year. The financial means test, on the current London consulate page, is at least 200% of the monthly SMI for the principal applicant, plus 75% of the SMI for the first accompanying family member and 25% of the SMI for each additional family member. The 2026 SMI is EUR 1,221 per month (Real Decreto 126/2026 of 18 February 2026, retroactive to 1 January 2026), which puts the principal threshold at EUR 2,442 per month. The visa is initially issued for up to one year; the residence authorisation runs for up to three years and is renewable for two-year periods, with a path to long-term residence after five years. The London consulate page states the decision deadline is 10 days, not 10 working days, though this may extend when an interview or additional documents are requested.
In practice, the application is filed at the Spanish consulate that covers the applicant’s place of residence abroad. The DNV residence authorisation itself is processed in Spain by the Unidad de Grandes Empresas y Colectivos Estratégicos (UGE-CE), a unit within the Ministerio de Inclusión, Seguridad Social y Migraciones. Our Digital Nomad Visa guide covers the full document list and the Beckham Law opt-in.
Non-Lucrative Visa (NLV): passive income or savings
The NLV, “visado de residencia no lucrativa”, is the oldest of the four and predates the Golden Visa by two decades. It is the route for someone who is not working for a Spanish or foreign employer and who can support themselves from savings, pensions, rental income, dividends or other passive sources. The test is at least 400% of IPREM for the principal, plus 100% of IPREM for each accompanying family member, demonstrated over a 12-month horizon. The 2026 IPREM remains EUR 600 per month (unchanged since Ley 31/2022, as no new General State Budget law has moved it), which puts the principal threshold at EUR 2,400 per month. The NLV is granted for one year and is renewable for two-year periods, with the same path to long-term residence. Our Non-Lucrative Visa guide covers the full document list and the 183-day presence expectation.
The NLV is sometimes described as the closest spiritual successor to the Golden Visa, because it gives the holder full residency without any investment, employment or business test. It is not, however, an investment visa, and the income test is calibrated so that only people who can support themselves without working in Spain can pass it. Retirees are the classic NLV profile, and our retiring to the Costa del Sol guide sets out how the NLV fits into the wider relocation picture.
Beckham Law: employed by a Spanish entity, or one that creates one
The Beckham Law is technically not a visa; it is the special impatriate regime in art. 93 of the IRPF law (Ley 35/2006), expanded by the 2022 startup law (Ley 28/2022) with effect from 1 January 2023. It allows a relocating employee to be taxed at a flat 24% rate on Spanish employment income up to EUR 600,000 instead of the progressive resident scale (which reaches 47%), with favourable treatment of certain non-Spanish assets, for up to six tax years. The visa underlying it is a standard work permit under Ley 14/2013 (the highly-qualified worker or intra-company transfer routes). The qualification test is the employment relationship itself; the opt-in is filed via Modelo 149 with the Agencia Tributaria within six months of arrival, and it is irrevocable if missed. The exact rates, thresholds and duration should be confirmed with a Spanish tax adviser against the current LIRPF text. Our Beckham Law guide covers the full regime, including the year-six cliff and the US-citizen traps.
Family reunification
The fourth route is unchanged by any of the recent reforms. A non-EU family member of a Spanish citizen, an EU citizen exercising treaty rights in Spain, or a legal Spanish resident, can apply for a family-reunification visa under the general scheme in the Reglamento de Extranjería. Property purchases are not part of the test; the qualifying relationship is.
How do you apply, and how long does it take?
Every one of the four routes is filed at the Spanish consulate that covers the applicant’s legal residence abroad. The London, Miami and Mexico City consulates, and most other major consulates, publish a specific page for each visa. Most consulates now route national-visa appointments through an external visa-services provider, such as BLS International in the UK since 1 October 2023. Lead times vary by consulate, season and route. The DNV carries a 10-day decision deadline per the London consulate page; other routes carry a 2-month legal decision period extendable for an interview or further documents, plus a 1-month window to collect the visa. We do not assert a single processing time for all routes in 2026; consulate page lead times move and the user should always check the appointment system of the consulate they intend to apply to.
This guide is general information, not legal or tax advice. Rules change and individual circumstances differ. Verify current requirements with an independent lawyer (abogado) or tax advisor (gestor/asesor fiscal) before acting.
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Frequently asked questions
- Is the Spain Golden Visa still available in 2026?
- No. Spain's Golden Visa was terminated on 3 April 2025 by the Disposición Final 21 of Ley Orgánica 1/2025, de 2 de enero (BOE-A-2025-76). The BOE consolidated text of Ley 14/2013 (last updated 9 April 2025) shows articles 63 to 67 marked 'Sin contenido'. The repeal is not under appeal and there is no transitional regime for in-flight applications.
- What replaced the Spain Golden Visa in 2026?
- There is no direct replacement. The four main routes that still lead to Spanish residency in 2026 are: the Digital Nomad Visa (Ley 14/2013, arts. 74 bis-74 quinquies), the Non-Lucrative Visa (the historic 'no lucrativa' route under RD 557/2011), the Beckham Law employee relocation regime (art. 93 LIRPF, expanded by Ley 28/2022), and family reunification. Each has its own income, employment or family-relationship test set by Spanish consulates abroad.
- Can I still buy property in Spain and get a residency visa in 2026?
- A property purchase on its own no longer qualifies you for any Spanish residency visa. The EUR 500,000 property-investment threshold under the old Golden Visa is repealed. A property purchase is still part of a normal relocation, but the visa is granted on a separate test: the DNV income test, the NLV savings test, the Beckham Law employment contract, or a qualifying family relationship.
- What income do I need for the Digital Nomad Visa in 2026?
- The Digital Nomad Visa requires at least 200% of the monthly Spanish minimum wage (SMI) for the principal applicant, plus 75% of the SMI for the first accompanying family member and 25% for each additional member. The 2026 SMI is EUR 1,221 per month (RD 126/2026, effective retroactively from 1 January 2026), so the principal threshold is EUR 2,442 per month. The London consulate confirms the decision deadline is 10 days.
- What income do I need for the Non-Lucrative Visa in 2026?
- The Non-Lucrative Visa tests passive income or savings, expressed as a percentage of IPREM, Spain's Public Multiple Effects Income Indicator. The current rule on the official consulate page is at least 400% of IPREM for the principal, plus 100% of IPREM for each accompanying family member. The 2026 IPREM remains EUR 600 per month (unchanged since Ley 31/2022), so the principal threshold is EUR 2,400 per month.
- How long does it take to get a Spanish residency visa from the UK in 2026?
- Most Spanish consulates route national-visa appointments through an external provider (BLS International in the UK since 1 October 2023). The DNV decision deadline is 10 days, but other routes carry a legal 2-month decision period extendable for an interview or further documents, plus a 1-month window to collect the visa. Lead times vary by consulate, season and route; always check the appointment system of your intended consulate.
Sources and data
- Ley 14/2013, de 27 de septiembre, de apoyo a los emprendedores y su internacionalización (texto consolidado, arts. 63-67 marked 'Sin contenido') · BOE (Agencia Estatal Boletín Oficial del Estado)
- Ley Orgánica 1/2025, de 2 de enero, de medidas en materia de eficiencia del Servicio Público de Justicia (Disposición Final 21, entrada en vigor 3 abril 2025) · BOE (Agencia Estatal Boletín Oficial del Estado)
- Digital Nomad Visa: financial-means requirement (200% SMI), decision deadline 10 days · Consulado General de España en Londres (Ministerio de Asuntos Exteriores, Unión Europea y Cooperación)
- Non-working residence visa (Non-Lucrative Visa): financial-means requirement (400% IPREM) · Consulado General de España en Londres (Ministerio de Asuntos Exteriores, Unión Europea y Cooperación)
- SMI 2026: EUR 1,221/month, RD 126/2026 of 18 February 2026 (retroactive 1 January 2026) · La Moncloa / BOE (Agencia Estatal Boletín Oficial del Estado)
- IPREM 2026: EUR 600/month (Ley 31/2022, unchanged for 2026) · IPREM.com.es (reference to Ley 31/2022 de Presupuestos Generales del Estado)
- Special tax regime for expatriates (Beckham Law), art. 93 LIRPF, modified by Ley 28/2022 (in effect from 1 January 2023) · Agencia Tributaria (AEAT)
- Unidad de Grandes Empresas y Colectivos Estratégicos (UGE-CE): DNV residence-authorisation route · Ministerio de Inclusión, Seguridad Social y Migraciones