Spain’s long-standing investor residence programme widely known as the “Golden Visa” is no longer available for property-based applicants. Organic Law 1/2025, which entered into force on 3 April 2025, removed real-estate investment as a qualifying pathway to residence. For affluent investors, retirees, remote professionals and founders who had been planning a move to Spain, the question is now straightforward: which Spain residency options remain viable, and how do they compare? This guide provides a definitive, government-sourced answer.
Three principal routes have emerged as the most practical alternatives for non-EU nationals: the Non‑Lucrative Visa, designed for those with sufficient passive income who do not intend to work locally; the Digital‑Nomad (Telework) Visa, created under Spain’s start-up ecosystem legislation and managed via the PRIE portal; and the Entrepreneur / Start‑up Visa, which offers a fast-track pathway for founders bringing innovative projects to Spain.
This page is written for high-net-worth individuals, their families and their professional advisors. It covers the legislative change in detail, sets out step-by-step application processes, provides side-by-side eligibility comparisons, and addresses critical tax-residency implications all grounded in primary Spanish government sources.
Spain introduced its investor residence programme in 2013 under Law 14/2013. The scheme permitted non-EU nationals to obtain residence by acquiring real estate valued at €500,000 or more. Organic Law 1/2025, of 2 January, amended the framework and effectively abolished the property-investment route. The law entered into force on 3 April 2025, giving applicants a three-month transition window from publication. After that date, no new applications for residence based solely on real-estate investment are accepted.
Existing Golden Visa holders are not immediately affected: those who obtained their permits before the cut-off may apply for renewals under the conditions that applied at the time of their original grant, subject to any transitional provisions set out in the law and any guidance published by the PRIE. Industry observers expect administrative clarifications to continue through 2026 as legacy cases work through the renewal cycle.
Crucially, the closure does not eliminate every investor-oriented route. The entrepreneur, start-up and telework categories administered by the PRIE remain fully operational. Additionally, the Non‑Lucrative Visa which predates the Golden Visa and operates under Spain’s general immigration regulation continues to offer a well-established pathway for individuals who can demonstrate sufficient means without engaging in local employment.
For investors who had planned to acquire Spanish property as a vehicle for residence, the practical effect is clear: property ownership alone no longer secures a visa. Strategic alternatives must now be evaluated on their own merits.
Choosing among the remaining Spain residency options depends on your professional profile, income sources and long-term objectives. The following profiles offer a starting point:
Many applicants find that their circumstances align with more than one route. A founder with significant passive income, for example, might apply under the entrepreneur pathway while keeping the Non‑Lucrative Visa as a fallback. The comparison table and checklists below will help refine that decision.
Regardless of which route you pursue, the following preparatory steps apply. Completing them in advance significantly reduces processing delays.
The Non‑Lucrative Visa application follows the procedure set out by the Ministry of Inclusion, Social Security and Migration. Applicants complete form EX‑01 and file at their nearest Spanish consulate. The consulate forwards the application to the relevant Government Delegation (Subdelegación del Gobierno) in Spain for a decision. Upon approval, the visa is stamped in your passport, and you enter Spain to complete TIE registration.
The telework route is administered through the PRIE teleworker portal. Applicants outside the EU apply at a Spanish consulate with evidence of remote employment or freelance activity for non-Spanish entities, academic credentials or professional experience, and proof of income. The initial visa is typically issued for one year, after which the holder may apply for a three-year residence authorisation renewal.
Aspiring entrepreneurs submit a business plan to the PRIE or the designated evaluation body. The plan is assessed for innovation, scalability, economic contribution and potential job creation. Once the PRIE issues a favourable report, the applicant files for a consular visa. After entry, the entrepreneur registers the business with the Tax Agency (AEAT) and Social Security, and applies for the TIE.
| Criteria | Non‑Lucrative Visa | Digital‑Nomad (Telework) Visa | Entrepreneur / Start‑up Visa |
|---|---|---|---|
| Best suited for | Retirees, HNWIs with passive income | Remote employees, freelancers working for non-Spanish entities | Founders, innovators, start-up investors |
| Main legal basis | General immigration regulation; Ministry of Inclusion guidance | Start-up Law; PRIE teleworker provisions | Start-up Law; PRIE entrepreneur provisions |
| Minimum funds / investment | 400% IPREM (main applicant) + 100% IPREM per dependent | Income thresholds based on remote-work earnings (see PRIE guidance) | Sufficient capital to execute business plan; no fixed statutory minimum |
| Work rights in Spain | No holder may not engage in gainful employment or professional activity in Spain | Yes for the non-Spanish employer/client only (remote work) | Yes within the scope of the approved business activity |
| Initial visa validity | 1 year (renewable for 2-year periods) | 1 year (renewable for up to 3-year authorisation) | 1 year (renewable; linked to business activity) |
| Typical consular decision period | Approximately 1 month (per RD 1155/2024 statutory timelines) | Variable; PRIE pre-assessment + consular processing | Variable; PRIE business-plan evaluation + consular processing |
| Key documents | EX‑01 form, bank certification, health insurance, criminal record, medical certificate | Remote-work contract/evidence, degree or 3+ years’ experience, income proof, health insurance | Business plan, financing proof, CV, health insurance, criminal record |
| Tax / residence implications | If 183+ days in Spain, full tax resident worldwide income taxed | Potential special tax regime for remote workers; 183-day rule applies | Full tax resident if 183+ days; corporate obligations for Spanish entity |
For most passive investors displaced by the Golden Visa closure, the Non‑Lucrative Visa offers the closest functional equivalent: it requires no commercial activity, only proof of means. The digital-nomad route suits a younger or professionally active demographic particularly those employed by US, UK or other non-EU companies and may offer favourable tax treatment during the initial period. The entrepreneur visa, meanwhile, is the natural successor for investors who wish to establish an active commercial presence in Spain, leveraging the country’s EU market access, talent pool and public-sector innovation incentives.
Processing timelines for Spain residence permit routes depend on the specific visa category and the applicant’s consulate. Under Real Decreto 1155/2024, which codifies procedural rules for immigration applications, statutory decision periods for many visa categories are set at approximately one month from the date of a complete filing. In practice, consular workload and documentary completeness can extend or shorten this window.
After visa issuance, applicants typically have 90 days to enter Spain and must apply for their TIE within 30 days of arrival. Renewal applications should be filed within 60 days before and up to 90 days after the expiry of the current authorisation.
Administrative fees: Applicants should budget for the consular visa fee (modelo 790 or equivalent payment, currently in the range of €60–€80 depending on the category and nationality), plus the TIE issuance fee. These are payable directly to the Spanish administration. Check the Ministry of Inclusion and your local consulate for current fee schedules.
Typical professional fees (market ranges): Legal counsel for dossier preparation and filing generally ranges from €2,000–€6,000 depending on complexity and route. Sworn translations typically cost €30–€60 per page. Business-plan preparation for the entrepreneur route may cost €1,500–€4,000 from specialist consultants. Company incorporation fees (notary, registry, initial tax filings) generally fall in the €1,000–€3,000 range. These are indicative market ranges and not firm quotations.
Any discussion of Spain residency options must address the tax consequences of becoming a Spanish resident. Under Spanish law, an individual who spends more than 183 days in a calendar year in Spain or whose “centre of economic interests” is located there is considered tax resident and subject to Spanish personal income tax on worldwide income.
This 183-day threshold applies regardless of the type of visa held. A Non‑Lucrative Visa holder who resides in Spain for more than half the year becomes a full tax resident, even though they may not work locally. Likewise, digital-nomad visa holders may benefit from a special inbound tax regime during the initial years, but they are not exempt from Spanish taxation once they cross the residency threshold.
Wealth tax: Spain levies a wealth tax (Impuesto sobre el Patrimonio) on residents’ worldwide net assets above certain thresholds. Some autonomous communities apply their own rates or partial exemptions. Additionally, a complementary “solidarity tax” on large fortunes may apply at the national level. HNWIs should obtain bespoke tax counsel before establishing residence.
Timing matters: The date of your empadronamiento (municipal registration) and the date of your first entry under the visa can both be relevant in determining when tax residence begins for a given calendar year. Careful planning of entry dates particularly for mid-year arrivals can materially affect your tax exposure in the year of relocation. Interaction with double-tax treaties, exit-tax obligations in your country of origin and the structuring of investment income should all be reviewed before the move.
The following personas illustrate how the three main routes map to real-world investor profiles:
The closure of Spain’s Golden Visa has not shut the door to residency it has redirected it. For high-net-worth individuals, the Non‑Lucrative Visa provides a well-established, straightforward pathway that requires no commercial activity, only verifiable passive income and proper documentation. For professionals whose work transcends borders, the digital-nomad visa offers a modern, flexible framework. And for founders and investors prepared to bring innovation and capital to Spain, the entrepreneur route delivers a structured path to EU market access.
Each of these Spain residency options carries distinct legal requirements, documentary burdens, tax consequences and renewal conditions. The stakes both financial and personal are high, and the regulatory landscape continues to evolve as implementing guidance under Organic Law 1/2025 and Real Decreto 1155/2024 matures. Getting the application right the first time, with proper apostilles, sworn translations, compliant insurance and a credible funds or business-plan dossier, is essential.
Global Law Experts maintains a network of qualified Spanish immigration and tax counsel who specialise in advising international investors navigating this post-Golden-Visa environment. Whether you are a retiree seeking a sun-drenched base, a remote worker planning a Barcelona chapter, or a founder eyeing Madrid as your EU headquarters, a bespoke eligibility assessment is the logical next step.
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