How to Apply for the Spain Digital Nomad Visa in 2026 (Step-by-Step)
A complete 2026 walkthrough of the Spain Digital Nomad Visa — SMI 200% income proof (€2,762/mo), consulate vs UGE in-country route, TIE biometrics, Beckham Law election within 6 months, and bilateral social security exemptions for US/UK/JP applicants.
Spain's Digital Nomad Visa, introduced under the Startups Law (Law 28/2022) in early 2023, has become one of the most popular European nomad visas. The combination of a 3-year initial permit (UGE route), eligibility for the Beckham Law flat tax regime, and Spain's overall cost of living and lifestyle has drawn applicants from across the US, UK, Latin America, and Asia.
But the process is also one of the most paperwork-heavy nomad visas in Europe. This guide walks through every step for 2026, with emphasis on the three areas that trip applicants up most: document apostille and sworn translation, the 6-month Beckham Law election window, and bilateral social security exemptions that can save US/UK/Japanese applicants ~30% of their gross income.
This is not legal or tax advice. Spanish immigration and tax rules change frequently — always verify with the Ministerio de Inclusión, Seguridad Social y Migraciones and the Agencia Tributaria before applying. For complex situations (US-Spain dual filing, dependents, prior Spanish residency), engage a Spanish immigration attorney and a tax advisor.
Quick eligibility check
| Requirement | Threshold (2026) |
|---|---|
| Citizenship | Non-EU/EEA/Swiss |
| Income (single applicant) | ≥ 200% of SMI (~€2,762/month, €33,144/year) |
| First dependent | +75% of SMI (~€1,036/mo) |
| Each additional dependent | +25% of SMI (~€345/mo) |
| Remote work history | ≥ 12 months with the same client(s) or employer |
| Spanish-source income | ≤ 20% of total (self-employed only); 0% for W-2 employees |
| Criminal background | Clean record in any country where you lived in the last 5 years |
| Health insurance | Private Spain-valid policy with no copays |
| Education | University degree OR ≥ 3 years professional experience |
Route comparison: consulate vs UGE
| Aspect | Consulate (D-visa) | UGE (in-country) |
|---|---|---|
| Where you apply | Spanish consulate abroad | Mercurio portal (inside Spain) |
| Where you must be | Home country | Spain on Schengen tourist stamp |
| Initial permit length | 1 year (then renew to 3) | 3 years immediately |
| Published SLA | 4–8 weeks (varies) | 20 business days |
| Best for | Applicants who can't pre-visit Spain | Applicants who can spend 2–3 months in Spain during application |
For most digital nomads with travel flexibility, UGE is the better route. The 3-year initial permit (vs 1-year + renewal) and the faster published SLA both materially reduce friction. The only catch: you must enter Spain before your tourist stamp expires and apply while still in status.
Document checklist (every single one)
Required for all applicants
- Valid passport (6+ months remaining beyond intended stay)
- 2 recent passport photos (32×26mm, white background — Spanish standard)
- EX-00 form (downloadable from the Ministerio website)
- Modelo 790-038 fee payment receipt (~€73)
- Proof of remote work: employment contract OR autónomo registration (≥12 months old)
- Proof of income (3 months of bank statements + payslips OR invoices)
- University degree or documented 3+ years of professional experience in the relevant field
- Criminal background check from every country you lived in the last 5 years
- Private health insurance certificate (Spain-valid, no copays)
- Cover letter explaining your remote work arrangement
Required for dependents
- Marriage certificate (apostilled + sworn-translated)
- Birth certificates for children (apostilled + sworn-translated)
- Additional income proof per dependent (see thresholds above)
- Dependent health insurance coverage
Apostille requirement
Every foreign-issued document must be apostilled under the Hague Apostille Convention. For US applicants, this typically means:
- FBI background check: order via an FBI-approved channeler, pay extra for ~5-7 business day expedite, then submit the result to the US Department of State Office of Authentications for apostille (current backlog: 3–6 weeks).
- University degree: must be apostilled in the state of issuance (varies — most go through the Secretary of State).
- Marriage/birth certificates: state-level apostille.
US, UK, Japan, Australia, and most EU countries are Hague signatories. If your document is from a non-Hague country, you need legalization through the Spanish embassy instead — slower and more expensive.
Sworn translation (traductor jurado)
Every non-Spanish document must be translated by a sworn translator certified by Spain's Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MAEC). Spain maintains a public registry — search "traductor jurado MAEC" plus your source language. Costs run €30–60 per page; expect 1–2 weeks turnaround.
Common mistake: Using a US "certified translator" (ATA member) or a generic translation service. These will be rejected. The translator must be on MAEC's list.
Step-by-step application
1. Pre-flight: confirm income math
Run your last 3 months of income through the 200% SMI test:
- Single applicant: ~€2,762/month average minimum
-
- Spouse: ~€3,798/month
-
- Spouse + 1 child: ~€4,143/month
Spain's SMI is updated annually (typically in January). If you're applying in late 2025/early 2026, double-check the current SMI — the 2026 figure cited here assumes the standard annual ~3–4% increase. The official figure is published at the Ministerio de Trabajo website.
2. Gather and apostille all documents (4–8 weeks)
This is the longest single-phase blocker. Start with the FBI background check (US) or equivalent — it has the longest turnaround. Apostilles for US documents at the State Department are running 3–6 weeks as of early 2026.
3. Get sworn translations (1–2 weeks)
Send all apostilled documents to a MAEC-listed sworn translator. Many work remotely and deliver PDF + physical originals by post.
4. Buy compliant health insurance
You need a Spain-valid policy with:
- No copays for in-network care
- No waiting periods
- Coverage equivalent to Spain's public system (Seguridad Social)
- Coverage for the full duration of your residence
International nomad insurance from SafetyWing or similar generally works if it explicitly meets these criteria. Local providers (Sanitas, Adeslas, Cigna España) often have DNV-specific products.
5. File the EX-00 (UGE) or D-visa application (consulate)
UGE route: Create an account on the Mercurio portal, upload all documents as PDFs, pay the Modelo 790-038 fee, submit. You'll receive an acknowledgment with a file reference.
Consulate route: Book an appointment with your nearest Spanish consulate. Bring all documents in person plus 2 passport photos. The consulate forwards your file to Madrid.
6. Wait for adjudication
- UGE: Published SLA is 20 business days. Spain operates under a "positive administrative silence" rule — if no response by day 20, your application is technically approved by default, though in practice most decisions are explicit.
- Consulate: 4–8 weeks typical, varies by jurisdiction.
If denied, you have 1 month to file an administrative appeal (recurso de reposición) or 2 months for judicial review.
7. (UGE only) Stay in Spain through TIE biometrics
If you applied via UGE, your tourist Schengen stamp is your only legal status until you receive your TIE. Do not leave Spain between application submission and TIE biometric appointment unless absolutely necessary — your re-entry could be complicated.
8. Empadronamiento (local address registration)
Before your TIE appointment, register your address at the local town hall (ayuntamiento). You'll need a rental contract or property deed, your passport, and the approval letter. Empadronamiento is free and same-day in most municipalities (Madrid and Barcelona may require an appointment).
9. TIE biometric appointment
Book via cita previa at your local Extranjería office. Bring:
- Passport + photocopy
- Approval letter
- EX-17 form
- Modelo 790-012 fee receipt (~€16)
- Biometric photos
- Empadronamiento certificate
The TIE card itself arrives 30–45 days after biometrics. Madrid and Barcelona have the longest waits — book the moment your approval lands.
10. Register with Social Security (autónomos only)
Self-employed applicants must register with the Régimen Especial de Trabajadores Autónomos (RETA) at the Tesorería General de la Seguridad Social. Critical: if you have a bilateral social security agreement with your home country, file your Certificate of Coverage here (Form CON-19 for US, A1 for EU/EEA, JP-Spain agreement equivalent). This exempts you from RETA contributions for up to 5 years — saving roughly €350–500/month for typical applicants.
The Beckham Law election — your most important tax decision
Within 6 months of registering with Social Security (or starting employment if employee-route), you can elect the special expat tax regime under Article 93 of the IRPF law, popularly called the "Beckham Law":
- Flat 24% on Spanish-source income up to €600,000 (47% above)
- Foreign-source income generally not taxed in Spain (with exceptions for some passive income)
- Valid for up to 6 years (the year of arrival + 5 subsequent)
The election is made by filing Modelo 149 with the Agencia Tributaria. You cannot retroactively elect — miss the 6-month window and you're locked into standard progressive IRPF rates (19–47%) for the duration of your residence.
For most DNV applicants with foreign income ≥€60k, Beckham Law is the right call. For lower incomes or applicants with significant Spanish-source business, the math can flip — run the comparison with a tax advisor. See our Portugal D8 vs Spain DNV comparison for a worked example at €80k/year.
Bilateral social security exemptions — the overlooked ~30% savings
The DNV process focuses heavily on immigration paperwork and Beckham Law election, but social security contributions are typically a larger cost than income tax for autónomos. Spain's monthly base contribution runs ~€300–500/month, and rises with declared income.
If you're a citizen of a country with a totalization agreement with Spain, you can request a Certificate of Coverage from your home country's social security agency, exempting you from Spanish contributions for up to 5 years:
| Country | Form | Issued by |
|---|---|---|
| United States | Form CON-19 (USA/Spain) | SSA International Operations |
| Japan | 適用証明書 (Spain-JP agreement, in force since 2010) | 日本年金機構 |
| United Kingdom | A1 (post-Brexit version under UK-Spain bilateral agreement) | HMRC |
| EEA countries | A1 | Home country social security |
| Canada, South Korea, others | Equivalent COC | Home country agency |
Get this before you register with RETA. The certificate must cover the entire period from your DNV start date.
Best cities for new DNV holders
- Madrid — strongest job market, best transport, most expensive
- Barcelona — coastal lifestyle, larger nomad community
- Valencia — best cost/lifestyle balance, growing nomad scene
- Málaga — winter destination, growing tech scene
Related tools and reading
- Run the Schengen 90/180 calculator before any pre-application visit
- Check the Tax Residency Tracker if you'll split time between Spain and another country
- How to use the Schengen calculator — step-by-step
- How to calculate tax residency — 183-day rule explained
- What is a Digital Nomad Visa in 2026 — cornerstone overview
- Schengen 90/180 in practice — for pre-application visits
Get your Spain-valid insurance before applying
Spain requires proof of compliant health insurance with your application. SafetyWing's Remote Health product meets the no-copay, no-waiting-period requirements for DNV applicants. Compare your options before locking in coverage:
Compare SafetyWing Remote Health for Spain →
Common rejections and how to avoid them
| Reason for denial | How to prevent |
|---|---|
| Untranslated or non-sworn translation | Use only MAEC-listed traductores jurados |
| Missing apostille | Apostille every foreign document, no exceptions |
| Income proof under 12 months | Wait until you have 12 full months of contracts/invoices |
| Spanish-source income >20% (autónomo) | Reduce Spanish clients, or restructure before applying |
| Inadequate health insurance | Confirm policy explicitly meets DNV criteria with the insurer |
| Criminal record (any country, last 5 yrs) | Disclose proactively; minor issues often forgivable |
Last updated: 2026-05-17. Spanish SMI, IRPF rates, and DNV regulations are subject to annual updates. Verify all thresholds with the Ministerio de Inclusión and Agencia Tributaria before filing. This article is editorial, not legal or tax advice. For complex situations, engage a licensed Spanish immigration attorney and a qualified tax advisor.