Spain's Beckham Law for Digital Nomads in 2026 — The Complete Tax Guide
A practical guide to Spain's special expat tax regime (Beckham Law) for DNV holders — 24% flat rate, foreign-income exemption, 6-year duration, Modelo 149 election within 6 months, and the math vs standard IRPF for typical remote-worker income levels.
Since Spain's Startups Law (Law 28/2022) extended the special expat tax regime — commonly called the "Beckham Law" — to Digital Nomad Visa holders and certain self-employed applicants, Spain has become the closest current EU equivalent to what Portugal NHR offered before its closure in 2023.
For a remote worker earning €80,000–€200,000 from foreign clients, electing Beckham Law within the 6-month window can mean a Spanish tax bill close to zero for up to 6 years — vs ~30–40% under standard IRPF.
This is the complete 2026 guide: who qualifies, how to elect, what's actually exempt, what's not, and how the math compares with alternative regimes.
This is not tax or legal advice. Spanish tax rules and the implementing regulations of Law 28/2022 continue to be clarified by Agencia Tributaria. Engage a Spanish-licensed tax advisor for your specific situation, especially if you have material foreign passive income, US citizenship, dependents, or pre-existing Spanish ties.
The headline tax structure
For qualifying Beckham Law filers:
| Income category | Spanish tax treatment |
|---|---|
| Spanish-source employment up to €600,000 | 24% flat |
| Spanish-source employment > €600,000 | 47% flat (above threshold) |
| Spanish-source self-employment / business | 24% flat (same thresholds) |
| Foreign-source employment income | Generally exempt |
| Foreign-source self-employment income | Generally exempt |
| Foreign-source dividends | Generally exempt |
| Foreign-source interest | Generally exempt |
| Foreign-source capital gains | Generally exempt (with caveats) |
| Foreign-source income from tax havens | NOT exempt — taxed as Spanish |
| Spanish real estate income / gains | Standard Spanish rules apply |
The "generally exempt" categories require careful analysis case-by-case — Spain's tax treaty network, specific anti-abuse rules under Article 93, and the controlled-foreign-corporation regime all interact with these.
Who qualifies (post-Law 28/2022)
The 2022 reform broadened eligibility significantly. Today, a person qualifies if all of the following are true:
- They have not been Spanish tax resident in the 5 years prior to relocating to Spain (down from 10 years pre-2022)
- They are moving to Spain because of one of:
- An employment contract with a Spanish or foreign employer to work in Spain
- Appointment as a director of a Spanish company (with ownership limits)
- Becoming a Digital Nomad Visa holder (NEW under Law 28/2022)
- Carrying out an entrepreneurial activity certified by ENISA as innovative
- Highly qualified professional working for an innovative startup
- They do not earn income through a permanent establishment in Spain (technical tax concept; pure remote work for a foreign employer is fine)
- They file Modelo 149 within 6 months
For typical nomads, paths 2(c) and 2(d) are the relevant ones.
The 6-month election — Modelo 149
The election is made by filing Modelo 149 with the Agencia Tributaria within 6 months of:
- Registering with Spanish Social Security (self-employed, RETA route), OR
- Starting your Spanish employment (the date in your contract)
You cannot retroactively elect. If you miss the window, you remain on standard progressive IRPF rates for the entire duration of your Spanish residence. There is no "we forgot" remedy.
Practical filing tips
- File as soon as possible after your start date — don't wait. Even if you're still gathering documents, the Modelo 149 itself is short.
- File electronically via the Agencia Tributaria's portal using a digital certificate (Cl@ve PIN works for individuals)
- Keep proof of filing — the system issues a justificante (receipt PDF) with a timestamp and CSV verification code
- If you also need to file Modelo 030 (taxpayer identification), do it first or simultaneously
After approval, Agencia Tributaria issues a resolution confirming Beckham Law status. This usually arrives within 2–3 months. Keep it on file — it's the proof you'll need if questioned in a future audit.
The math — three worked examples
All examples assume single applicant, 2026 rates, no dependents, no Spanish-source income unless noted.
Example A: Pure remote employee, €100k foreign salary
- Spanish-source income: €0
- Foreign employment income: €100,000 (US employer, US payroll)
- Beckham Law liability: €0 (foreign employment income exempt)
- Standard IRPF liability: ~€31,000 (effective ~31%)
- Annual saving: ~€31,000
US citizen note: you still owe US federal tax, but Beckham status means no Spanish tax to offset against US tax. Net total tax = US tax only.
Example B: Freelancer, €120k from mixed clients
- Spanish-source income: €20,000 (Spanish clients, autónomo)
- Foreign-source income: €100,000 (foreign clients, autónomo)
- Beckham Law liability: €20,000 × 24% = €4,800
- Standard IRPF liability: ~€41,000 (effective ~34%)
- Annual saving: ~€36,200
The 20% Spanish-source cap on autónomo DNV income (set by the DNV regulation itself, not Beckham Law) keeps this scenario realistic.
Example C: Director, €700k salary
- Spanish-source employment: €700,000
- Beckham Law liability: (€600,000 × 24%) + (€100,000 × 47%) = €144,000 + €47,000 = €191,000 (27.3% effective)
- Standard IRPF liability: ~€321,000 (45.9% effective, top marginal 47% + state surcharges)
- Annual saving: ~€130,000
Beckham wins for high earners, but the 47% bracket above €600k is brutal compared with regimes that have no income cap.
What Beckham Law does NOT do
Important to understand the limits:
- Doesn't reduce social security contributions. Spanish RETA for autónomos runs €300–500/mo and rises with income. Get a bilateral Certificate of Coverage from your home country (US Form CON-19, UK A1, JP equivalent) if you qualify — this can exempt you from RETA for 5 years.
- Doesn't apply to wealth tax (Impuesto sobre el Patrimonio). You become a Spanish wealth-tax resident regardless of Beckham status. However, Beckham filers are taxed on Spanish-situs assets only, not worldwide — a significant benefit if you have material non-Spanish assets.
- Doesn't apply to the Solidarity Wealth Tax (Impuesto Temporal de Solidaridad de las Grandes Fortunas) the same way. Recent court decisions have created nuances here; check the latest with your advisor if you have ≥€3M in assets.
- Doesn't shield you from CFC rules. If you control a non-Spanish company, Spain's CFC regime may attribute income to you even during Beckham status. The exact treatment depends on whether the foreign entity is in a Spanish tax-treaty country.
- Doesn't allow foreign tax credits against Spanish-source income during the regime. If you face US tax on Spanish-source business income, double taxation is possible. This rarely matters for pure remote workers but can matter for directors and entrepreneurs.
Bilateral social security — the often-overlooked saving
Beckham Law gets all the attention, but for autónomos the Spanish social security exemption via bilateral agreements is often a larger saving:
| Country | Form | Issuing agency |
|---|---|---|
| United States | Form CON-19 (Spain-US Social Security Agreement) | SSA International Operations |
| United Kingdom | A1 (post-Brexit version under UK-Spain bilateral agreement) | HMRC |
| Japan | 適用証明書 (Spain-JP agreement, in force since 2010) | 日本年金機構 |
| EU/EEA | A1 | Home country social security |
| Canada, South Korea, Argentina, etc. | Equivalent COC | Home agency |
Get the certificate before your first RETA registration. It must cover your entire intended residence period (up to 5 years initial, renewable depending on the agreement).
Annual saving for a typical €100k autónomo: €4,000–€6,000 in Spanish social security contributions.
Combined cost: Beckham + bilateral social security
For a €100k pure remote autónomo (foreign clients only):
| Cost line | Without optimization | Beckham + bilateral COC |
|---|---|---|
| Spanish income tax | ~€31,000 | €0 |
| Spanish social security | ~€5,400 | €0 |
| Total Spanish cost | ~€36,400 | €0 |
Plus: any tax owed in country of citizenship (e.g., US federal tax for US citizens), private health insurance (~€1,000/year), and standard living costs.
Spain is, for a properly-structured remote worker, functionally a tax-free destination for 5–6 years. This is the comparison that drives the post-NHR migration of nomads to Spain.
How Beckham Law compares with alternatives
| Regime | Effective tax on €100k foreign income | Duration | Key catch |
|---|---|---|---|
| Spain Beckham Law | ~0–24% | 6 years | 6-month Modelo 149 deadline |
| Italy impatriate | ~22–30% (50% exemption) | 5 + 5 (w/kids) | Income cap €600k |
| Italy 7% South | 7% flat | Up to 10 years | Pensioners + specific towns |
| Greece (foreign exec) | ~20% (50% exemption) | 7 years | Specific qualifying conditions |
| Cyprus 60-day non-dom | ~6–22% | 17 years | Strict 60-day residence rule |
| Portugal IFICI | 0–20% | 10 years | Narrow eligibility (researchers) |
| Malta non-dom | Effective ~5–35% | Indefinite | Remittance basis + minimum tax |
For pure remote workers, Spain Beckham Law and Cyprus non-dom are the two strongest options in the EU. Spain wins on lifestyle, language access, and DNV route simplicity; Cyprus wins on duration.
What to do next
If you're considering Spain DNV with Beckham Law:
- Read the full DNV application HowTo: How to Apply for the Spain Digital Nomad Visa in 2026
- Run the tax math against your specific income mix — use a Spanish tax advisor familiar with Article 93
- Get a bilateral Certificate of Coverage from your home country social security agency before RETA registration
- File Modelo 149 within 6 months of your start date — set a calendar reminder for month 5
Related tools and reading
- How to Apply for the Spain DNV in 2026
- Portugal D8 vs Spain DNV comparison — €80k worked example
- From Portugal NHR to IFICI — 2026
- Tax Residency Tracker
- How to calculate tax residency
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Last updated: 2026-05-17. Spanish IRPF rates and Article 93 implementing rules are subject to annual budget legislation. Beckham Law analysis interacts heavily with bilateral tax treaties and your country of citizenship — this article is general editorial guidance, not legal or tax advice. For specific situations, engage a Spanish-licensed tax advisor with international expertise.