Visas & Residency · Spain

Spain's golden visa is dead. Here's what happened — and what to do instead.

Last verified: 8 July 2026

On 3 April 2025, Spain abolished its investor residence permit — all of it, including the famous €500,000 property route. If you hold one, you keep it. If you were planning on one, you need a new plan. This is the honest version of both.

The key facts
  • Ended 3 April 2025 — by Organic Law 1/2025 (of 2 January 2025), which repealed the investor articles of the 2013 entrepreneurs law
  • All categories abolished: €500k real estate, €1M shares/funds, €2M government debt, business projects
  • Existing permits stay valid — and applications filed before the deadline were processed under the old rules
  • Renewals continue under the rules in force when the permit was first granted (per the law's transitional provisions, as read by major law firms — see the caveat below)
  • Buying property is still legal — it just doesn't buy residence anymore

What exactly ended

The golden visa lived in articles 63–67 of Spain's 2013 entrepreneurs law (Ley 14/2013). Organic Law 1/2025 — formally a justice-efficiency law — repealed those articles with effect from 3 April 2025. That killed every investor category at once: the €500,000 property purchase, €1 million in shares or funds, €2 million in government debt, and qualifying business projects. Spain's government framed the move as housing policy; the property route accounted for the overwhelming majority of applications.

If you already hold one

Permits issued before 3 April 2025 remain valid. Applications filed before the deadline were processed under the old rules. Renewals continue under the rules in force at the initial grant — but note the caveat: that renewal detail rests on the law's transitional provisions as interpreted by major law and advisory firms, not on a plain-language government page. If your renewal is coming up, have an immigration lawyer confirm your specific position rather than relying on general summaries — including this one.

What to use instead

There is no like-for-like replacement. The golden visa's unique feature was residence with minimal physical presence. Nothing in Spain's current system offers that. Your realistic options:

Your situationRouteThe catch
Retired, or living on passive income Non-lucrative visa — €2,400/month (€28,800/year) in 2026, +€600/month per dependant No work of any kind, and since May 2025 renewal requires 183+ days/year in Spain — which also makes you a Spanish tax resident
Still working, remotely Digital nomad visa — €2,849/month (2026) working for non-Spanish companies Real remote-work relationship required (employer operating ≥1 year, ≥3 months' history); Spanish clients capped at 20% for freelancers
Want Spain part-time, no residence Stay a visitor — 90 days visa-free in any 180 across Schengen Hard ceiling of ~180 days/year, counted biometrically by EES since April 2026; no residence rights; ETIAS (€20, over-70s fee-exempt) expected late 2026
The part-time math changed twice. Before 2025, a golden visa let you own a Spanish home and drop in at will; the NLV could be renewed with modest presence. Now the golden visa is gone and the NLV demands more than half the year in Spain. For genuine part-timers — under 90 days per 180 — the honest answer in 2026 is: buy the house if you like, and stay a Schengen visitor.

You can still buy the house

Nothing stops Americans or Canadians buying Spanish property — it just no longer confers residence. Normal costs apply: 10% IVA plus stamp duty on new builds, or regional transfer tax of roughly 4–13% on resales (Madrid 6%, Valencia 9% from 1 June 2026, Cataluña 10–13%), plus ~1–2.5% in notary, registry and gestoría fees. One thing to watch: a bill proposing a tax of up to 100% on purchases by non-EU non-residents was registered in Congress in May 2025. As of mid-2026 it is stalled without a majority and is not law — but it tells you which way the political wind blows. Details in the Housing guide.

Why this matters beyond Spain

Spain joined a broader European retreat from investor migration. If your plan was "buy residence somewhere in Europe," treat every remaining scheme as politically fragile — and check the current law, not a 2023 blog post, before wiring money anywhere.

Sources

  1. Ley Orgánica 1/2025 (abolition, in force 3 April 2025) — BOE: boe.es
  2. Government announcement — La Moncloa, 2 April 2025: lamoncloa.gob.es
  3. Transitional provisions / renewals — KPMG legal alert on LO 1/2025: kpmg.com (professional-firm reading; confirm your case with counsel)
  4. Non-lucrative visa requirements — Ministerio de Inclusión, Hoja 6: inclusion.gob.es · Digital nomad — Ley 28/2022: boe.es
  5. Schengen 90/180 — US State Department: travel.state.gov · EES: home-affairs.ec.europa.eu
  6. 100% purchase-tax proposal (pending, not law) — PwC Periscopio: pwc.es
This guide is general information, not legal advice. Transitional rules for existing golden visa holders involve legal interpretation; confirm your position with an immigration lawyer before acting.