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UK-Spain Dual Nationality: Can You Have Both Passports?

UK-Spain Dual Nationality: Can You Have Both Passports?

Many UK expats in Spain wonder whether they can hold both British and Spanish nationality. The answer is complicated — Spain generally does not allow dual nationality with the UK. Here's what you need to know about the rules, exceptions, and practical alternatives.

Last updated: February 2026

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MUNDO Research Team · Vetted by Costa del Sol property professionals

Published February 2026 · Updated February 2026 · 9 min read

The question of dual nationality comes up constantly among British expats in Spain — particularly since Brexit removed the automatic right to live and work across the EU. Holding a Spanish passport would restore freedom of movement across all 27 EU countries, the right to vote in Spanish elections, and an unshakeable right to remain in Spain regardless of future political changes.

The problem: Spain generally does not allow dual nationality with the UK. Understanding exactly what this means, what your options are, and whether the trade-off is worth it requires navigating some complex legal territory. For the residency basics, see our guide to Spanish residency and the TIE card.

The Basic Rule: Spain Prohibits Dual Nationality (With Exceptions)

Spanish nationality law (Código Civil, Articles 17-28) establishes a clear principle: Spain permits dual nationality only with a specific list of countries that have historical and cultural ties to Spain. These are:

  • Ibero-American countries (all of Latin America plus Portugal)
  • Andorra
  • Philippines
  • Equatorial Guinea

Nationals of these countries can become Spanish citizens without renouncing their original nationality, and vice versa.

For everyone else — including British nationals — becoming Spanish requires renouncing your previous nationality. This is not a technicality or a formality. It is a legal requirement that has real consequences.

What "Renouncing" Actually Means

When you become a Spanish citizen, you make a formal declaration before a Spanish civil registrar renouncing your British citizenship. What this means in practice:

What You Lose

  • British passport: You must surrender it and cannot renew it
  • Automatic right to live in the UK: You become a foreign national needing permission to reside long-term in the UK (though Spanish passport holders can visit the UK for up to 6 months as tourists without a visa)
  • Right to work in the UK: You would need a work visa or sponsorship
  • UK voting rights: You lose the right to vote in UK elections (though as a UK citizen abroad you already lose this right after 15 years — a rule that has been under review)
  • UK consular protection: If you travel to a third country and run into trouble, you would use a Spanish consulate rather than a British one
  • NHS access: You lose entitlement to free NHS care (though emergency treatment remains available to all visitors)

What You Gain

  • Spanish/EU passport: Full freedom of movement across all 27 EU/EEA countries — the right to live, work, study, and retire anywhere in the EU without visas or permits
  • Permanent and unconditional right to remain in Spain: Not dependent on residency permits, treaty agreements, or future political decisions
  • Voting rights in Spain: Full participation in national, regional, and local elections
  • EU citizen benefits: Access to EU-wide healthcare (EHIC/GHIC equivalent), education, and consular protection in non-EU countries through any EU member state's embassy
  • Simplified travel: EU passport lanes at airports, no ETIAS requirement (which will apply to UK passport holders visiting the Schengen area)
  • Succession planning: Simplified inheritance processes within Spain and the EU

The Practical Reality

There is an uncomfortable grey area that is widely discussed in expat communities but carries legal risk: Spain requires you to formally renounce your previous nationality, but it does not actively verify that the UK has processed your renunciation. Some people have gone through the Spanish naturalisation process, made the renunciation declaration in Spain, but not formally renounced with the UK Home Office — effectively holding both passports.

This approach carries real risks:

  • It is technically illegal under Spanish law — you are required to renounce, not just declare that you will
  • Spain can revoke your Spanish nationality if it discovers you are maintaining another nationality (you have 3 years to complete the renunciation after the Spanish declaration)
  • Using two passports from countries that do not have a dual nationality agreement can cause problems at borders, with tax authorities, and in legal proceedings
  • If either country's rules change or enforcement tightens, you could find yourself in a legally precarious position

Professional advice: do not rely on the enforcement gap. If you choose to become Spanish, properly renounce British citizenship through the UK Home Office. If you are not willing to do that, the alternatives below may be better options.

Requirements for Spanish Citizenship

If you decide the trade-off is worth it, here are the requirements for British nationals:

Standard Route: 10 Years Residency

  • 10 continuous years of legal residence in Spain — with a valid TIE card and registered on the padron throughout. Continuous means you have not been absent for extended periods (generally, absences under 6 months per year are acceptable)
  • Good civic conduct (buena conducta cívica): No criminal record in Spain or your previous countries of residence. A Spanish criminal record certificate and a UK police certificate (ACRO) are required
  • Sufficient integration: Demonstrated through the CCSE exam (Conocimientos Constitucionales y Socioculturales de España) — a 45-minute exam covering Spanish government, law, geography, and culture — and the DELE A2 Spanish language exam (basic conversational level)
  • Financial stability: Evidence that you can support yourself (tax returns, employment contracts, or pension documentation)

Reduced Residency Routes

  • 1 year: If married to a Spanish citizen, born in Spain, or born to a parent who was originally Spanish
  • 2 years: If you are a national of an Ibero-American country, Andorra, Philippines, Equatorial Guinea, or Portugal (not applicable to UK nationals)
  • 5 years: If you are a recognised refugee

The Exams

CCSE (Conocimientos Constitucionales y Socioculturales de España): 25 multiple-choice questions in Spanish covering the Spanish constitution, government structure, geography, history, and culture. 60% pass mark. Study materials are available from the Instituto Cervantes. Most UK applicants find this manageable with 2-4 weeks of preparation.

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DELE A2: Basic Spanish language certification. Tests reading, writing, listening, and speaking at A2 level (Elementary). This is not fluent Spanish — it is the ability to handle simple, everyday transactions. Most UK expats who have lived in Spain for 10 years (as required) pass without difficulty, but formal preparation is advisable if your Spanish is limited.

Alternatives to Spanish Citizenship

For most UK expats, the practical alternatives offer most of the benefits without the sacrifice of British citizenship:

1. Permanent Residency (Residencia de Larga Duración)

After 5 years of legal residence with a TIE, you can apply for permanent residency. This grants:

  • The right to live and work in Spain indefinitely
  • Access to all public services including healthcare and education
  • No need to renew your residency card (though the card itself is renewed every 5 years — this is administrative, not a re-application)
  • Greater protection against deportation

What it does not provide: EU-wide freedom of movement, the right to vote in Spanish national elections (you can vote in local elections as a resident), or an EU passport.

2. Maintain UK Citizenship + Spanish Residency

The most common approach for UK expats. You keep your British passport, maintain your TIE, and accept the limitations — primarily that you cannot live or work freely in other EU countries (though you can travel as a tourist) and that your right to remain in Spain is based on a residency permit rather than citizenship.

For most people who do not plan to move to another EU country and who have family, property, or pension ties to the UK, this is the most pragmatic choice.

3. Citizenship Through Family Connection

If you have a parent or grandparent who was a citizen of an EU member state (Irish citizenship is particularly relevant for many British people, given the common ancestry), you may be able to claim that country's citizenship without affecting your British nationality. An EU passport from any member state grants the same freedom of movement rights as a Spanish passport.

Irish citizenship is especially valuable here: anyone with a parent or grandparent born in Ireland (including Northern Ireland) can claim Irish citizenship, retain their British citizenship, and gain full EU rights — including the right to live in Spain as an EU citizen rather than a third-country national.

Is It Worth It?

The decision to give up British citizenship for Spanish citizenship is deeply personal and depends on your specific circumstances:

It may be worth it if:

  • You have no intention of ever living in the UK again
  • You have no significant UK ties (family, property, pension rights that require residence)
  • You want to live or work in other EU countries in the future
  • The security of an unconditional right to remain in Spain matters more than UK connections
  • You are concerned about future changes to UK-Spain bilateral agreements affecting your residency

It is probably not worth it if:

  • You have family in the UK you visit regularly and may need to care for in the future
  • You own UK property or have UK pension rights that benefit from residence status
  • You might want to return to the UK to live at some point
  • Your primary concern is stability in Spain — permanent residency provides this without renouncing

Future Changes?

There is ongoing discussion at both EU and bilateral levels about potentially allowing UK-Spain dual nationality. Spain has modernised its nationality laws in recent years and expanded its list of dual nationality agreements. Some legal scholars and politicians have advocated for including the UK on this list, particularly given the large British-born population in Spain.

However, as of now, there is no concrete legislative proposal and no timeline for change. Making decisions based on what might happen would be unwise — plan based on the current rules.

The Bottom Line

For most UK expats in Spain, the practical answer is: keep your British passport, maintain permanent residency, and accept that EU-wide freedom of movement is the one benefit you cannot access without giving up British citizenship. For the minority whose life circumstances make Spanish citizenship clearly advantageous, the process is achievable but requires genuine commitment — 10 years of residency, language competency, and the willingness to formally relinquish British nationality.

Whatever you decide, make the choice based on professional legal advice specific to your situation, not on forum posts or hearsay about enforcement gaps. Your nationality is too important to gamble with.

Exploring life in Spain? Join MUNDO to browse property options across Spain's coastal regions. For post-Brexit residency basics, see our TIE card and residency guide.

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Disclaimer

This guide is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal, tax, or financial advice. Property laws and tax regulations change frequently — always consult a qualified Spanish lawyer and tax advisor before making any property purchase decisions. Data sourced from Spanish Land Registry, Idealista, and MUNDO partner network. Last verified: March 2026.

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