MUNDO Research Team · Vetted by Costa del Sol property professionals
Published April 2025 · Updated February 2026 · 9 min read
Spain's Golden Visa Is Gone: What Happened
On 3 April 2025, Spain officially abolished its Golden Visa programme for real estate investment. The law ending the programme was approved by the Spanish Senate after passing through Congress, making Spain the latest European country to close its property-based residency-by-investment route.
If you're reading old articles that still describe the Golden Visa as active or "under threat," they are out of date. The programme is closed. No new applications based on property investment are being accepted.
This guide explains what the Golden Visa was, why it was abolished, what happens to existing holders, and — most importantly — what alternative routes to Spanish residency are available for UK buyers in 2026.
What the Golden Visa Was
Spain's Golden Visa — officially part of the Ley 14/2013, de apoyo a los emprendedores y su internacionalización (Entrepreneurs' Act) — launched in September 2013. It offered residency permits to non-EU nationals who made qualifying investments in Spain.
The most popular route, by a wide margin, was the real estate investment option:
- Minimum €500,000 in Spanish property (debt-free portion)
- The investment could be a single property or a portfolio
- Residential, commercial, or land all qualified
- The €500,000 could be financed above the minimum — only the first €500,000 had to be unencumbered
In return, investors received:
- Residency permit for the investor, spouse/partner, and dependent children
- Right to live and work in Spain
- Schengen-wide travel across 27 European countries
- No minimum stay requirement — unlike other visa types, you didn't have to live primarily in Spain
- Initial 2-year permit, renewable for 5-year periods
- Path to permanent residency after 5 years and citizenship after 10 years
Over 14,000 main applicants used the programme between 2013 and 2025, with British, Chinese, Russian, and Middle Eastern nationals among the most common applicant groups. The Costa del Sol, Barcelona, and Madrid were the primary investment locations.
Why It Was Abolished
The abolition was driven by a combination of political, economic, and EU-level factors:
Housing Affordability Crisis
Spain has faced a deepening housing crisis, particularly in major cities and popular coastal areas. The government argued that Golden Visa property purchases — concentrated in prime urban and resort markets — were contributing to price inflation that priced out local residents, especially younger Spaniards. Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez framed the abolition as part of a broader housing reform agenda.
EU-Level Pressure
The European Commission had been increasingly critical of Golden Visa programmes across the EU, citing concerns about money laundering, security vetting, and the commodification of residency rights. Portugal ended its real estate Golden Visa route in October 2023. Ireland closed its programme in 2023. The EU Court of Justice struck down Malta's citizenship-by-investment scheme in April 2025. Spain's move aligned with this broader European trend.
Political Dynamics
The abolition passed through both houses of the Spanish Parliament. The Sánchez government, leading a minority coalition, found sufficient support for this measure across left-wing and regional parties who viewed Golden Visas as benefiting wealthy foreign investors at the expense of Spanish housing accessibility.
Limited Economic Impact
In practice, Golden Visa property purchases represented a small fraction of Spain's overall real estate market — roughly 1-2% of total transactions. The government calculated that the political benefit of abolishing the programme outweighed the economic cost of losing a relatively small number of high-value purchases.
What Happened to Existing Golden Visa Holders
If you already hold a Spanish Golden Visa, the abolition does not affect your existing rights:
- Existing holders can continue to renew their residency permits under the original terms, provided they still hold their qualifying investment
- Renewal applications continue to be processed under transitional provisions
- You must still visit Spain at least once per year and maintain the qualifying investment
- The path to permanent residency (5 years) and citizenship (10 years) remains unchanged
- Family members included in the original application retain their residency rights
Applications submitted before 3 April 2025 are also protected. If you had a pending Golden Visa application in the pipeline when the programme closed, it will still be processed to completion under the previous rules.
Can You Still Buy Property in Spain?
Absolutely yes. This is a critical point that causes confusion. The abolition of the Golden Visa does not restrict property purchases in any way. Any person of any nationality can still buy property in Spain — residential, commercial, or land — with no restrictions.
What has changed is simple: buying property no longer automatically grants you a residency permit. You can still purchase a €5 million villa in Marbella tomorrow, but you will not receive residency rights from the purchase alone. You would need to apply for residency through one of the standard visa routes described below.
For UK buyers who want a holiday home and are content staying within the 90-day Schengen limit, nothing has changed. You buy, you visit for up to 90 days in any 180-day period, and you enjoy your property. The Golden Visa only mattered if you wanted to live in Spain full-time or spend more than 90 days.
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Alternative Visa Routes for UK Buyers in 2026
With the Golden Visa gone, UK citizens who want to live in Spain for more than 90 days have four main options:
1. Non-Lucrative Visa (Visado de Residencia No Lucrativa)
This is the most common route for retirees and financially independent individuals.
| Requirement | Detail |
|---|---|
| Income | €28,800/year for the main applicant (~€2,400/month) |
| Additional family | +€7,200/year per dependent |
| Qualifying income | Pensions, savings, investments, rental income, dividends |
| Work permitted | No — you cannot work or be self-employed in Spain |
| Health insurance | Full private health cover required, no co-pays |
| Minimum stay | Must live primarily in Spain (183+ days/year recommended) |
| Initial permit | 1 year, renewable for 2-year periods |
| Permanent residency | After 5 years |
| Citizenship | After 10 years of legal residency |
Key difference from the Golden Visa: The non-lucrative visa requires you to actually live in Spain. The Golden Visa's unique selling point was its no-minimum-stay clause — you could visit once a year and maintain residency. That flexibility no longer exists through any visa route.
Best for: Retired UK couples with a combined pension and savings income above €28,800/year who plan to make Spain their primary home.
2. Digital Nomad Visa (Visado para Teletrabajo de Carácter Internacional)
Introduced in January 2023, this has become Spain's most successful visa programme, with approximately 28,000 non-EU residents using it by early 2026.
| Requirement | Detail |
|---|---|
| Income | €34,188/year (~€2,849/month), which is 200% of Spain's minimum wage |
| Employment | Must work remotely for a non-Spanish company (80%+ revenue from outside Spain) |
| Or freelance | Self-employed with non-Spanish clients (80%+ non-Spanish revenue) |
| Experience | Must show professional relationship with employer for 3+ months, or 1+ year of freelance experience |
| Health insurance | Full private health cover required |
| Initial permit | 3 years, renewable for 2-year periods |
| Tax benefit | 24% flat tax rate on Spanish-sourced income for first 4 years (Beckham Law) |
| Permanent residency | After 5 years |
Key advantage: The 24% flat tax rate for the first four years is a significant financial benefit compared to Spain's standard progressive rates (which go up to 47%). This makes Spain competitive with Portugal's former NHR regime.
Best for: UK remote workers, freelancers, and contractors earning above €34,188/year from non-Spanish clients or employers.
3. Entrepreneur Visa (Visado de Emprendedor)
For those starting a business in Spain or investing in innovative ventures.
| Requirement | Detail |
|---|---|
| Business plan | Must demonstrate a viable business plan with relevance to the Spanish economy |
| Investment | No fixed minimum, but must show sufficient capital for the venture |
| Innovation | The business should have an innovative character or special economic interest for Spain |
| Qualifications | Proof of professional qualifications or relevant experience |
| Initial permit | 1 year, renewable for 2 years |
| Work | Yes — self-employed in the approved business activity |
Key consideration: The entrepreneur visa requires your business plan to be assessed and approved by a government body (the Oficina Económica y Comercial). It's more involved than a simple investment but does not require a massive capital outlay.
Best for: UK entrepreneurs who want to start or expand a business in Spain.
4. Student Visa (Visado de Estudios)
Sometimes overlooked, the student visa can be a practical first step into Spanish residency.
| Requirement | Detail |
|---|---|
| Enrolment | Must be enrolled in a recognised Spanish educational institution |
| Courses | Full-time studies: university, language school (20+ hours/week), or professional training |
| Funds | Must show sufficient means to support yourself during studies |
| Work | Part-time work permitted (up to 20 hours/week) |
| Duration | Matches course length, renewable |
| Conversion | Can convert to a work or self-employment visa after completing studies |
Key consideration: Time spent on a student visa counts towards residency but at a reduced rate (only 50% counts towards the 5-year permanent residency requirement in some cases). However, it's the easiest visa to obtain and provides a legal basis for living in Spain while you explore longer-term options.
Best for: Younger UK citizens, career changers, or those who want to learn Spanish intensively while establishing a foothold in Spain.
Comparing the Alternatives: Quick Reference
| Feature | Non-Lucrative | Digital Nomad | Entrepreneur | Student |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Income/investment | €28,800/yr | €34,188/yr | Viable business plan | Sufficient funds |
| Work in Spain | No | Remote only | Self-employed | Part-time |
| Must live in Spain | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Initial permit | 1 year | 3 years | 1 year | Course length |
| Special tax rate | No | 24% flat (4 years) | No | No |
| Path to PR | 5 years | 5 years | 5 years | Indirect |
| Path to citizenship | 10 years | 10 years | 10 years | 10 years |
What This Means for the Costa del Sol Property Market
The abolition of the Golden Visa has had a limited impact on the Costa del Sol property market for several reasons:
- Golden Visa purchases were always a minority: Most foreign buyers on the Costa del Sol were lifestyle purchasers, retirees, and holiday home buyers — not Golden Visa investors. The programme accounted for roughly 1-2% of total transactions.
- Demand drivers remain intact: Remote work, Northern European migration, climate, lifestyle, and infrastructure continue to drive demand.
- British buyers are unaffected: UK buyers remain the largest foreign buyer group in Andalusia, and the vast majority were never Golden Visa applicants — they bought for lifestyle or investment purposes and handled residency separately.
- Supply constraints persist: Coastal planning restrictions, environmental protections, and the reduced buildable land allocations in municipal PGOUs continue to constrain new supply.
If anything, the end of the Golden Visa may reduce some speculative buying pressure in the very high end (€500,000+ market aimed specifically at visa-motivated investors), which could modestly benefit genuine buyers at that price point.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is the Golden Visa coming back?
It is extremely unlikely. The political and EU-level trend is firmly against property-based residency programmes. No major party in Spain has proposed reinstating it.
I already have a Golden Visa. Am I affected?
No. Existing holders can continue to renew under transitional provisions. Your residency rights are protected as long as you maintain your qualifying investment and visit Spain at least once per year.
I submitted my application before 3 April 2025. What happens?
Your application will be processed to completion under the previous rules. Applications pending at the time of abolition are covered by transitional provisions.
Can I still invest €500,000 in Spanish property?
Yes, you can invest any amount in Spanish property. You simply won't receive a residency permit from the investment alone. You'll need to apply for residency through another visa route if you want to live in Spain.
Which alternative visa is closest to the Golden Visa?
None offers the exact same combination of benefits. The Golden Visa's unique feature was the no-minimum-stay requirement. The non-lucrative visa is the closest for financially independent individuals, but it requires you to live primarily in Spain and does not permit work. The Digital Nomad Visa is the strongest option for working-age professionals.
Does this affect property prices?
Minimally. Golden Visa purchases represented a small fraction of total transactions, and the broader demand drivers for Costa del Sol property remain strong.
Related Reading
Our Recommendation for UK Buyers
The end of the Golden Visa removes one route to Spanish residency, but it does not change the fundamental appeal of buying property in Spain. The Costa del Sol still offers exceptional value, quality of life, and investment returns for UK buyers.
If you're buying a holiday home and plan to stay within the 90-day Schengen limit, the Golden Visa abolition is irrelevant to you. Buy the property you want and enjoy it.
If you're planning to relocate to Spain, the non-lucrative visa (for retirees) or Digital Nomad Visa (for remote workers) are well-established, proven routes that thousands of UK citizens use successfully every year. They require more commitment to actually living in Spain than the Golden Visa did, but for most people who are genuinely moving to Spain, that's not a hardship — it's the point.
Browse our Costa del Sol location guides to find the right area for your needs, and use our buying costs calculator to see the complete picture.
This article was last updated in February 2026. Immigration and visa rules can change — always consult a qualified immigration lawyer for your specific situation.
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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.