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Post-Brexit Residency Rules for UK Buyers in Spain: What Changed in 2026

Post-Brexit Residency Rules for UK Buyers in Spain: What Changed in 2026

The 90-day rule, visa options, residency permits, and how to legally spend more time at your Spanish property after Brexit. A practical guide for UK property owners.

Last updated: February 2026

M

MUNDO Research Team · Vetted by Costa del Sol property professionals

Published May 2025 · Updated February 2026 · 6 min read

The Basics: What Brexit Changed

Before Brexit, UK citizens could live in Spain indefinitely with minimal paperwork. Since January 2021, you're treated as a third-country national — the same as an American, Australian, or Canadian. This doesn't stop you buying property (anyone can buy in Spain regardless of nationality), but it affects how long you can stay there.

The key rule: you can spend up to 90 days in any 180-day period in the Schengen Area without a visa. This is the "90/180 rule" and it covers all 27 Schengen countries combined — time in France, Portugal, or Italy counts towards your 90 days too.

The 90/180 Rule Explained

This is the rule that catches most UK buyers off guard. It's not "90 days per trip" or "90 days per country" — it's a rolling 180-day window across all Schengen states.

How it works: at any given moment, look back 180 days. You must not have spent more than 90 of those days in the Schengen Area.

Practical example: You fly to your Spanish property on 1st March and stay until 30th May (91 days). You've overstayed by 1 day. Even if you haven't been to Spain since last September, you've exceeded the 90-day limit in this 180-day window.

What happens if you overstay? Fines of €500-€1,000 per day of overstay, potential entry ban of up to 3 years, and difficulty getting visas in the future. Spanish border control has become increasingly strict since 2024 with the EU Entry/Exit System (EES) automated tracking.

Option 1: Holiday Home Owner (No Visa Needed)

If you're happy spending less than 90 days every 6 months at your Spanish property, you don't need any visa or permit. Many UK owners structure their time as:

  • Spring stay: April-May (8 weeks)
  • Autumn stay: October-November (4 weeks)
  • Christmas break: 2 weeks in December

That's 14 weeks (98 days per year) but never more than 90 in any rolling 180-day window. This works perfectly for holiday home owners who spend summers in the UK.

Option 2: Non-Lucrative Visa (Stay All Year, No Working)

The most popular visa for UK retirees and people with passive income. Requirements:

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  • Proof of income: approximately €2,400/month for the main applicant (roughly £2,100) plus €600/month per dependent. This can be pension, investments, rental income, or savings
  • Private health insurance: must cover you fully in Spain with no co-payments. Cost: €100-€300/month depending on age
  • Clean criminal record: UK police certificate, apostilled
  • No intention to work in Spain — this visa is purely for living, not earning

The visa is initially granted for 1 year, then renewable for 2-year periods. After 5 years, you can apply for permanent residency.

Cost: approximately €200 for the visa application plus €50-€100 for document translations and apostilles.

Option 3: Digital Nomad Visa (Work Remotely from Spain)

Introduced in 2023, Spain's digital nomad visa lets you live and work remotely in Spain if your employer or clients are outside Spain. Requirements:

  • Remote work proof: employment contract with a non-Spanish company, or freelance contracts with international clients
  • Minimum income: 200% of Spain's minimum wage — €2,849/month (€34,188/year) in 2026. For a first dependent add €1,069/month (€12,821/year); each additional dependent adds €357/month (€4,274/year)
  • Less than 20% of income from Spanish clients
  • Professional experience: degree or 3+ years relevant experience
  • Private health insurance

The big advantage: eligibility for the Beckham Law regime, which offers a flat 24% tax rate on Spanish-source income up to €600,000 for up to 6 years (vs Spain's normal 19-47% progressive rates). Since the 2023 Startup Law reforms, digital nomad visa holders can opt into the Beckham Law. For UK remote workers earning £60,000+, this represents significant savings.

Initially granted for 1 year, renewable for up to 5 years.

Option 4: Entrepreneur/Self-Employment Visa

If you plan to start a business in Spain (not just remote work), you'll need this visa. The business plan must demonstrate:

  • Innovation or economic value to Spain
  • Job creation potential
  • Sufficient funding
  • Relevant qualifications or experience

This is a more complex route and typically requires a Spanish lawyer to prepare the application.

The TIE Card: Your Spanish ID

Once you have any residence visa, you need to apply for a TIE (Tarjeta de Identidad de Extranjero) — your physical residency card. This is your proof of legal residence in Spain and you'll need it for:

  • Opening a Spanish bank account (easier with TIE than NIE alone)
  • Signing utility contracts
  • Accessing the Spanish healthcare system (if applicable)
  • Re-entering Spain without passport control queues

Apply at your local Oficina de Extranjería within 30 days of arriving in Spain on your visa. Cost: approximately €12-€16.

Tax Implications of Residency

Where you're tax resident matters enormously. The rules are complex but the basics:

SituationTax ResidentKey Implications
Less than 183 days in SpainUKPay UK tax on worldwide income. Pay Spanish IRNR (non-resident tax) on Spanish rental income
183+ days in SpainSpainPay Spanish tax on worldwide income (including UK pension, investments). Double taxation treaty prevents paying twice
Centre of economic interests in SpainSpainEven under 183 days, Spain may claim you as resident if your main assets/income are there

The UK-Spain double taxation treaty ensures you don't pay tax twice on the same income, but the rates and allowances differ. If you're spending significant time in Spain, get advice from a tax advisor who understands both jurisdictions.

Healthcare After Brexit

UK visitors can use the UK Global Health Insurance Card (GHIC) for emergency treatment during short stays. But this only covers emergencies, not routine care, and you must be visiting (not residing).

If you're a resident, your options are:

  • Spanish public healthcare (convenio especial) — pay approximately €60/month to join the Spanish public system. Quality is high in Andalusia
  • Private health insurance — required for visa applications anyway. Full cover from €100-€400/month depending on age and coverage level
  • UK state pension recipients — if you receive a UK state pension and become a Spanish resident, your S1 form entitles you to Spanish public healthcare at Spain's cost

Read our detailed guide: Healthcare and Insurance for UK Expats in Spain.

Practical Steps for UK Property Buyers

  1. Decide your usage pattern — holiday home (90 days) or long-term residence?
  2. Get your NIE number — needed regardless of visa status
  3. If staying over 90 days — apply for the appropriate visa at the Spanish Consulate in the UK before travelling
  4. Budget for health insurance — €1,200-€3,600/year depending on age
  5. Talk to a tax advisor before changing your residency status
  6. Join the MUNDO Buyer Club to connect with verified agents who understand expat buyer needs

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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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