MUNDO Research Team · Vetted by Costa del Sol property professionals
Published July 2025 · Updated February 2026 · 9 min read
The 183-Day Rule: The Basics
The most well-known criterion for Spanish tax residency is the 183-day rule. Under Article 9 of the Ley del IRPF (Spanish Income Tax Law), you are considered a Spanish tax resident if you spend more than 183 days in Spain during the calendar year (1 January to 31 December).
183 days is just over six months. If you spend 184 days or more in Spain in a calendar year, Spain considers you tax resident for that entire year — not just from the day you crossed the 183 threshold, but from 1 January. This is a critical distinction from the UK system, which has a split-year treatment allowing you to be resident for part of the year.
How Days Are Counted
The 183-day count is straightforward but has important nuances:
- Days of arrival and departure count: If you arrive in Spain on 1 March and leave on 5 March, that counts as 5 days.
- Days do not need to be consecutive: If you spend 100 days in spring and 84 days in autumn, that is 184 days — you are resident.
- Temporary absences count as days in Spain: This is the most controversial aspect. Under Spanish law, "ausencias esporádicas" (sporadic absences) are counted as days in Spain unless you can prove tax residency in another country. So a week's holiday in France during your Spanish stay does not reduce your day count.
- The calendar year applies: This is January to December, not a rolling 12-month period. Strategically, this means you could spend 183 days in Spain in the second half of one year and 183 days in the first half of the next year — 366 consecutive days — without technically triggering the 183-day rule in either calendar year.
Proving Your Day Count
If challenged by the Spanish tax authority (Agencia Tributaria), you need evidence of your movements. Useful documentation includes:
- Passport stamps (though Schengen doesn't always stamp EU entry)
- Flight tickets and boarding passes
- Credit card and bank statements showing transactions in different countries
- Phone location data and call records
- Utility bills showing usage patterns
- Evidence of work attendance in the UK
- UK GP and dentist records
The burden of proof depends on the situation. If Spain believes you are resident (because, for example, your family lives there), the burden shifts to you to prove otherwise.
Other Triggers for Tax Residency
The 183-day rule is only one of three independent criteria for Spanish tax residency. Meeting any one of them is sufficient:
1. Centre of Economic Interests (Núcleo Principal de Actividades o Intereses Económicos)
You are considered Spanish tax resident if your main professional or economic activities are based in Spain, or if the principal base of your activities or economic interests is in Spain. This includes:
- Your main employment or business is in Spain
- The majority of your income arises in Spain
- Your main investments are in Spain
- You manage your wealth primarily from Spain
This criterion can catch people who spend fewer than 183 days in Spain but run a business there, or whose Spanish property portfolio generates more income than their UK activities.
2. Centre of Vital Interests (Vínculos Personales y Familiares)
This is the family tie test. There is a presumption that you are Spanish tax resident if your spouse (not legally separated) and/or minor children live in Spain. This is a rebuttable presumption — you can provide evidence to the contrary — but it is difficult to overcome.
Practical implications:
- If your spouse moves to Spain but you continue working in the UK, Spain may consider both of you tax resident in Spain
- If your children attend school in Spain, this strengthens the case for your residency there
- Even if you spend fewer than 183 days in Spain, the family tie can trigger full tax residency
Becoming Tax Resident by Accident
Many UK expats become Spanish tax resident without intending to. Common scenarios include:
The Extended Holiday
You buy a holiday home and plan to spend a few months a year there. But the Spanish lifestyle grows on you. One year, you extend your spring stay by a few weeks, then come back early in autumn. Before you know it, you have spent 190 days in Spain. You are now tax resident for that entire year and liable for Spanish tax on your worldwide income.
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The Family Move
Your partner and children move to Spain for the schools and sunshine. You continue working in the UK and commute regularly. Spain considers you tax resident because your family is there. You may need to prove UK tax residency through the Statutory Residence Test to overcome this presumption.
Remote Working
You work remotely for a UK company from your Spanish property. You spend 5 months in Spain, but your "sporadic absences" (short trips to the UK for meetings) are counted as days in Spain. You may have unknowingly spent more than 183 days by Spain's count.
The Consequences
Accidental tax residency means you are liable to pay Spanish income tax on your worldwide income for the entire calendar year. If you have not been filing Spanish tax returns, you face back taxes, interest, and penalties. The Agencia Tributaria actively investigates suspected non-declarants, particularly among foreign property owners.
How to Declare Tax Residency
If you move to Spain and become tax resident, you should:
- Register on the padrón: The padrón municipal (census register) at your local town hall. This is an administrative registration, not a tax registration, but it establishes your residence.
- Obtain a TIE card: The Tarjeta de Identidad de Extranjero, which serves as your residence card in Spain.
- Register with the Agencia Tributaria: Using Modelo 030, you register your tax domicile in Spain. This formally establishes you as a Spanish taxpayer.
- Notify HMRC: Complete form P85 to notify HMRC that you are leaving the UK for tax purposes. Apply for the split-year treatment in your final UK tax year if applicable.
- File the Modelo 720: If you have overseas assets above €50,000 in any category (bank accounts, investments, property), file this declaration by 31 March of the year following your first year of residency.
Your Obligations as a Spanish Tax Resident
Once you are Spanish tax resident, your obligations are extensive:
Worldwide Income Tax (IRPF)
You must declare all income from everywhere in the world on your annual Spanish tax return (Declaración de la Renta, filed April-June for the previous year). This includes:
- Employment income (Spanish and foreign)
- Self-employment income
- Pension income (UK state pension, private pensions, SIPPs)
- Rental income (from Spanish and UK properties)
- Investment income (dividends, interest, capital gains)
- Any other income
Spanish income tax rates are progressive: 19% on the first €12,450, up to 47% on income over €300,000. Savings income (dividends, interest, capital gains) is taxed at 19%-28%.
Wealth Tax
You must declare your worldwide net wealth and pay the Impuesto sobre el Patrimonio if it exceeds the thresholds (€700,000 per person, with a €300,000 main home exemption). Regional rates and exemptions apply.
Modelo 720: Overseas Asset Declaration
If you hold overseas assets worth more than €50,000 in any of three categories (bank accounts, investments, property), you must file the Modelo 720 by 31 March each year. This is an information return, not a tax return, but failure to file carries penalties.
Modelo 721: Overseas Cryptocurrency Declaration
Since 2024, if you hold cryptocurrency on overseas exchanges worth more than €50,000, you must also file the Modelo 721.
Exit Tax: If You Leave Spain
Since 2015, Spain has had an exit tax (impuesto de salida) that applies when a Spanish tax resident who has been resident for at least 10 of the previous 15 years leaves Spain. The exit tax applies to unrealised capital gains on:
- Shares and participations worth more than €4 million, or
- Holdings representing more than 25% of a company worth over €1 million
The exit tax is calculated as if you had sold these assets on the day before you ceased to be Spanish tax resident. The tax rate is the savings income rate (19%-28%).
For most UK buyers, the exit tax is not relevant — it applies to large shareholders leaving Spain, not to typical property owners or retirees. But if you hold significant share portfolios or company stakes, it is worth discussing with your tax adviser before committing to Spanish tax residency.
Related Reading
Practical Planning for Dual-Country Living
Many UK property owners want to spend significant time in Spain without becoming Spanish tax resident. Here are practical planning strategies:
Counting Days Carefully
Keep a detailed diary of your days in each country. Use a smartphone app or spreadsheet. Remember that in Spain, temporary absences may count as days present, so be conservative — aim for no more than 170 days in Spain to give yourself a safety margin.
Maintaining UK Ties
Strong UK ties support your claim to UK tax residency if challenged by Spain:
- Keep your UK property as your main home
- Remain registered with a UK GP and dentist
- Maintain UK club memberships and social connections
- Keep your UK bank accounts active with regular transactions
- Ensure you pass the UK Statutory Residence Test as a UK resident
Avoiding the Family Tie Trap
If your partner wants to live in Spain full-time, you have a problem. The family tie creates a strong presumption of Spanish residency for both of you. Options include:
- Both of you limiting time in Spain to below 183 days
- Legal separation (drastic but effective for tax purposes)
- Accepting Spanish tax residency and planning your finances accordingly
Getting Professional Advice
Tax residency is one of the most consequential financial decisions you can make. The difference between being a UK tax resident with a Spanish holiday home and being a Spanish tax resident with worldwide obligations can amount to tens of thousands of euros per year. Engage a tax adviser who understands both UK and Spanish tax law before you commit to spending extended periods in Spain.
The 183-day rule is simple in concept but complex in application. Combined with the centre of interests and family tie tests, it creates a framework that requires careful attention. Do not assume you can spend 6 months in Spain without tax consequences — plan your time, keep records, and seek professional advice.
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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.