Digital Nomad Visa · Spain · Requirements 2026

Spain Digital Nomad Visa Requirements 2026 — What You Actually Need

The DNV is the most flexible long-stay visa Spain has ever offered remote workers — but the eligibility rules are specific, and small gaps in your paperwork are the single biggest reason applications are rejected. This page walks through every requirement — income, employment, documents, insurance, personal record — exactly as the UGE and Spanish consulates assess them in 2026.

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Digital Nomad Visa Spain — Full Representation

Fixed Fee · All-Inclusive
€1,899main applicant

End-to-end DNV representation from eligibility check to TIE card. Paid in three instalments — no hourly billing, no mid-case surprises.

Payment 1 — on engagement€500
Payment 2 — on filing€500
Payment 3 — on approval / TIE€899
Start Your Application in the DNV Dashboard

What's Included

  • Dedicated case manager + immigration specialist
  • Full eligibility review and route selection (UGE or consulate)
  • Document pack assembled and reviewed to UGE standards
  • All UGE forms prepared and filed via Mercurio
  • Sworn translations covered up to €200
  • Government fees (Tasa 790-052) handled by us
  • Apostille coordination & document legalisation
  • Free administrative appeal if rejected on form
  • Direct access to your case manager via the DNV Dashboard
Applying as a family? Dependents priced from €499 each with multi-applicant discounts. Open the DNV Dashboard for a tailored quote.
The DNV Dashboard

Run Your Whole DNV Application Through One Online Dashboard

The Platinum Legal Spain DNV Dashboard is where your case lives. Upload documents, track apostille progress, message your case manager, sign paperwork electronically, view your Mercurio case number and see your UGE decision — all in one secure place. No chasing emails, no lost attachments, no guessing what happens next.

The DNV in One Paragraph — So You Know Where You Stand

Spain's Digital Nomad Visa (officially the Visado para Teletrabajo de Carácter Internacional) was introduced under the Startups Law in January 2023. It lets non-EU remote workers and remote freelancers live in Spain for up to three years initially, renewable for two more, while continuing to earn from non-Spanish clients or employers. It is faster than almost any other Spanish residency pathway — the UGE unit in Madrid decides cases in around twenty working days — and it unlocks the Beckham Law flat tax rate of 24% for up to six years. But the trade-off is that the evidential standards are stricter than the older residency routes. Every single requirement below has to be evidenced on paper, with apostilles and sworn translations where applicable, and the UGE will reject applications where evidence is incomplete rather than request more information.

What follows is the full working requirement set our immigration specialists use when we assess a case. It is written for real applicants — employees of foreign companies, freelancers with foreign clients, and mixed-income remote workers — not for immigration lawyers. If you are in a hurry, the free eligibility quiz will check your situation against the same criteria in under five minutes.

Important — 2026 Update

In late 2025 the UGE tightened how it verifies employer letters and freelance contracts. Self-certified statements from founders of their own companies are now routinely queried, and UGE is checking public company records (UK Companies House, US state filings, etc.) against declared revenue. If you're a founder-operator of your own business, the requirements set below needs careful handling — please read the Employees vs Freelancers section further down.

Who Qualifies

Who the Digital Nomad Visa Is Actually For

The DNV exists for people whose income does not come from the Spanish economy. If your work is remote, your clients or employer are outside Spain, and you meet the income and experience thresholds, you are in scope.

Route A · Employees

Remote Employee of a Non-Spanish Company

You hold a formal employment contract with a company registered outside Spain. The company authorises you to perform your work remotely from Spain, and the employer-employee relationship has been ongoing for at least three months before you apply.

  • Company registered and trading outside Spain
  • Employment contract of at least 3 months' duration with the same employer
  • Company has been trading for at least one year
  • Written authorisation from employer to work remotely from Spain
  • No more than 20% of your income from Spanish clients
Route B · Freelancers

Self-Employed / Freelance Remote Worker

You work as an independent contractor or freelancer for one or more non-Spanish clients. The client base does not need to be exclusively foreign, but the vast majority of your income must originate outside Spain.

  • Active commercial relationship with at least one non-Spanish client
  • Existing freelance activity for at least 3 months before application
  • Client companies trading and registered for 1+ year
  • Contracts permitting remote work from Spain
  • Maximum 20% Spanish-sourced income

The Three-Month Rule That Catches People Out

The most common misunderstanding about eligibility is the three-month employment or freelance continuity rule. The three months runs to the date you submit your application, not to the date you start work in Spain. If you have just changed employer or just started freelancing, you will not qualify until the relationship has existed for three clear months — and the UGE will check payslips, invoices and bank deposits to verify it. This is one of the three most frequent reasons we see UGE rejections in 2026.

Financial Requirements

Spain DNV Income Requirements for 2026

The DNV income floor is pegged to the Spanish minimum wage (SMI). The main applicant must earn at least 200% of the SMI, with additional amounts required for each dependent. In 2026 the base figure works out as follows — these are the amounts you need to evidence, gross, calculated as a 12-month average.

ApplicantMinimum Monthly IncomeMinimum Annual IncomeCalculated As
Main applicant€2,850 / month approx€34,200 / year approx200% of Spanish SMI
First adult dependent (spouse / partner)€1,069 / month approx€12,828 / year approx75% of Spanish SMI
Each additional dependent (incl. children)€356 / month approx€4,272 / year approx25% of Spanish SMI
Family of 4 (2 adults + 2 children)€4,631 / month approx€55,572 / year approxSum of all above

These are indicative 2026 figures. The SMI typically moves each February when the Spanish government sets the new annual minimum wage — the percentages stay the same, but the underlying SMI figure changes, which is why official documentation can look slightly different between applications filed in January and those filed in April. Our eligibility quiz uses the current live figures.

Income can be evidenced in euros or any major foreign currency — USD, GBP, CAD, AUD, CHF and so on — but UGE uses its own conversion reference rate and will reject applications that are only marginally above the threshold on the date of submission. We always recommend applicants have at least 10% headroom above the minimum before we file, so that short-term currency movement does not tip the case below the line.

What Counts as Income

Salary from a foreign employer counts in full. Freelance income counts if backed by contracts, invoices and bank deposits. Dividends from your own company count but are scrutinised — the UGE looks at whether the dividend is sustainable or a one-off. Passive income, rental income and investment income do not count towards the DNV income test (they count towards the NLV instead). Cryptocurrency income is not generally accepted by UGE unless paid through a regulated exchange and evidenced with clean bank deposits.

Document Checklist

The Full DNV Document Set — UGE Route

Every DNV application filed through the UGE requires the same core pack. Exactly which documents apply depends on whether you're filing as an employee or a freelancer, but the base list is identical. Missing, outdated, unapostilled or poorly translated documents are the single biggest reason for refusal — more than income gaps, more than criminal record issues, more than insurance problems.

01

Valid Passport

Minimum 12 months validity remaining at the date of application, with at least two blank pages. Copies of every used page.

02

EX-05 Application Form

The Spanish immigration application form specific to the DNV, completed in Spanish with accurate address, NIE (if held) and employment data.

03

Modelo 790 (Tasa 052) Fee Proof

Proof of the UGE state fee paid via the Agencia Tributaria portal. Receipt must be attached to the file at submission.

04

Criminal Record Certificate

From every country you have lived in during the last 5 years. Issued within 90 days of application. Apostilled, then sworn-translated into Spanish.

05

Private Health Insurance

Full coverage in Spain from day one, with no co-payments and no deductibles. Certificate must quote the DNV regulation explicitly.

06

Employment / Freelance Evidence

Employer letter (Route A) or client contracts (Route B), plus three months of payslips or invoices and matching bank statements.

07

Company Trading Evidence

Proof the employer or main client has been trading for at least one year — incorporation documents, Companies House filings, or equivalent.

08

Qualifications or 3+ Years' Experience

Either a university-level qualification relevant to the role, or documented professional experience of three years or more.

09

Social Security Coverage Proof

A1 certificate (EU employers) or equivalent social-security coverage certificate, or registration as Spanish autónomo if filing as freelancer.

Apostille & Sworn Translation

Any public document issued outside Spain — criminal records, birth certificates, marriage certificates, educational diplomas — must carry a Hague Apostille and be accompanied by a sworn translation into Spanish by a translator certified by the Spanish Ministry of Foreign Affairs. Your UK or US notary public is not sufficient. We handle apostille and sworn translation end-to-end as part of our DNV service.

Route-Specific Requirements

Employees vs Freelancers — What Changes

The DNV is a single visa, but the evidence the UGE wants depends on which route you qualify under. The practical difference is significant, and mixing up the two routes is one of the fastest ways to get rejected.

Employees

If You Are Employed by a Non-Spanish Company

The UGE's focus is on verifying that the employment relationship is real, ongoing, and that your employer has formally authorised your move to Spain. Founders of their own companies are treated separately — see the callout below.

  • Employer letter on company letterhead, naming you as employee
  • Position title, date of hire (min 3 months ago), gross salary
  • Explicit authorisation to work remotely from Spain
  • Statement that the relationship can be maintained 100% remotely
  • Company registration and proof of 1+ year of trading
  • 3 months of payslips + matching bank deposits
  • A1 social security certificate if EU employer
Freelancers

If You Are Self-Employed or a Contractor

The UGE will read every contract in detail. Short contracts, one-off projects, or client relationships less than three months old will not qualify. Minimum one non-Spanish client with meaningful revenue.

  • Signed service contract(s) with each non-Spanish client
  • Contracts must permit remote work from Spain
  • Client companies trading and registered for 1+ year
  • 3+ months of invoices + matching bank deposits
  • Income split showing <20% Spanish-sourced revenue
  • Registration as autónomo in Spain at activation stage
  • Tax residency / non-residency certificate from home country
Founders of Their Own Companies

If you are a shareholder, director or controlling owner of the company that employs you, the UGE treats you as a freelancer for evidential purposes, not as an employee — regardless of how your payroll is structured. You will need to evidence the company's independent trading history, separate client contracts, and that the revenue flowing to you is commercial rather than distributive. This is the single trickiest DNV profile in 2026, and the one we see rejected most often without specialist help.

Personal & Professional

Clean Record, Relevant Experience, No Recent Schengen Refusals

Beyond income and employment, the UGE looks at your personal suitability and your professional credibility for the role you say you perform. Three areas matter — and none of them are negotiable.

01 · Record

No Criminal Record

Clean record for the last 5 years in every country you've lived in. Certain historic convictions may be overlooked; anything recent or serious will refuse the case.

02 · Schengen

No Prior Schengen Refusals

Any previous refusal, deportation, or overstay within the Schengen area must be disclosed. Non-disclosure is itself a ground for refusal.

03 · Experience

Relevant Qualifications

A university-level qualification linked to your role, or alternatively three full years of documented professional experience in the field.

04 · Overlap

No Overlapping Residency

You cannot already be a Spanish tax resident and apply for the DNV "from inside". You can apply in-country on a tourist stamp, but not as an existing resident.

Health Insurance

DNV Spain Health Insurance Requirements

Private health insurance is mandatory for every DNV applicant and every dependent, from day one of residency. The standards are higher than most off-the-shelf travel policies offer, and the wrong policy is a very common rejection reason.

Minimum Standard

What Your Policy Must Include

  • Full coverage anywhere in Spain
  • No co-payments (zero copay on GP and specialist visits)
  • No waiting periods for major treatment
  • Hospitalisation and surgery covered in full
  • Coverage equivalent to Spanish public system
  • Certificate explicitly quoting the DNV regulation
  • Policy active from date of entry to Spain
Our Insurance Partners

DNV-Compliant Policies Our Clients Use

We work with two specialist partners whose policies match UGE requirements out of the box, and whose certificates are accepted without issue in 2026 applications. Dependents can be added to the same master policy, and both partners can issue a compliant certificate inside 24 hours.

  • 247 Expat Insurance — DNV-compliant policies for non-EU applicants
  • Sanitas Health Insurance (part of Bupa) — UGE-approved family cover in Spain
  • Policies activate on residency start date, not on quote date
  • Premium refund available on some products if your DNV is refused
How We Handle Requirements

How Platinum Legal Spain Verifies Your Case

Every DNV case we take on goes through the same four-stage requirements process — before we file a single document with UGE or the consulate.

1

Eligibility Screen

Free quiz or paid consultation. We confirm which DNV route you qualify under and flag anything that would cause a refusal before you commit to the process.

2

Document Mapping

Personalised document list based on your nationality, family structure, employer and income profile. Apostille and sworn translation organised on your behalf.

3

File Review

Before submission a specialist immigration lawyer reviews the entire file. Gaps, mistranslations, expired documents or weak evidence are fixed — not submitted in hope.

4

UGE / Consulate Filing

We submit via UGE (in-country) or your home-country Spanish consulate, track the case through to decision, and handle the TIE appointment once approved.

What Gets DNVs Refused

The Six Reasons DNV Applications Are Rejected in 2026

These are the recurring reasons we see the UGE refuse cases in the current round of decisions. None of them are unfixable — but all of them are avoidable with proper preparation.

1

Income Too Close to the Floor

Applications filed at €2,851/month with no buffer are routinely refused when UGE's conversion rate moves against the applicant. Always file with meaningful headroom.

2

Contract or Employment Under 3 Months

The 3-month continuity rule is hard. Applications filed at 2 months 28 days are refused, not deferred. Wait until the rule is cleanly met.

3

Founder-Operator Evidence Gaps

Self-certified letters where the applicant is the company's only director no longer pass. UGE wants independent trading evidence and commercial client activity.

4

Non-Compliant Health Insurance

Travel insurance, short-term policies, or policies with co-payments do not meet the DNV standard. Always use a specialist DNV policy.

5

Apostille or Translation Errors

Notarised-only documents, out-of-date apostilles, or translations by non-certified translators are treated as missing by UGE.

6

Undeclared Schengen History

Any past refusal, overstay or deportation must be disclosed. The Schengen Information System is checked on every application. Non-disclosure refuses the case on its own.

Why Instruct Us

Why Remote Workers Choose Platinum Legal Spain for the DNV

A specialist English-speaking immigration team who handle DNV cases every week — not occasionally, not alongside property law or divorce. Built for English-speaking applicants who expect to run the process online.

01

DNV Specialists, Not Generalists

Our immigration team handles DNV, NLV and Student Visa cases full-time. We track every UGE policy shift and know how individual consulates interpret the rules.

02

Fixed Fee, Agreed Up Front

We quote the full application fee in writing before you commit. No hourly billing, no document-by-document charges. Dependents quoted separately and clearly.

03

Online Portal, End-to-End

Upload documents, message your specialist, track every stage. Works for applicants still in the UK, US, Canada, Australia — or already in Spain on a tourist stamp.

Who's on Your Case

Every DNV case at Platinum Legal Spain is handled by our specialist English-speaking immigration team. Our immigration specialists often have more hands-on UGE and consulate experience than visa-practising solicitors elsewhere in Spain — because DNV work is what they do every single week.

Common Questions

DNV Requirements — FAQs

What is the DNV income requirement for 2026?
The main applicant must evidence at least 200% of the Spanish minimum wage — approximately €2,850 per month or €34,200 per year in 2026. A first adult dependent adds 75% of the SMI (around €1,069/month), and each further dependent adds 25% (around €356/month). The figures move each February when the Spanish government resets the SMI, so always verify with live numbers before applying.
Can I apply for the DNV from inside Spain on a tourist stamp?
Yes — and for most applicants this is the faster route. Entering Spain on your Schengen tourist allowance and filing with the UGE unit in Madrid gives you a decision in approximately 20 working days, compared with several months at a consulate abroad. Your immigration specialist will confirm whether UGE or consulate filing is the better route for your case during the eligibility review.
Can I apply for the DNV if I own my own company?
Yes, but the UGE treats founder-operators as freelancers rather than employees, regardless of how your payroll is structured internally. You need to evidence that the company has been trading independently for at least one year, that it has real client activity, and that the income flowing to you is commercial revenue rather than a self-paid distribution. This is the trickiest DNV profile in 2026 — self-certified employer letters from your own company will not pass.
Does my employer need to register in Spain?
No. The whole point of the DNV is that your employer stays outside Spain. What the employer does need to do is (i) authorise you in writing to work remotely from Spain, (ii) ensure they have at least one year of trading history, and (iii) if EU-based, provide an A1 social security certificate. US and UK employers have different social-security positions — we handle the structuring as part of the application.
Is a degree mandatory for the DNV?
No. You need either a university-level qualification relevant to the role, or documented professional experience of at least three years. The "three years' experience" route is commonly used by self-taught developers, senior freelancers and career-changers, and is accepted by UGE when evidenced with employment records, client letters and work history.
Can I bring my family on the DNV?
Yes. A spouse or civil partner and children under 18 (or over 18 if financially dependent) can be included on the same application or added later. Each dependent increases the income requirement — see the income table above — and each dependent must be covered by the same compliant health insurance policy. Unmarried partners are accepted but need to evidence a stable registered partnership or documented cohabitation.
What happens if my DNV is refused?
A DNV refusal is not final. You have one month to file an recurso de reposición (administrative appeal) or two months to file in the administrative courts. Most refusals we see are based on fixable evidential gaps rather than substantive ineligibility — our immigration team reviews the refusal, identifies the specific ground, and either appeals or refiles with corrected evidence.
Does the DNV lead to permanent residency?
Yes. The initial DNV is granted for three years, renewable for two more. After five years of continuous legal residency you can apply for permanent residency (residencia de larga duración), and after ten years — or two years if you are from a Hispano-American country — for Spanish citizenship.
What's the fastest the DNV can be approved?
UGE targets twenty working days for a decision on a complete, well-prepared file. Consulate processing times vary significantly — London and New York consulates typically run 6–10 weeks, while some smaller consulates run longer. The best way to control speed is to file a complete file the first time: incomplete files are the single biggest cause of delay.

Match Your Situation Against the DNV Requirements

Our free eligibility quiz runs through every requirement on this page in under five minutes. If you qualify, book a consultation with one of our immigration specialists and we'll walk you through the full process end-to-end.