Most "DNV cost" pages online quote the government fee and stop there. That's a small fraction of what you'll actually spend. This page breaks down every real cost in a 2026 Digital Nomad Visa application — government fees, apostilles, sworn translations, health insurance, autónomo set-up and legal fees — for single applicants, couples and families. No surprises, no hidden line items.
Everything from eligibility review to TIE collection, agreed in writing before we start. Paid in three instalments — no hourly billing, no mid-case surprises.
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 cheapest DNV application anyone can file — a single, healthy applicant, applying through UGE in Spain, with documents already apostilled, clean criminal record, own translations, and no legal help — costs in the low hundreds of euros. The cheapest application anyone should file, if they value their time and don't want to get refused, costs quite a bit more than that. Most of the difference is not the government fee, which is small. Most of the difference is in the apostilles and sworn translations (which cannot be avoided), the compliant private health insurance (which is mandatory), and the legal representation fee if you choose to use a specialist firm.
The reality is that the government part of a DNV application is one of the cheapest pieces of residency paperwork in Europe. The document preparation and compliance part is where the real cost sits — and this is the part where a specialist firm either saves you money (by preventing a refusal that would cost you the whole application) or costs you money (if you pick a firm that doesn't actually specialise in DNV cases). On this page we break down every line item, show you what a single applicant's all-in budget looks like, what a couple's looks like, what a family of four looks like, and where the real savings (and risks) sit.
All figures below are 2026 indicative numbers. Government fees and some notarial costs are set by the Spanish state and are therefore reliable. Third-party costs (apostille, translation, courier, insurance) vary by your home country and provider — we've used typical mid-market UK and US pricing. Legal fees for Platinum Legal Spain are always fixed and quoted in writing based on your specific case — we don't publish specific legal fees on this page because every case has a slightly different scope.
The real hidden cost of a DNV application is a refusal. If your file is refused for an evidential reason — a missing apostille, an out-of-date criminal record, a non-compliant insurance policy — you don't get your government fee back, you don't get your translation costs back, and you have to start the apostille and sworn-translation cycle again. A refused DNV typically costs an applicant 60–80% more than a properly-prepared one, before you even factor in the lost time. Budget accordingly.
Every euro you spend on a DNV application falls into one of four buckets. Some are unavoidable, some vary by provider, and some are optional.
The UGE / consulate fee (Tasa 052), the TIE card fee (Tasa 790-012), and your residency card issuance. Small in absolute terms but mandatory for every applicant.
Every foreign document needs a Hague Apostille and a sworn translation by a Ministerio-certified translator. Scales by document count, not by income.
DNV-compliant annual policy for the main applicant plus every dependent. Cost depends on age, family size and provider — not on income.
Specialist legal fees for end-to-end handling of the application, document preparation, UGE or consulate filing, TIE, and Beckham Law registration.
These fees are set by the Spanish government and are the same for every applicant, regardless of nationality or family size. UGE (in-country) and consulate (from abroad) fees differ slightly but sit in the same range.
| Government Fee | Who Pays | Typical 2026 Amount | Paid To |
|---|---|---|---|
| Visa Fee (Tasa 052) | Main applicant + each dependent | Low three-figure per person | UGE / Spanish Consulate |
| TIE Card Fee (Tasa 790-012) | Every approved applicant | Low two-figure per person | Spanish National Police |
| Fingerprinting / Appointment | Every approved applicant | Nominal / sometimes free | Extranjería Office |
| NIE Number (if separate) | Each applicant without an existing NIE | Low two-figure per person | Spanish National Police |
| Autónomo Registration (freelancers only) | Freelance DNV applicants | Social-security based | Tesorería General / Agencia Tributaria |
| Government total (single applicant, employee route) | — | Low-to-mid three-figure total | — |
Government fees are paid through the Agencia Tributaria portal using Modelo 790 forms. Receipts must be attached to the file at submission. We handle this on behalf of clients as part of the representation fee — most applicants never interact with the portal directly.
These costs are not Spanish government fees — they're charged by the authorities and translators in your home country, or by Spanish sworn translators. They are mandatory, and they scale with the number of documents in your file.
| Document Cost | Typical Count | Typical 2026 Unit Cost | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| UK Apostille (FCDO) | 1–3 documents | Low two-figure per doc, express service higher | Criminal record, marriage cert, diploma |
| US Apostille (Secretary of State) | 1–3 documents | Low two-figure per doc, state-dependent | Federal docs via US State Dept (higher) |
| Sworn Translation (Spain) | 1 per foreign document | Mid two-figure per page typical | Must be Ministerio-certified translator |
| Criminal Record Certificate | 1 per country lived in (5 yrs) | Low two-figure per country | ACRO (UK), FBI (US), RCMP (Canada) etc. |
| Courier / Secure Document Handling | 1–2 shipments | Low two-figure per shipment | Tracked international courier |
| Document-prep total (single applicant) | — | Mid three-figure to low four-figure | Depends on nationality and family |
Two frequent mistakes: (1) using a notary-only document instead of an apostille — notarisation does not replace apostille for Hague Convention member countries, and UGE will reject the file; (2) using a UK or US translator rather than a Ministerio-certified sworn translator based in Spain — foreign translators cannot produce a traducción jurada, and UGE will not accept their work. Both mistakes mean redoing the document at full cost plus losing your original government fee.
Private health insurance is mandatory for the DNV, and the wrong policy is a top-three rejection reason. Cost depends on age band, family size, and whether you choose a basic DNV-compliant policy or a higher-specification international plan.
Meets the DNV regulation — no co-pays, no waiting periods, full Spanish coverage, hospitalisation and surgery included. Suitable for applicants in good health who want to meet UGE requirements without premium international cover.
International insurers (Cigna Global, Bupa Global, Allianz Care, Foyer) offer DNV-compliant cover alongside wider global coverage and higher annual limits. Preferred by applicants who travel frequently or want the same provider they used in the UK or US.
We work with two specialist partners whose DNV-compliant policies are accepted by the UGE without issue — 247 Expat Insurance (DNV-compliant cover for non-EU applicants) and Sanitas Health Insurance (part of Bupa) (Spain-based UGE-approved policies). Both offer premium refunds on some products if your DNV is refused — worth asking about when you quote.
These are indicative all-in budgets (government + documents + insurance + representation) for three typical 2026 applicant profiles. Legal fees shown as "fixed fee quoted" — specific figures depend on scope and are always confirmed in writing before we begin work.
British remote employee of a US tech company, healthy, mid-30s. No dependents. Applies via the Spanish Consulate in London. Needs one criminal record, one diploma, one employer letter, all apostilled and sworn-translated. DNV-compliant annual insurance. Fixed-fee legal representation.
Main applicant (freelancer) plus spouse as dependent. Enter Spain on tourist stamps, file with UGE for 20-working-day decision. Double the apostille and translation work, double the insurance premium, single representation fee with dependent add-on. No children.
US employee relocating from New York with spouse and two children aged 8 and 11. Four apostilles, four criminal records (adult-only), four insurance policies, dependents added to the master application. Beckham Law registration for main applicant. Legal representation priced per applicant.
Because "the legal fee" for a DNV case is not one number. A single employee with clean documents is a different scope to a founder-operator with a complex structure, a family of five, or an applicant with a historic Schengen refusal that needs a letter of explanation. We quote every case in writing before we start work, we don't charge by the hour, and we never increase the fee mid-case unless the scope changes and you agree in writing.
Every quote follows the same four-step process — so you know exactly what you're paying for, and what isn't included, before you commit.
Free quiz or paid consultation confirms your DNV route. If you're not eligible yet, we say so — no pressure to instruct.
We map your document set, family size, Beckham Law status, and whether UGE or consulate filing applies. This drives the fee.
A line-by-line fee quote in writing, broken down by applicant and workstream. Fixed. No hourly billing, no surcharges.
Once agreed, we issue a retainer, open your portal access, and start the document pack. Fee is locked for the case.
These are the costs that routinely catch applicants off guard — either because they're not mentioned in the consulate guidance, or because they only hit once the case is underway.
Freelance DNV holders must register as autónomo and pay monthly social security contributions from activation. First-year flat-rate scheme helps, but the ongoing cost is real and permanent.
Modelo 149 to opt into the Beckham Law regime is a separate filing with a short six-month window after residency. If you miss it you lose the 24% flat rate. Fee for the filing is additional but well worth it.
US citizens and non-EU applicants with complex tax positions often need a Spanish fiscal representative post-residency. Separate from DNV legal fees.
Registering at your Spanish address (empadronamiento), getting a digital certificate, and local admin. Minor individually but real.
Your first TIE is valid three years. Renewal is a separate process with its own government fee and legal scope — budget for it now.
If the file is refused, the government fee isn't refunded and apostille / translation cycles have to start again. The best hedge against this cost is proper preparation the first time.
A specialist English-speaking immigration team who handle DNV cases every week. Built for English-speaking applicants who expect transparency on fees.
You never see an hourly invoice from us. Every quote is fixed, written, and locked for the case. Scope changes are discussed and agreed before any additional fee applies.
DNV work is a weekly activity for our immigration team, not a side project. We know which consulate interprets which rule in what way — and we know where UGE has tightened in 2025/2026.
You get a full cost roadmap — government fees, document costs, insurance estimate, legal fee — before you commit. No line items appear for the first time in an invoice.
Every DNV case at Platinum Legal Spain is handled by our specialist English-speaking immigration team. Fees always reflect the actual work — not a flat figure designed for the easiest cases.
Book a short consultation with one of our immigration specialists. We'll map the scope, confirm your route, and send you a line-by-line fixed-fee quote before you commit to anything.