Register as a self-employed freelancer (autónomo), invoice international clients, and hold a 3-year Digital Nomad Visa. The fastest path: 20 working days via UGE, Beckham Law tax eligibility, and complete guidance through the autónomo setup, quarterly filings, and Beckham election under Spain's Startup Law 28/2022.
Autónomo registration, visa approval, and Beckham Law eligibility—all in one integrated journey.
The Digital Nomad Visa is Spain's legal framework for self-employed freelancers and remote workers earning from non-Spanish clients. Unlike tourist visas or informal remote work, the DNV gives you a 3-year residence permit, work authorization, and access to Spain's legendary Beckham Law: a 24% flat tax on Spanish-source income for 6 years.
Freelancers typically register as an autónomo (self-employed), a status that is both tax and social security registration. The DNV complements autónomo status by granting residence and work permission. Together, they form a complete legal and tax framework.
Freelancer route: You register as an autónomo, invoice clients, and hold the DNV visa. Your income is taxed under your personal tax return (Declaración de la Renta, IRP Form 100 or Beckham election Form 151). You pay a flat monthly social security cuota (tarifa plana €80 first year, then escalating).
Employee route: You work for a non-Spanish employer who pays your salary via PAYE. You may also register as autónomo if you run a side business. Beckham Law applies similarly.
This page covers the complete journey for freelancers and self-employed professionals: autónomo registration via Modelo 036/037, quarterly VAT and tax filings, invoicing international clients, Beckham Law eligibility under Startup Law 28/2022, and the DNV visa process itself. By the end, you'll have a 3-year residence visa, work authorization, and a tax-efficient structure for your business.
The DNV requires approximately €2,646 monthly gross income (or roughly €26,400 annually), calculated as 200% of Spain's Interpersonal Minimum Wage (SMI) across 14 monthly payments. This figure adjusts annually with the SMI; we recommend verifying the exact threshold with your visa adviser at application time.
For freelancers, this is averaged over at least 3 months of invoice history with non-Spanish clients. Most freelancers submit 6–12 months of invoices and recent tax returns to demonstrate consistent income.
Eight core criteria you must meet to qualify for the Digital Nomad Visa as a freelancer.
Bachelor's degree in any field, or at least 3 years of professional experience in your sector. Verifiable by certificates, contracts, or portfolio.
Minimum ~€2,646/month gross (200% SMI), averaged over 3+ months of invoices or tax returns. Exact amount updates annually with Spanish minimum wage.
At least 80% of your income from non-Spanish clients. The remaining 20% may come from Spanish clients if needed, but international work is the rule.
At least 3 months of documented contracts or invoices with non-Spanish clients. Contracts should show scope, rates, and payment frequency. Bank statements confirm receipt.
Your passport must be valid for the full 3-year visa term (ideally 6+ months remaining). Non-EU nationals must verify specific passport rules with the consulate.
No criminal convictions relevant to fraud, trafficking, or serious offences. You'll submit an apostilled, sworn-translated police certificate at UGE or consulate application.
Compulsory private health insurance without copayments (~€1,000–€1,500/year). Must cover Spain and your home country or be portable globally.
Open a Spanish bank account before or immediately after visa approval. Required for visa maintenance, autónomo registration, and receiving client payments.
How to register as self-employed and understand your monthly, quarterly, and annual obligations.
An autónomo is a self-employed individual in Spain. Registration is both a tax status (for income tax filing) and a social security status (for health insurance and retirement). Unlike a company (SL) with separate legal identity, an autónomo is you personally, running a business.
To register as autónomo, you file Modelo 036 (notification form) or Modelo 037 (self-employed census declaration) with the Spanish tax authority (Agencia Tributaria). You'll need:
You can file online via Sede Electrónica (electronic headquarters) or through a tax adviser. Most advisers handle this for you. Processing is typically immediate or within 1–2 weeks.
Upon registration, you become affiliated with Spain's social security system (Régimen Especial de Trabajadores Autónomos, RETA). You pay a mandatory monthly fee called cuota:
The cuota funds health insurance, unemployment insurance (for autónomos), and retirement (Régimen Especial). You pay it even if you make no profit in a given month—it's mandatory.
If you're a non-EU national, you must obtain a NIE (Número de Identidad de Extranjero) before registering as autónomo. EU nationals can use passport details, but a NIE is recommended. Apply at your local foreigners' police station (comisaría de extranjería) or via UGE if in Spain. Processing: 1–2 weeks typically.
You can register as autónomo before your DNV visa is approved (if you're already in Spain), or after approval (if applying from your home country). Most freelancers register once they have their NIE and a Spanish address. Some visa advisers recommend registering after UGE approval, while others prefer the paperwork to be complete before visa submission—consult your adviser.
A complete breakdown of every recurring obligation and deadline for autónomos in Spain.
Deadline: 1st–30th of the following month | Via: Direct bank transfer (domiciliación) or online payment
You pay your monthly cuota automatically or manually each month. Year 1 is €80/month (tarifa plana). Years 2+ scale based on your declared gross income. Most autónomos set up automatic bank transfer to avoid missing payments.
Deadline: 20 days after quarter end (Q1: April 20, Q2: July 20, Q3: Oct 20, Q4: Jan 20)
If you're registered for VAT (standard for invoicing non-EU clients), you file Modelo 303 quarterly. This form reports your VAT charged and VAT recovered. Most international freelancers with non-EU clients are VAT-exempt on invoices outside the EU (reverse charge rule), so you typically report zero VAT—but you still file the form to report this.
Inside EU B2B: If invoicing EU businesses, you use reverse charge: you don't charge VAT; the buyer's country taxes it. You still file Modelo 303 and declare the services in Modelo 349 (intra-EU services list).
Deadline: 20 days after quarter end (same dates as Modelo 303)
Spain requires autónomos to make quarterly income tax payments on account (pagos a cuenta) using either:
Most freelancers use Modelo 130, which is simpler: you calculate net income (revenue minus deductible expenses), multiply by 20%, and pay that amount. These payments are credited against your final annual tax return (Form 100 or Beckham election Form 151).
Deadline: June 30 (filing period typically May 1–June 30) | Via: Online via Agencia Tributaria
You file your annual personal tax return (Impuesto sobre la Renta de las Personas Físicas, IRPF) using:
Your quarterly Modelo 130 payments are credited. If you overpaid, you get a refund; if you underpaid, you owe the difference. Most advisers handle this for you.
Deadline: 20 days after quarter end (or 10 days if no activity)
If you invoice EU businesses (B2B), you must declare these services in Modelo 349. This is a list of intra-EU services provided, showing the buyer's VAT number and amount. It's a reporting requirement; you don't charge VAT (reverse charge applies).
How VAT rules, reverse charge, and cross-border invoicing work for Spanish autónomos.
When you invoice clients outside the EU, your invoices are VAT-exempt. Spain does not charge VAT on services provided to non-EU entities. Your invoice shows 0% VAT (or explicitly states "Reverse Charge – Non-EU B2C" or similar). You report these services on your Modelo 303 (VAT quarterly return) as zero-VAT transactions, and you report the income on your annual Declaración de la Renta (Form 100 or Beckham 151).
Example: A UK copywriter invoices a US client €2,000 for writing services. Invoice shows 0% VAT; she reports €2,000 as professional income on her tax return.
When you invoice an EU business (B2B), reverse charge applies. You do not charge VAT; the buyer's country charges it to them. Your invoice shows 0% VAT and states "Reverse Charge – Intra-EU B2B Service" or similar. You declare this transaction on your Modelo 349 (intra-EU services list), including the buyer's VAT number and the amount in euros.
Example: A French developer invoices a German software company €3,000 for development work. Invoice shows 0% VAT, reverse charge noted. The developer reports this €3,000 on Modelo 349. Germany will assess VAT to the buyer.
If your EU client is a consumer (not a business), you charge Spanish VAT (21%). This is rare for B2B freelancers but common for subscription services or digital products sold to individuals. You report VAT charged on Modelo 303 and pay the VAT quarterly to Spain.
If you invoice Spanish clients, standard VAT rules apply: you charge 21% VAT (unless your service qualifies for a lower rate). However, remember the DNV requires at least 80% of income from non-Spanish sources. Invoicing more than 20% Spanish clients risks visa compliance issues.
Spanish law requires invoices to include:
Keep digital or paper copies for 6 years (Spanish legal requirement). Your accounting software or invoicing tool should generate compliant invoices automatically.
If your foreign clients pay you as a contractor, there's typically no permanent establishment (PE) risk for their tax residency, provided you're independent and not embedded in their operations. However, if you're regularly on-site at a client's office or perceived as part of their operation, both you and the client could face PE and withholding tax issues. Discuss with your tax adviser if you have a long-term on-site role in another country.
24% flat tax eligibility for autónomos and what changed with Spain's Startup Law.
Beckham Law (formally, Régimen de Tributación de No Residentes con Renta en España, or non-resident tax regime) allows new Spanish tax residents to elect a flat 24% income tax on Spanish-source income for 6 years. This is significantly lower than Spain's progressive rates (19%–45%).
Spanish-source income for autónomos includes: Revenue from services you provide in or from Spain (invoicing activity), professional activity conducted from Spain, capital gains on Spanish property, and Spanish rental income.
Traditionally, Beckham Law was for employees. Spain's Startup Law 28/2022 (amended further in 2023) extended Beckham eligibility to certain self-employed professionals:
Not all freelancers automatically qualify. Your sector, business model, and whether you meet Spanish "economic activity" criteria matter. Consult a tax adviser to confirm eligibility before filing your Beckham election.
To elect Beckham, you file your annual tax return using Form 151 instead of Form 100. You must elect within one month of becoming a Spanish tax resident (or by your filing deadline if you became resident mid-year). Election is binding for 6 years and covers your first year of Spanish tax residence plus the following 5 years.
Scenario: UK-based freelancer earning €50,000 from non-Spanish clients, now a Spanish tax resident with DNV.
Most higher-earning freelancers see Beckham savings, especially in years 1–2 when foreign income is still being incorporated into Spain. Work with a tax adviser to model both scenarios for your situation.
Beckham only covers Spanish-source income. If you earn €50,000 from US and EU clients (non-Spanish sources), your Spanish-source income may be much lower or zero. Example: if you earn €50,000 from non-Spanish clients and €2,000 from a Spanish client, only the €2,000 qualifies for Beckham's 24% rate; the other €50,000 is foreign-source and not covered.
This is why many DNV freelancers elect Beckham for its compliance value and potential savings on any Spanish-source income, rather than tax optimization alone.
Start your Digital Nomad Visa application with expert guidance on autónomo registration, quarterly filings, and Beckham Law planning.
How different freelancers navigate autónomo registration, invoicing, and tax filings with the DNV.
Profile: Sarah, UK copywriter, earns €3,500/month from US tech clients (70%) and UK agencies (15%), plus €500 from a Spanish content agency. Moves to Barcelona on DNV.
Setup: Registers as autónomo (Modelo 036), gets NIE, pays tarifa plana €80/month social security. Invoices US and UK clients at 0% VAT (non-EU or reverse charge EU B2B). Spanish client invoiced at 0% VAT (reverse charge) because that client is a B2B entity.
Quarterly Filings: Files Modelo 303 (VAT) reporting zero VAT quarterly and declares the Spanish B2B service on Modelo 349. Files Modelo 130 (tax on account) at 20% of net income (~€560/month).
Annual Tax: Files Form 151 (Beckham) because she's a new Spanish tax resident. Spanish-source income (€500/month = €6,000/year) × 24% = €1,440 Beckham tax. Foreign-source income (€36,000) is not covered by Beckham. Total Spanish tax liability estimated ~€4,200 for the year after quarterly payments credited.
Visa Income: €3,500/month average qualifies (above €2,646 threshold). Three months of invoices and bank statements submitted with visa application.
Profile: Marc, French developer, earns €4,200/month from EU tech companies (France, Germany, Netherlands) and two US clients (€700/month). Applies for DNV as remote freelancer.
Setup: Registers as autónomo. Invoices all EU clients at 0% VAT with reverse charge notation, listing each client's VAT number. US clients invoiced at 0% VAT (non-EU exempt).
Quarterly Filings: Files Modelo 303 reporting zero VAT (all reverse charge). Files Modelo 349 listing the four EU clients and amounts. Files Modelo 130 (20% tax on account).
Beckham Eligibility: As a freelance developer, Marc may qualify under Startup Law if his sector and activity meet criteria. His tax adviser confirms eligibility and he files Form 151. Election covers 6 years.
Income Compliance: €4,900/month average (above threshold). Breakdown: 86% non-Spanish (EU + US), 0% Spanish. Fully compliant with DNV 80% non-Spanish requirement.
Profile: Lucia, Argentine designer, earns €7,500/month from US design agencies and one UK consultancy. No Spanish clients. Applies for DNV while based in Madrid.
Setup: Registers as autónomo. Gets NIE. Invoices all clients at 0% VAT (non-EU or reverse charge). No social security for health coverage under RETA alone; must secure private health insurance (mandatory for DNV).
Quarterly Tax Payments: Files Modelo 130 (20% of net) quarterly. With €7,500 gross and €1,500 estimated expenses, net ~€6,000, tax payment ~€1,200 per quarter.
Beckham Opportunity: High income + new tax resident = Beckham potentially saves significant tax. Form 151 election for 6 years. Example: €90,000 annual income under Form 100 (progressive rates) might cost €24,000–€28,000 tax. Beckham at 24% (assuming all is Spanish-source, which it may not be) = €21,600. Savings ~€3,000–€6,000+ per year depending on structure.
SL Consideration: At €7,500/month (€90,000/year), Lucia's adviser may recommend incorporating an SL (Spanish limited company) for better tax efficiency above certain thresholds. This is a secondary option after autónomo; she could operate as autónomo initially and incorporate later if income grows.
Profile: James, US-based life coach, runs an online membership program earning €2,200/month from a mix of video courses (US, EU, global clients) and one-on-one coaching calls (mostly US, some EU). Moves to Seville on DNV.
Setup: Registers as autónomo in Spain, keeps US business structure intact where possible. Invoices membership payments (B2C from individuals globally) and coaching calls (B2B/B2C). VAT depends on client location: EU consumers get 21% Spanish VAT if they buy from Spain; US consumers get 0% VAT (non-EU); EU B2B gets reverse charge.
Accounting Complexity: This is messier than pure B2B invoicing. Uses accounting software to track VAT by customer location. Files Modelo 303 reporting VAT collected (on EU B2C subscriptions) and VAT-exempt transactions (US B2C, non-EU).
Tax Payments: Modelo 130 filed quarterly. Annual return (Form 100 or 151 if Beckham-eligible) includes membership and coaching income.
DNV Income Requirement: €2,200/month is below the ~€2,646 threshold. James would not qualify for DNV unless his income grows or he can demonstrate expected income growth (some visa advisers allow projections). Alternative: combine with spouse's income if married, or restructure business to add services.
Profile: Anna, German management consultant, earns €5,000/month from German corporations (consulting project) and €1,500 from Spanish clients (training). Plans to relocate to Barcelona under DNV.
Setup: Registers as autónomo. German clients invoiced at reverse charge (0% VAT, reverse charge noted). Spanish client invoiced at 21% VAT (standard rate in Catalonia; note some regions have slightly different VAT or income tax considerations).
Spanish Client Compliance: €1,500/month from Spanish clients = 20% of total income (€6,500). Exactly at the 20% cap allowed under DNV. She cannot take on more Spanish clients without jeopardizing visa compliance. Should monitor invoicing carefully.
Regional Tax Notes: Barcelona (Catalonia) has a 2% personal income tax surcharge on high incomes (over €300,000+, generally not affecting Anna). Madrid has no regional surcharge. This is a small detail but worth awareness if relocating.
Quarterly Filings: Modelo 303 (VAT on Spanish client's 21%; reverse charge on German clients). Modelo 349 for German services. Modelo 130 (tax on account).
Beckham: If eligible, Form 151 election for 6 years.
Avoid these pitfalls to keep your visa, autónomo status, and tax standing intact.
Invoicing more than 20% of income from Spanish clients breaches DNV requirements. If audited, you risk visa revocation. Track client locations closely and turn down Spanish work if you're near the limit.
Missing Modelo 303 or Modelo 130 deadlines (20 days after quarter end) triggers penalties and interest. Set calendar reminders and automate if possible. Work with a tax adviser to stay on schedule.
Underreporting invoices or averaging income incorrectly can disqualify you. Use 3+ months of consistent invoices, and ensure bank statements match. Conservative approach: show 6–12 months of history if income is variable.
If you incorporate an SL but keep autónomo status for personal invoicing, your tax filings become complex. Decide: autónomo alone, or SL alone (or autónomo + SL with proper separation). Unclear status invites IRS scrutiny.
You must file Beckham Form 151 within one month of becoming a Spanish tax resident, or by your filing deadline that year. Filing late or not filing means standard Form 100 rates apply (no 24% flat benefit). Once missed, you cannot retroactively elect.
Invoicing non-EU clients with VAT, or forgetting reverse charge on EU B2B, creates VAT liability you didn't plan for. Review invoice templates for accuracy. Use accounting software with location-based VAT rules built in.
How to decide between staying self-employed or forming a Spanish limited company.
Most freelancers start as autónomos. As income grows, some incorporate a Spanish SL (Sociedad Limitada)—a limited company with separate legal identity. Both can hold a DNV visa, but the tax and administrative implications differ.
Stay autónomo if: Your income is under €60,000/year, you want simplicity, you prefer flat social security (year 1), and you don't need liability protection.
Incorporate SL if: Your income exceeds €60,000–€80,000/year, you want limited liability, you plan to reinvest profits, or you need a more "corporate" legal structure for clients or partnerships.
Hybrid approach: Some freelancers operate as autónomo initially, then incorporate an SL as income grows. You can transition mid-year with proper tax planning. Consult your adviser on the best timing and structure for your situation.
If you own an SL (and draw a salary from it), DNV income requirements are typically met via your salary + dividends or via the company's revenue. Visa advisers may ask for business financials (company tax returns) instead of personal invoices. The process is similar, but documentation differs. Discuss with your visa adviser early if you're operating via an SL.
Risk mitigation when working with clients abroad while based in Spain.
Permanent establishment (PE) is a tax concept that asks: where does a business activity actually occur for tax purposes? If you, as a Spanish tax resident, have a fixed place of business in another country (e.g., you maintain an office in a client's building in New York), you may trigger PE status in that country. This can expose both you and your client to unexpected tax liabilities.
As a DNV freelancer working from Spain for foreign clients, PE risk is low if you:
However, if a client requests you work on-site at their office regularly, or you rent an office space in their country, PE status may be triggered. In that case, both you and the client face potential tax exposure in that country. Discuss on-site arrangements with your tax adviser before committing.
If you're working for clients in another EU country as a self-employed person (autónomo), you may need to coordinate social security contributions. Spain issues an A1 certificate (formerly E101) confirming you're paying Spanish social security and not subject to another country's social security laws. Request this from your Spanish social security office (Régimen de Trabajadores Autónomos) if a foreign client asks. It protects you from double social security contributions.
Full-service guidance from visa approval through tax filing and ongoing compliance.
Platinum Legal Spain specializes in helping freelancers and self-employed professionals obtain the DNV and manage the complex tax and legal landscape. Our specialist English-speaking immigration team works with trusted Spanish fiscal advisers so you get visa, autónomo and ongoing tax guidance from one coordinated source.
Our fixed-fee DNV engagement for freelancers is tightly scoped so you know exactly what we do and don't touch. What's inside the fee:
UGE approval typically lands in 20 working days for a clean file. You source your own criminal record certificates and apostilles from the correct issuing authority; we tell you exactly what to request, where to send it, and review the pack before submission.
Running a freelance life in Spain involves more than the visa. The workstreams below are not part of our fixed DNV fee — they are separate engagements handled either by our Spanish fiscal partners (asesores fiscales) or by a qualified adviser in your home country. We flag every one of them early and introduce the right people so nothing is missed:
The honest split: our specialist English-speaking immigration team runs the DNV application and gets the residency right. The fiscal side — autónomo, quarterly filings, Beckham Law, annual returns — sits with a Spanish asesor fiscal we introduce you to. Keeping the scopes clean means you know exactly what each professional is responsible for, and you don't pay a single-source fee for work that's actually being done by two separate specialists.
Tax and administrative nuances depending on where in Spain you settle.
Regional income tax: No regional surcharge (unlike some autonomous communities). Administrative ease: Foreigner registration (empadronamiento) and residency procedures generally streamlined in Madrid city. Cost of living: Moderate to high; shared apartments €600–€1,200/month, depending on neighborhood.
Regional income tax: 2% surcharge on personal income above €300,000+ (generally not affecting most freelancers, but note it if high earner). Language: Catalan is co-official; Spanish is also widely spoken. Some official documents may require Catalan translation. VAT rate: Standard 21% (same as rest of Spain). Social security: Standard Spanish system applies.
Special considerations: Islands have slightly higher cost of living and may have additional rules for seasonal or tourism-linked activities. If your freelance work is tourism-related (e.g., tour guide invoicing), verify if you need a specific license. Residency registration: Same as mainland. Beckham Law: Applies normally to Balearics as they are within Spain's tax system.
Spain is decentralized; most tax and administrative rules are national. Regional differences are typically minor (a 2% surcharge here, a language requirement there). DNV visa approval, autónomo registration, and Beckham Law are all national rules regardless of region. We recommend confirming any regional nuances with your local tax adviser once you choose a location.
Clear answers to common concerns from freelancers considering the DNV and autónomo route.
Yes. If you're already in Spain with a valid residence permit (e.g., tourist visa), you can register as autónomo before your DNV is approved. Some advisers recommend this; others prefer visa approval first to avoid any impression of early employment. Discuss with your visa adviser. Once your DNV is approved, your autónomo status continues seamlessly.
Your autónomo status is independent of your DNV visa status. If your visa is rejected, you can appeal, reapply, or continue as autónomo (though you'd need another legal residence basis, such as a tourist visa extended via request). Most rejections are due to insufficient income or incomplete documentation; we advise clients thoroughly to minimize rejection risk. Our approval rate is 90%+ with proper preparation.
The DNV requires at least 80% of income from non-Spanish sources on average over the visa period. Exceeding 20% Spanish income, even temporarily, risks visa compliance issues. If you have a short-term Spanish project (a few months), we recommend declining it or structuring it carefully. Once you exceed 20% consistently, you're in violation. Avoid this trap entirely by turning down excess Spanish work.
Not strictly for registration, but practically yes. Social security affiliations are processed faster with a Spanish bank account (for automated cuota payments). Additionally, many clients prefer paying into a Spanish bank account (easier than international transfers). We recommend opening a Spanish business account (e.g., with BBVA, Sabadell, or a fintech like Wise or Revolut with Spanish IBans) alongside your autónomo registration.
DNV income requirements are based on averages over 3+ months. If you earn €3,000 one month and €2,200 the next, your 2-month average is €2,600 (above the ~€2,646 threshold). For visa applications, we recommend submitting 6–12 months of history to show consistent ability to meet the threshold. Your quarterly Modelo 130 (tax on account) can be adjusted if income drops mid-year; you'd file a lower estimate, then reconcile at year-end.
Private health insurance without copayments (compulsory for DNV) costs approximately €1,000–€1,500/year depending on age, health profile, and provider. Plans from Sanitas (Bupa), Adeslas, or Asisa are popular. As an autónomo, you may also be eligible for public Spanish health insurance (via your social security contributions), which is much cheaper. Many freelancers use public insurance + a supplementary private plan. Discuss with an insurance broker; we can recommend partners.
Yes. Autónomos can deduct professional expenses including a portion of home office rent/mortgage (typically 10–30% of your home based on dedicated office space), utilities, internet, software, and business supplies. Keep receipts and document the business-use percentage. Your tax adviser will incorporate these deductions into your annual return (Form 100 or 151), reducing your taxable income.
As an autónomo, you can hire employees or subcontractors. Hiring employees triggers payroll and employer social security obligations (costly and complex). Many growing freelancers incorporate an SL at this point to separate personal liability and streamline employment administration. Discuss with your adviser if you plan to hire; it may trigger a transition from autónomo to SL.
No. Spanish tax residency begins once you establish your habitual residence in Spain (typically the date you register locally or apply for your visa/autónomo status). Income earned before that date is taxed by your prior country of residence. Your Spanish tax adviser will document your residency start date. Beckham Law eligibility also starts from your residency date (6 years forward from that point).
Modelo 130: Simpler; you calculate quarterly net income (revenue minus expenses), multiply by 20%, and pay that. Most freelancers use this. Modelo 131: Estimated annual tax; you estimate your full-year tax liability and pay a portion quarterly. Modelo 131 is less common and requires more foresight. We recommend Modelo 130 for most freelancers. Your tax adviser will confirm which is best for your situation.
Yes, but it requires careful tax planning. If you switch mid-year, you'll file tax returns for both your autónomo period (as autónomo) and your SL period (as SL entity). Expenses and income must be properly allocated to each period. There may be a final autónomo tax return (Form 110 or 111) and a start to your corporate tax returns. Consult your tax adviser to plan the transition and minimize double taxation or unexpected liabilities.
Expert guidance through visa approval, autónomo registration, quarterly filings, and Beckham Law planning. Let's build your legal and tax foundation in Spain.
Our Digital Nomad Visa service is a single fixed fee, split across three stages so you only pay as we progress. Everything from eligibility assessment to TIE card collection is included — no hourly billing, no mid-case fee creep.