Permanent (long-term) residency comes after ~5 years and lets you live and work in Spain indefinitely, but you remain a national of your home country — no Spanish passport, no EU-wide free movement, no national vote, and the (renewable) card and absence rules still apply. Citizenship comes after ~10 years for most (just 2 for Ibero-Americans and a few others), makes you Spanish with a passport, EU free movement and full rights — but most non-Ibero-American nationalities must renounce their previous nationality and pass language/culture exams. The decision turns on: how quickly you qualify (nationality), whether you want EU-wide mobility and a passport, and whether you can accept the renunciation. Many Britons/Americans stop at permanent residency; Ibero-Americans usually go for citizenship.
What Permanent Residency Is
Long-term (permanent) residency is generally available after five continuous years of legal residence. It gives you the right to live and work in Spain indefinitely, free of the visa-specific conditions you started with (so, for example, the Non-Lucrative Visa's no-work rule falls away), with far fewer renewals and far more security than temporary residency. You're treated similarly to a national for most everyday purposes — work, services, benefits.
But you remain a citizen of your home country. Permanent residency is a settled immigration status, not nationality: there's no Spanish passport, no right to vote in national elections, and your rights are anchored to Spain rather than the whole EU. The physical card is still renewed periodically, and the status can be lost after a very extended absence. For a great many expats, though, this is exactly enough — a secure, indefinite right to their life in Spain, without the cost, exams or nationality-renunciation that citizenship involves. It's the natural destination of the residency journey, with citizenship an optional further step.
What Citizenship Is
Spanish citizenship makes you a Spanish national — the fullest status. It comes (by residence) after a qualifying period that's 10 years for most nationalities but only 2 years for citizens of Ibero-American countries, Andorra, the Philippines, Equatorial Guinea, Portugal and Sephardic Jews of Spanish origin (and 1 year if married to a Spaniard). You pass the DELE A2 language and CCSE culture exams, show good conduct and continuous residence, and — for most — formally renounce your previous nationality.
In return you get a Spanish (and EU) passport, with the right to live and work anywhere in the EU/EEA, full political rights including voting, and an unconditional, permanent status no card renewal or absence rule can threaten. For non-EU expats — especially Britons since Brexit — the restoration of EU-wide free movement is often the headline draw. The cost is the long qualifying period for most nationalities, the exams, and the renunciation requirement. Citizenship is the ultimate security and mobility; the question is whether its price, for your nationality, is worth it over permanent residency.
Permanent Residency vs Citizenship Side by Side
| Permanent residency | Citizenship | |
|---|---|---|
| Qualify after | ~5 years | ~10 years (2 for Ibero-Americans etc.) |
| Status | Settled resident (home national) | Spanish national |
| Passport | No (keep your own) | Spanish/EU passport |
| Live/work in other EU countries | No — Spain only | Yes — EU-wide free movement |
| National vote | No | Yes |
| Exams | None | DELE A2 + CCSE |
| Renounce home nationality | No | Usually (except favoured nations) |
| Can be lost | After very long absence | No — you're a national |
The headline: permanent residency is quicker, simpler and keeps your nationality but is Spain-only and not quite unconditional; citizenship is the fullest, most mobile, permanent status but takes longer (for most), needs exams, and usually requires renouncing your current nationality.
Rights & Mobility
The clearest practical difference is EU-wide mobility. Permanent residency gives you a secure right to live and work in Spain — but not in France, Germany or anywhere else in the EU; for that you'd need to qualify separately in each country. A Spanish passport, by contrast, carries EU citizenship, so you can live, work, study and retire anywhere across the EU/EEA freely. For Britons who lost EU free movement with Brexit, this restoration is frequently the single biggest reason to pursue citizenship; for Americans, Canadians, Australians and others, gaining EU-wide mobility for the first time is a powerful draw.
There's also political and existential security. As a citizen you can vote in national elections and stand for office, and your status is utterly secure — no card to renew, no absence rule, immune to any future tightening of immigration policy. A permanent resident, while very secure, is still ultimately a foreign national whose status, in extremis, depends on continuing to meet residence conditions and on Spain's immigration framework. For most people that distinction is academic, but for those who want the deepest possible roots — or who worry about long-term policy changes — citizenship's unconditional permanence is meaningful. Against all this sits the renunciation question, which for many is the deciding factor.
The Dual-Nationality Factor
This is the issue that most often decides it. Spain generally requires those naturalising to renounce their previous nationality — with a major exception for nationals of Ibero-American countries, Andorra, the Philippines, Equatorial Guinea and Portugal (and Sephardic Jews of Spanish origin), who may hold dual nationality. So for an Argentine, Mexican or Colombian, citizenship means adding a Spanish/EU passport while keeping their own — an easy yes. For a Briton or American, it means (formally) giving up their existing nationality to become Spanish.
In practice the picture is more nuanced — the renunciation is a declaration to the Spanish authorities, and whether your home country actually removes your nationality depends on its rules (the US and UK, for instance, don't automatically strip citizenship merely because you've declared renunciation elsewhere), so some end up effectively dual in fact. But you shouldn't bank on that: the formal Spanish requirement is renunciation, and how it interacts with your home country's law needs specific advice. For many non-Ibero-American expats, an unwillingness to give up their original nationality — even formally — is precisely why they choose to stop at permanent residency, which requires no such step. If keeping your current passport cleanly matters to you, that points strongly toward permanent residency.
Renunciation is the crux for most nationalities
Ibero-American (and a few other) nationals keep dual nationality, making citizenship an easy add. Most others — Britons, Americans, etc. — must formally renounce their previous nationality to become Spanish, which is the main reason many settle for permanent residency instead. Get specific advice on how renunciation interacts with your home country's law.
Timescales by Nationality
Your nationality hugely affects the calculation, because it sets how long citizenship takes relative to the 5-year permanent-residency point:
- Ibero-American nationals (and Andorra, Philippines, Equatorial Guinea, Portugal, Sephardic Jews): citizenship at just 2 years, with dual nationality kept — so citizenship arrives before the 5-year permanent-residency point and with no downside. Citizenship is the clear goal.
- Most other nationalities (UK, US, Canada, Australia, South Africa, etc.): permanent residency at 5 years, citizenship at 10 and with renunciation — so there's a long gap, during which permanent residency provides security, and citizenship is a much bigger, later commitment.
- Spouses of Spanish citizens: citizenship at 1 year, which can make citizenship the natural target regardless of original nationality.
- Those qualifying by origin (Spanish parents/grandparents, democratic-memory routes): may have a faster citizenship route that bypasses the residence calculation entirely.
So the same comparison lands very differently depending on who you are. For an Ibero-American, "permanent residency vs citizenship" barely arises — citizenship is quicker and costless in nationality terms. For a Briton or American, permanent residency at year five is a real, attractive endpoint, and citizenship a separate, later, weightier decision. Knowing your timescale is the first step in deciding.
Which to Pursue
A few honest pointers:
- Ibero-American (or other favoured) national? Pursue citizenship — it's quick (2 years) and you keep dual nationality. Little reason to stop at residency.
- Want EU-wide free movement / a passport? Only citizenship gives it — a strong pull for Britons post-Brexit and others.
- Unwilling to renounce your nationality? Permanent residency requires no renunciation and may be the right endpoint.
- Happy with a secure life in Spain only? Permanent residency delivers that without exams or renunciation.
- Want the deepest security and a vote? Citizenship is unconditional and political; residency, while secure, isn't nationality.
- Married to a Spaniard or with Spanish ancestry? A faster citizenship route may make it the obvious target.
For many Ibero-American nationals, citizenship is simply the goal. For many British and American expats, permanent residency is the practical destination — secure, no exams, no renunciation — with citizenship pursued only by those who specifically want EU mobility and a passport enough to accept the cost. There's no universally right answer; it's a personal weighing of mobility and security against time, exams and nationality. We help you make it with your exact nationality and circumstances in view.
Common Mistakes
- Assuming citizenship is always the goal. For non-Ibero-American nationals, permanent residency is often the better endpoint given the time and renunciation.
- Overlooking your nationality's timescale. 2 years vs 10 years changes the calculation entirely.
- Ignoring the renunciation requirement. Most nationalities must renounce; only the favoured nations keep dual citizenship.
- Forgetting permanent residency is Spain-only. It doesn't give EU-wide free movement — only citizenship does.
- Underestimating the citizenship exams. The DELE A2 and CCSE are real requirements with no equivalent for residency.
- Not checking faster routes. Marriage or Spanish ancestry can make citizenship far quicker — worth confirming.
How We Help
We help you choose the right milestone for your nationality and goals, then get you there. We confirm your timescales (when permanent residency and citizenship become available to you), explain the renunciation and EU-mobility trade-offs in light of your home country's rules, and check whether a faster citizenship route (marriage, origin) applies. Whichever you pursue, we handle it — the long-term residency application, or the citizenship process including the exams and document legalisation. The result is a clear, deliberate plan rather than drifting toward one or the other by default. It's part of our immigration and expat legal services, in English on a clear quote. Your consultation gives you a recommendation for your situation.
Related Guides
Residency & Visa Renewal
Keeping your residence clean through the qualifying years.
Residency renewal →Frequently Asked Questions
Permanent (long-term) residency, after ~5 years, lets you live and work in Spain indefinitely but you stay a national of your home country — no Spanish passport, no EU-wide free movement, no national vote. Citizenship, after ~10 years for most (2 for Ibero-Americans), makes you Spanish with a passport, EU mobility and full rights, but most must renounce their previous nationality and pass exams.
It depends on your nationality and goals. Ibero-American nationals usually pursue citizenship — it's quick (2 years) and keeps dual nationality. For Britons, Americans and most others, permanent residency at 5 years is a secure, simpler endpoint with no exams or renunciation, and citizenship (10 years, with renunciation) is worth it mainly if you want an EU passport and EU-wide free movement.
No. Permanent residency gives a secure right to live and work in Spain only — not in other EU countries. For EU-wide free movement (living, working, studying anywhere in the EU/EEA) you need Spanish citizenship, which carries EU citizenship. This is often the decisive advantage of citizenship for non-EU expats, especially Britons since Brexit.
For most nationalities, yes — Spain generally requires you to renounce your previous nationality. The exception is nationals of Ibero-American countries, Andorra, the Philippines, Equatorial Guinea and Portugal (and Sephardic Jews of Spanish origin), who keep dual nationality. In practice your home country may not strip your citizenship just because you declared renunciation, but the formal Spanish requirement is renunciation — get specific advice.
Permanent residency: ~5 years of continuous legal residence. Citizenship: ~10 years for most nationalities, but just 2 for Ibero-Americans and a few others, 1 if married to a Spaniard, and potentially faster by origin. So for most non-Ibero-American expats there's a long gap between qualifying for permanent residency and for citizenship.
For many expats permanent residency is enough — a secure, indefinite right to live and work in Spain without exams or renunciation. You'd want citizenship specifically if you value EU-wide free movement and a passport, full political rights, or the deepest unconditional security — and (for most nationalities) are willing to accept the renunciation and the longer wait.
Yes. Permanent residency is very secure but can be lost after a very extended continuous absence, among limited circumstances, and the card is still renewed periodically. Citizenship, by contrast, makes you a national — it can't be lost through absence and needs no renewal. That unconditional permanence is one of citizenship's advantages for those who want the deepest roots.
Start with your nationality (it sets your timescales and whether you keep dual nationality), then weigh how much you value EU-wide mobility and a passport against the exams, the longer wait and the renunciation. Ibero-American nationals usually choose citizenship; many others find permanent residency the practical endpoint. A consultation helps you decide for your exact situation and handles whichever you pursue.