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Spain Self-Employed Visa (Autónomo Visa): Complete Guide 2026

The Spain self-employed visa — officially autorización de residencia y trabajo por cuenta propia — is a 1-year residence and work permit that allows non-EU/EEA/Swiss nationals to legally live and work in Spain as freelancers or independent professionals (autónomos). Applicants must submit a viable business plan, demonstrate minimum financial means to live and sustain the business, and present a clean criminal record. Applications are submitted at the Spanish consulate in the applicant’s home country, and processing typically takes 3 to 6 months.

 

 

What Is the Spain Self-Employed Visa?

The Spain self-employed visa — commonly known as the autónomo visa or freelance visa — allows non-EU citizens to move to Spain and operate professionally as independent workers, whether as a consultant, developer, designer, architect, marketer, or small business owner.

In Spain, the term autónomo refers to anyone who works independently rather than under an employment contract. Once approved, this visa grants you:

  • Legal residence in Spain for an initial period of 1 year
  • The right to work as a freelancer with multiple clients, or to run your own small business
  • The possibility of renewing for 4 additional years, leading to long-term permanent residency after 5 consecutive years
  • The right to bring family members through family reunification once you meet one year of residence and the financial thresholds

Important distinction: The self-employed visa is different from the Digital Nomad Visa and the Entrepreneur Visa. See the full comparison table further below.

Who Can Apply?

The self-employed visa is designed exclusively for non-EU, non-EEA, and non-Swiss nationals. Citizens of EU/EEA countries and Switzerland already have the right to work freely in Spain and only need to register as autónomos with the relevant authorities.

You can apply if you intend to:

 
  • Provide professional services independently (consulting, IT, design, copywriting, coaching, etc.)
  • Open a small local business such as a shop, studio, or service company

This visa is not for you if:

  • You are an EU/EEA/Swiss national (you do not need it)
  • You intend to work as an employee for a Spanish company (→ a work permit applies)
  • Your business is innovation-driven or tech-focused (→ the Entrepreneur/Startup Visa may be more appropriate)

British nationals: Since Brexit, UK citizens are treated as third-country nationals and follow the same application process as other non-EU applicants.

Requirements for the Spain Self-Employed Visa (2026)

1. Business Plan — The Most Critical Requirement

A detailed and credible business plan is mandatory and is assessed carefully by immigration authorities. It must include:

  • A clear description of your professional services or business activity
  • Target market and competitive landscape
  • Financial projections covering at least 1 to 2 years
  • An explanation of the positive economic impact your activity will have on Spain

The plan must be endorsed by a recognized professional association or an autónomo federation. Accepted certifying bodies include:

  • ATA — Federación Nacional de Asociaciones de Empresarios y Trabajadores Autónomos
  • OPA — Organización de Profesionales y Autónomos
  • UATAE — Unión de Asociaciones de Trabajadores Autónomos y Emprendedores
  • UPTA — Unión de Profesionales y Trabajadores Autónomos
  • CIAE — Confederación Intersectorial de Autónomos del Estado Español

From our experience: A weak business plan is the primary reason for rejection. Vague income projections, insufficient market research, or plans that lack economic viability for Spain are red flags for immigration officers. At Klev&Vera, we assist clients in drafting and getting their business plan endorsed before submission. Get in touch with our team to discuss your case.

2. Financial Means — Income Requirements

The financial threshold for the self-employed visa is based on Spain’s IPREM (Public Indicator of Multiple Effects Income), which is the official reference index used for social benefit thresholds and visa assessments.

Applicant situation

Minimum required

Applicant alone

100% IPREM = €600/month (€7,200/year)

+ Spouse or partner

+ 50% IPREM = €300/month

+ Each dependent child

+ 30% IPREM = €180/month

Example: applicant + spouse + 1 child

€1,080/month (€12,960/year)

Beyond personal living expenses, you must also demonstrate sufficient funds to cover your initial business operations, typically assessed at between €10,000 and €15,000 depending on the nature of your business plan.

Common confusion: Several online sources incorrectly state the income requirement as 200% of Spain’s SMI (minimum wage, approximately €2,850/month). That figure applies to the Digital Nomad Visa, not the self-employment visa. For the autónomo visa, the personal living threshold is 100% IPREM (€600/month). This distinction matters — applying with the wrong figures wastes preparation time and may lead to unnecessary rejection.

3. Professional Qualifications

If your profession is regulated in Spain — such as medicine, law, engineering, or architecture — you must prove your foreign qualifications have been officially homologated by Spain’s Ministry of Education before applying. For non-regulated professions, proof of relevant training or professional experience is sufficient.

4. Clean Criminal Record

A criminal background certificate from your country of origin (and any country where you’ve lived for over 5 years) is mandatory. It must be:

  • Issued within the last 90 days
  • Apostilled (or legalised via the Hague Convention)
  • Translated into Spanish by a sworn translator

5. Valid Passport

Your passport must be valid for the entire requested period plus a minimum margin.

6. Medical Certificate

Some consulates require a medical certificate confirming you do not have any disease that may have serious repercussions for public health, as listed by the International Health Regulations.

Step-by-Step Application Process

Step 1 — Prepare Your Business Plan and Get It Endorsed

This is the most time-intensive step. Draft your business plan, gather all supporting documents, and get it endorsed by a professional association. Allow 4 to 8 weeks.

Step 2 — Collect, Apostille, and Translate All Documents

Obtain your criminal background check, have it apostilled, and get all required documents translated by a sworn translator. This can take 2 to 4 weeks.

Step 3 — Book an Appointment at the Spanish Consulate

Apply through the Spanish consulate or embassy in your country of legal residence. Appointment availability varies by country — book as early as possible, as waiting times can reach 4–6 weeks.

Step 4 — Submit Your Application

Attend your consulate appointment and submit all documents in person. 

Step 5 — Wait for a Decision (3–6 months)

The Immigration Office has up to 3 months to issue a resolution. In practice, decisions often take 4 to 6 months due to current processing backlogs. You may be contacted for additional documentation.

Step 6 — Apply for the visa

Once the Immigration Office resolves your application, the Consulate will notify you and you will need to attend another appointment to submit the visa application. Visa usually take 1-2 months to be issued.

Step 7 — Enter Spain (within 30 days of visa issuance)

Once the visa is issued, you have 1 month to travel to Spain.

Step 8 — Register in Spain (within 30 days of arrival)

After arriving in Spain:

  1. Empadronamiento — Register your address at your local town hall (Ayuntamiento). This is mandatory and unlocks access to public services.
  2. TIE appointment — Book an appointment at the local immigration office to submit your fingerprints and apply for your Foreigner Identity Card (Tarjeta de Identidad de Extranjero, TIE). Pay the corresponding administrative fee.
  3. Collect your TIE — The physical card is usually ready within 30 to 40 days.
  4. NIE — Your foreigner identification number will be assigned through the TIE process.
  5. Register as autónomo — Register with the Spanish Tax Agency (Agencia Tributaria) and the Social Security system to begin operating legally.

Full Cost Breakdown

Concept

Estimated Cost

Visa application fee

~€80 (up to ~$270 for US citizens)

Self-employment authorisation (Modelo 790-062)

€203,84

TIE residence card (Modelo 790-012)

€16,08

Medical certificate (if required)

€50–€150

Criminal background check + apostille + translation

€50–€200

Certified document translations

€30–€80 per document

Business plan professional drafting (optional)

€300–€800

Immigration lawyer (recommended)

€500–€2,000

Total estimated range

€400–€3,500

 

Ongoing monthly costs once registered as autónomo:

Concept

Amount

Social Security — tarifa plana, first 12 months

€80/month base (real total ~€88,64/month incl. MEI 0,9%)

Social Security quota after year 1 (based on income)

€230–€530+/month

Quarterly income tax advance (IRPF — modelo 130)

~20% of quarterly net income

VAT filing (IVA — modelo 303, if applicable)

21% of invoiced services

 

Insider tip: Spain’s tarifa plana (flat rate) for new autónomos offers a significantly reduced Social Security contribution of €80/month for the first 12 months. This is a major financial advantage that most guides overlook.

 

Renewal and Path to Permanent Residency

The self-employed visa follows a 1 + 4 structure:

  • Year 1: Initial permit, valid for 1 year.
  • Years 2–5: Renewed for a 4-year period.
  • After year 5: Eligible for long-term permanent residency.

Renewal requirements:

  1. Continued autónomo activity — Proof of remaining registered with the Social Security system and Agencia Tributaria (invoices, tax returns, accounting records).
  2. No outstanding tax or Social Security debt — All payments must be up to date. Unpaid contributions will result in denial.
  3. Sufficient income — Financial means at or above the IPREM threshold (€7,200/year minimum), evidenced by tax declarations.
  4. Valid health insurance — Either a private policy or enrolment in Spain’s public Social Security health coverage.

The renewal is filed at the local Oficina de Extranjería. Decisions take 3 to 6 months under current processing times. If denied, you have 1 month to appeal.

After 5 continuous years of legal residence, you become eligible for long-term permanent residency (residencia de larga duración), which grants you rights equivalent to those of a Spanish national for employment and social purposes.

For EU Citizens: No Visa Required

EU, EEA, and Swiss nationals do not need a visa to work as autónomos in Spain. If planning to stay beyond 90 days, you must:

  • Register at your local town hall (padrón municipal)
  • Obtain an EU Citizen Registration Certificate (Certificado de Registro de Ciudadano de la Unión)
  • Register with the Agencia Tributaria and Social Security as an autónomo
  • Hold proof of financial means and health insurance

Most Common Mistakes — and How to Avoid Them

Based on our experience handling autónomo visa applications for clients from over 55 countries, these are the errors that most frequently cause delays or rejections:

  1. A business plan that doesn’t convince immigration officers. The plan must be specific, financially grounded, and demonstrate real viability in the Spanish market. Generic templates or overly optimistic income projections raise red flags immediately.
  2. Confusing the income threshold with the Digital Nomad Visa requirement. The 200% SMI figure (~€2,850/month) applies to the Digital Nomad Visa. The self-employment visa requires 100% IPREM (~€600/month) for personal living costs, plus evidence of business start-up funds.
  3. Submitting an expired criminal certificate. The certificate must be less than 90 days old at the time of application submission — not at the time you requested it. Plan your timeline accordingly.
  4. Applying as a tourist from within Spain. The self-employment visa cannot be applied for while you are in Spain as a tourist. Applications must go through your Spanish consulate in your home country (exceptions apply for holders of other valid Spanish residence permits converting to autónomo status).
  5. Failing to homologate regulated professional qualifications. If your profession is regulated in Spain (medicine, law, engineering, architecture), you must have your degree officially recognised before the visa can be granted.
  6. Underestimating ongoing autónomo costs. The €80/month tarifa plana only applies for the first 12 months. After that, monthly Social Security contributions can reach €230–€530+ per month depending on income. Factor this into your business plan projections.
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Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)

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Anna Klevtsova

Anna holds an LLM in International Human Rights Law, and is a Certified Lawyer with the Bar Association of Barcelona. With more than 20 years of legal practice in International Law, Anna specialises in business set-up, investment transactions, and immigration strategies.

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