Skip to content
Visa Atlas
DestinationsGuidesCompareUpdates
Find my route ->
Menu
DestinationsGuidesCompareUpdatesFind my route
Visa Atlas

A free, independent field guide to moving countries. Every figure links to its official government source.

Not legal advice. Visa Atlas is an encyclopedia, not an adviser. The authoritative source is always the government link on each page. For your specific case, consult a regulated professional.

Explore

All destinationsBest-of guidesCompare countriesRoutes by professionRoute comparisonsTopic guides

Plan

Find my routeProcessing timesGovernment feesSettlement & citizenshipRoute deep-divesSalary thresholds

Trust

Editorial standardsOur methodologyCorrectionsUse our data
© 2026 Visa AtlasReviewed continuously. Last sweep: 1 June 2026
  1. Home/
  2. From Argentina/
  3. Kingdom of Spain/
  4. Digital Nomad Visa (Spain)

🇦🇷 Argentinian applicants · 🇪🇸 Kingdom of Spain

Digital Nomad Visa (Spain) for Argentinian citizens

Residence permit for remote workers and international freelancers under the Startup Law (Ley de Startups).

No sponsorship requiredLeads to permanent residencyInitial 1-year consular visa, extendable to 3-year residence permit, then renewable for further 2 years; counts toward permanent residence after 5 years.

This page covers the Digital Nomad Visa (Spain) specifically for Argentinian applicants — including document requirements, consular procedures, and common issues specific to Argentina. The general eligibility criteria apply to everyone.

What Argentinian applicants should know

Argentinian DNV applicants are a fast-growing cohort, drawn by the Beckham regime's favourable USD/EUR-income treatment plus shared language and visa-free Schengen entry. The binding constraint at consular stage is currency: Argentinian peso-denominated income from local employers does not satisfy the "predominantly non-Spanish-client" eligibility test, and Argentina's currency controls (the cepo cambiario) constrain the upfront NIE / Spanish-bank-opening phase. Best-practice structures invoice US/EU clients in USD/EUR through accounts held outside Argentina, or work for foreign employers via employer-of-record arrangements. Argentinians of Spanish ancestry retain a separate citizenship pathway under Ley 36/2002 (the nieto law) which can run in parallel; note the broader Ley de Memoria Democrática window for descendants of Spanish nationals who lost citizenship under Franco closed in October 2025 and is no longer accepting new applications.

Source: Ministry of Inclusion, Social Security and Migrations · Reviewed 2026-06-01 · Confirm current rules on the primary source linked in the sidebar.

Processing time
3 weeks – 6 weeks
Government fees
€1,007.02
Typical duration
Initial 1-year consular visa, extendable to 3-year residence permit, then renewable for further 2 years; counts toward permanent residence after 5 years.
Sponsorship required
No
Leads to permanent residency
Yes
Reviewed 1 June 2026Ministry of Inclusion, Social Security and Migrations ↗

Bilateral context

  • Schengen Area
  • Spanish ancestry eligibility
  • Mercosur

Consular processing: Buenos Aires

Tourist entry vs. this route

Yes — Argentinian nationals can enter Kingdom of Spain without a visa for short tourism (typically up to 90 days), but tourist entry does not authorise the activity covered by the Digital Nomad Visa (Spain).

Key figures for Argentinian applicants

Computed from our continuously re-verified, primary-sourced data. Indicative, not legal advice.

Government cost

€1,007.02

Single applicant, applying from abroad

Each family member pays their own €80 consular fee, €10.94 UGE-CE tasa (Tasa 038; the old €73.26 line was repealed by Orden PJC/617/2025), and €16.08 TIE. Income threshold scales: +75% of SMI for first dependant, +25% per additional.

Verified 1 June 2026 · BOE — Orden PJC/617/2025 (immigration fees) →

How long it takes

3 weeks – 6 weeks

The 2022 Startup Law gives UGE-CE a 20-working-day decision target for in-country Digital Nomad applications. Consular applications from abroad commonly run 4–8 weeks.

Verified 1 June 2026 · UGE-CE (Unidad de Grandes Empresas) — Startup Law visas →

Time to permanent residence

Arrival → permanent residence (5 years) → citizenship (10 years for most nationalities; 2 for Latin American).

Leads to Residencia de Larga Duración, then Spanish citizenship.

Ministerio de Justicia — Nacionalidad española →

Visa overview

Spain's Digital Nomad Visa (Visado de teletrabajador de carácter internacional) was introduced by the Startup Law in December 2022. It allows non-EEA nationals to live in Spain while working remotely for companies outside Spain, or as freelancers with predominantly non-Spanish clients (typically 80%+ non-Spanish income).

Eligibility

Typical criteria

  • ✓Remote work for a company based outside Spain, or freelance activity where at most 20% of income derives from Spanish clients.
  • ✓Employment relationship or professional contract of at least 3 months' standing with the foreign company.
  • ✓University degree or at least 3 years of relevant experience.
  • ✓Minimum income at roughly 200% of the Spanish minimum wage (SMI); higher uplifts for family.
  • ✓Private health insurance covering Spain.

Common blockers

  • !Too high a share of Spanish-client income (above 20%).
  • !Qualifications not matching degree-or-experience requirement.
  • !Income below 200% SMI for principal applicant, or insufficient for dependants.

Typical evidence

  • ·Employment contract or freelance contracts.
  • ·Letter from employer confirming remote-work authorisation.
  • ·Recent payslips and tax records.
  • ·Degree certificate or evidence of 3+ years experience.
  • ·NIE and health insurance.

Application pathway

  1. 01

    Decide consular vs. in-country route

    Apply at a Spanish consulate for a 1-year visa then extend; or enter on tourist status and apply to UGE-CE for the 3-year residence permit directly (faster in practice).

  2. 02

    Prepare evidence package

    Employer letter, contract, qualifications, income, insurance, clean criminal record.

  3. 03

    Submit application

    To Spanish consulate or, in-country, to UGE-CE via the online Mercurio system.

  4. 04

    Receive approval and obtain TIE

    Book TIE appointment (fingerprints) at a Spanish police station.

  5. 05

    Renew and progress to long-term residence

    After 5 years of lawful residence, apply for permanent residence.

Not sure Kingdom of Spain is right for you? Compare similar routes

Other countries offer digital nomad routes that Argentinian nationals also apply to. See how they compare.

  • 🇵🇹 Portuguese Republic

    Argentinian applicants — digital nomad routes

  • 🇦🇪 United Arab Emirates

    Argentinian applicants — digital nomad routes

  • 🇮🇹 Italian Republic

    Argentinian applicants — digital nomad routes

  • 🇪🇪 Republic of Estonia

    Argentinian applicants — digital nomad routes

Frequently asked questions

Are Argentinian citizens eligible for the Digital Nomad Visa (Spain)?+−

Eligibility for the Digital Nomad Visa (Spain) is set by Ministry of Inclusion, Social Security and Migrations and is not nationality-restricted beyond the general criteria, though Argentinian applicants may also have access to the following bilateral or treaty frameworks: Schengen Area, Spanish ancestry eligibility, Mercosur. See the criteria below for the published requirements.

Where do Argentinian applicants typically file the Digital Nomad Visa (Spain)?+−

Buenos Aires. Specific intake (online portal, biometrics centre, or in-country lodgement) is determined by Ministry of Inclusion, Social Security and Migrations — confirm the current intake channel on the primary source linked above before filing.

Do Argentinian applicants need a tourist visa for Kingdom of Spain as well?+−

Yes — Argentinian nationals can enter Kingdom of Spain without a visa for short tourism (typically up to 90 days), but tourist entry does not authorise the activity covered by the Digital Nomad Visa (Spain).

How much does the Digital Nomad Visa (Spain) cost for a Argentinian applicant?+−

Government fees for the worked example (Single applicant, applying from abroad) total about €1,007.02. Each family member pays their own €80 consular fee, €10.94 UGE-CE tasa (Tasa 038; the old €73.26 line was repealed by Orden PJC/617/2025), and €16.08 TIE. Income threshold scales: +75% of SMI for first dependant, +25% per additional. Figures from BOE — Orden PJC/617/2025 (immigration fees), verified 1 June 2026. Treat these as indicative — confirm the current schedule on the official source before budgeting.

How long does the Digital Nomad Visa (Spain) take to process from Argentina?+−

The typical published decision window is 3 weeks – 6 weeks. Argentinian applicants usually file via Buenos Aires, and consular-post backlogs can add to the wait. Source: UGE-CE (Unidad de Grandes Empresas) — Startup Law visas, verified 1 June 2026.

How long until permanent residence in Kingdom of Spain?+−

Arrival → permanent residence (5 years) → citizenship (10 years for most nationalities; 2 for Latin American). The route leads to Residencia de Larga Duración, then Spanish citizenship. See Ministerio de Justicia — Nacionalidad española for the qualifying-residence rules.

How much income do I need for the Spanish Digital Nomad Visa?+−

Roughly 200% of the Spanish minimum wage (SMI) for the principal applicant, with uplifts of approximately 75% for a spouse/first dependant and smaller uplifts for further dependants. Exact figures update annually with the SMI.

Is the Spain DNV tax-favourable?+−

Qualifying applicants can apply for the Beckham-style special expats regime (Régimen especial aplicable a trabajadores desplazados a territorio español under Article 93 LIRPF), which flat-taxes non-Spanish-source income at 24% for the first €600k and exempts most overseas income for 6 years. Tax advice from a Spanish asesor fiscal is essential.

This is not legal advice

We publish neutral, sourced information about immigration routes. Rules and thresholds change often — always verify details on the official government source linked on this page and consult a regulated immigration advisor before applying.