What actually happened to the Golden Visa
Spain's investor residency route — commonly called the Golden Visa, which granted residency to non-EU nationals who bought Spanish property worth €500,000 or more — was formally abolished by Organic Law 1/2025, published in the Boletín Oficial del Estado (BOE) on 3 January 2025. The government stopped accepting new applications from 3 April 2025. The stated reason was housing pressure: officials cited figures showing the large majority of these visas were tied to real estate purchases concentrated in already-stressed housing markets like Madrid and Barcelona.
This wasn't a phase-out with a long transition — the cutoff was a hard date. If you didn't have an application filed before 3 April 2025, the property-investment route to Spanish residency is no longer available, full stop.
We still get calls every week from investors who saw "Spain Golden Visa" content that was written before April 2025 and assume the program is still running. It isn't — and there's no grandfather clause for applications filed after the cutoff, regardless of how far along the property purchase was.
If you already applied — or already hold one
Applications submitted before 3 April 2025 are still being processed under the old rules; the closure wasn't retroactive. If you already hold a Golden Visa, you can generally still renew it, provided you continue to meet the original investment and holding criteria. What's gone is the ability to file a brand-new application — existing holders and pending applicants aren't affected by the closure itself.
Buying Spanish property as a foreigner is still completely legal in every other respect — the change only removed the automatic link between that specific purchase and a residence permit. A property purchase today just needs to be paired with a different route to residency if that's your goal. If you're financing that purchase rather than paying cash, see our guide on non-resident mortgages in Spain for how the financing side works.
What actually replaces it
There was never a single one-to-one substitute for the Golden Visa, because it served a mix of different people for different reasons. The right replacement depends on which of those you actually are:
| If you were planning to... | Consider instead |
|---|---|
| Live off savings, pensions, or investment income without working | Non-Lucrative Visa — no property purchase required, just proof of sufficient passive income |
| Keep working remotely for a non-Spanish employer or clients | Digital Nomad Visa — also opens eligibility for the Beckham Law flat tax rate |
| Start or relocate an innovative, scalable business | Startup Visa, typically paired with ENISA certification |
| Relocate or register a standard business in Spain | Entrepreneur Visa alongside SL company registration |
Notice what's missing from that list: none of these routes require a specific property purchase. You can still buy property in Spain as part of your relocation, but the visa itself now comes from your income, your work, or your business — not from the size of the purchase.
Why this usually works out fine for US and UK clients
In our experience, most US and UK nationals who were drawn to the Golden Visa weren't purely passive real estate investors — they were people who also had remote income, savings, or a business, and the property purchase was simply the fastest route available at the time. For that profile, the Non-Lucrative or Digital Nomad routes usually turn out to be a comparable or even better fit, since they don't tie residency to a specific asset and don't require anywhere near the €500,000 minimum outlay.
Where the closure genuinely removes an option is for investors whose primary goal was portfolio diversification into Spanish real estate with residency as a secondary benefit, and who don't have qualifying income, remote work, or a business to fall back on. For that narrower group, there currently isn't a direct substitute — worth discussing your specific numbers with an advisor rather than assuming any one route fits.