Self-Employed Visa Spain: The 5 Steps for Freelancers and Entrepreneurs

If the golden light of Spain — its buzzing plazas, its late dinners, its unmistakable la buena vida — has captured your imagination, and you're dreaming of building a freelance career or your own business under the Iberian sun, then you're in exactly the right place.


Carving out your spot in the Spanish business scene and securing a self-employed visa might sound like a maze of paperwork and appointments. But fear not! We're here to break the whole thing down into five clear steps, so you can picture yourself sipping a café con leche on a sunny terrace while lining up your next big project. This guide walks you through everything you need to know about the self-employed visa in Spain — and how to take those first real steps toward making the move.


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1. Understanding the Self-Employed Visa Spain


Before we dive into the steps, let's get clear on what this visa actually is. The self-employed visa — officially the autorización de residencia y trabajo por cuenta propia, and known to everyone in Spain simply as the autónomo visa — lets non-EU citizens live and work in Spain as independent professionals. Whether you're a freelancer, consultant, designer, developer, or small-business owner, this visa opens the door to one of the most beautiful and liveable countries in Europe.


Its purpose is straightforward: it's for people who intend to carry out real economic activity in Spain, either as a registered autónomo (freelancer) or by setting up a company — including a Spanish limited company (an SL). With it, you can register as autónomo, invoice Spanish and international clients, and run your own venture on Spanish soil.


It's also one of the most common “next steps” for people who are already in Spain on another status. We regularly help clients move onto the autónomo route from a student visa, or from a Digital Nomad Visa (DNV) or Non-Lucrative Visa (NLV) — including their dependents — once they're ready to start working with Spanish clients or build a local business.


In terms of duration, the initial permit generally runs for one year when you arrive without prior work authorization (for example, coming from a student or non-lucrative permit); applicants who already held legal work authorization in Spain can be granted a longer initial permit. From there it's renewable for four years at a time, and after five years of continuous legal residence it can lead to permanent (long-term) residency. It even offers helpful flexibility: the permit allows both self-employed and employed work, so you're not locked into a single way of earning. In other words, this isn't just a work permit — it's a genuine pathway to building a long-term life in Spain.


A quick but important distinction: if your work is fully remote and your clients are mostly outside Spain, the Digital Nomad Visa is very likely the better route — it's faster, more flexible, comes with attractive tax benefits, and doesn't require you to set yourself up as a Spanish autónomo in the same way. The self-employed visa, by contrast, is built around a clear economic link to Spain — so it's the right fit when you plan to build a client base inside Spain or launch a local business, and it's not the right tool for a purely remote worker with no Spanish connection.


👉 Not sure which one fits you? That's exactly what a free consultation is for.

2. Requirements for the Self-Employed Visa Spain


Securing the self-employment visa comes down to a clear, if demanding, checklist. It can look daunting on paper, but broken into pieces it's entirely manageable. Here's what you'll need to prepare.


a. A Viable, Certified Business Plan

This is the heart of the application. Your business plan (proyecto de viabilidad) should lay out your activity, the investment required, expected profitability, and any potential to create jobs. The crucial catch: it can't just be written by you and left at that. It must be reviewed and certified by one of Spain's recognised professional associations for self-employed workers — such as UPTA, ATA, or UATAE.

You have options here. Many applicants prepare the plan themselves and pay only for the certification, which typically costs around €50–€150. Alternatively, a specialised provider can prepare the entire plan for you — certification included — for roughly €400. Whichever route you take, a strong plan always includes solid market analysis, a clear-eyed look at your competitors, and realistic financial projections.

A convincing, certified plan doesn't just support your application — it's the foundation your business will actually stand on. To be taken seriously, it should walk the reader through the following key elements:

1. Description of the business (and its history, if any) — what you do, how it works, and, if you're already trading, where you've come from.

2. Training, certificates or qualifications related to your professional activity, showing you're genuinely equipped to deliver it.

3. The sector your business operates in, and how it fits the Spanish market.

4. Your current business configuration and fiscal setup — including your main current metrics (turnover, costs and profit) and supporting evidence such as tax declarations and/or bank statements.

5. The city where you'll establish the business in Spain (this matters far more than you'd think — see the section on regional differences below).

6. The contracts you'll have in Spain to support the activity — client agreements, collaborations or letters of intent.

7. Financial projections — realistic, forward-looking forecasts that tie back to everything above.

b. A Genuine Economic Link to Spain

Because this visa is all about doing business in Spain, you'll need to show a real, credible reason for operating there rather than anywhere else. Strong justifications include selling your services or products to Spanish clients, collaborating with Spanish companies, or expanding into the local market through events and partnerships.

In practice, this often means lining up pre-contracts or letters of intent with Spanish companies — these usually carry no binding commitment, but they demonstrate that your project has real footing. Some regions weigh this heavily: in Barcelona, for instance, it's common to be expected to show one or two contracts with Spanish clients or partners.

c. Proof of a Workplace

Spain will also want to see where you'll actually work. The cleanest options are a rented office or a coworking membership — coworking is often the simplest and most cost-effective to evidence. Working from home isn't impossible, but it's more complex: you'll need to justify your setup, equipment, and why your home doubles as a viable business base.

d. Proof of Sufficient Financial Means

Spain wants to know you can support yourself and get your venture off the ground without leaning on public funds. There's no single fixed figure — what matters is that the numbers are coherent with your business plan. As a rough baseline, applicants are often expected to show around €2,000 in available funds, but the real test is whether you can cover both your living costs and your business investment (website, tools, equipment, and so on).

One practical tip: if your plan relies on a website you haven't built yet, be ready to show the funds set aside to develop it. Throughout, your income projections should be realistic and clearly aligned with the plan — inflated forecasts do more harm than good.

e. Qualifications, Licenses, Documents and a Clean Record

You'll need to prove you have the qualifications or professional experience to actually do the work — and, for regulated professions, any licenses or registrations Spain requires. Round this out with a criminal record certificate, a medical certificate, and valid health insurance.

A word on paperwork, because it's where timelines quietly slip: every foreign document — your criminal record certificate, your academic and professional qualifications, and so on — must be both apostilled and officially sworn-translated into Spanish. If you're already in Spain on another visa, you'll also generally need a recent empadronamiento certificate (proof of local registration), typically no more than three months old.

3. The 5 Steps to Apply for a Freelance Visa Spain

Ready to dive in? Here's your simplified roadmap — five steps from dream to autónomo.

Step 1 — Prepare Your Documents. Start gathering everything: your passport, the certified business plan, proof of funds, evidence of your qualifications or experience, proof of your workplace, any Spanish contracts or letters of intent, your criminal record certificate, medical certificate, and health insurance. Get foreign documents apostilled and sworn-translated into Spanish early — this is where most timelines quietly slip.

Step 2 — Apply in the Right Place. Where you apply depends on your situation. If this is an initial application and you don't currently hold a spanish visa, you apply from your home country, in person at the Spanish consulate for your district (you can't do it as a tourist already in Spain). But if you're already in Spain on another permit — say a student, DNV or NLV holder making a change of status — you can usually apply from within Spain, either in person at the Oficina de Extranjería or online through the Mercurio platform. Applying online on your behalf requires a Power of Attorney — either a notarial POA (around €80) or, more conveniently, an electronic POA via Apodera if you hold a digital certificate. A few regions (such as País Vasco) run their own platforms, so it's always worth checking.

Step 3 — The Review (and Possible Interview). Once submitted, your file goes to the relevant Spanish authorities for assessment, and the consulate may ask you in for a personal interview. Treat it as your chance to bring the business plan to life — show your preparation, your passion, and why your project makes sense in Spain.

Step 4 — Await Approval. Now comes the patience. Timelines vary enormously by region: some cases are decided in as little as two weeks, the average sits around three months, and the strictest regions (Valencia is notorious here) can take up to eight months. If you applied through a consulate, once approved you'll usually need to collect the visa within about a month of notification, or the approval can lapse.

Step 5 — Register as Autónomo (RETA). This is the step that makes it official. After you're approved you'll register with the Spanish Social Security system under the self-employed regime (RETA), sign up with the tax authority, and — if you entered on a visa — apply for your foreigner's identity card (TIE) within the required deadlines. Ideally you'll already be registered as autónomo; if not, applications can often be submitted with a formal commitment to register. Once that's done, you're officially in business — legally living and freelancing in Spain. Embarking on this adventure takes planning and persistence, but the reward — building a life and a career in a country this vibrant — is worth every appointment.

4. Regional Differences: Why Location Can Make or Break Your Application

Here's something many guides gloss over but which can genuinely decide the outcome of your case: Spain's regions apply this visa very differently. Criteria, strictness, and even the documents scrutinised can shift from one province to the next.

  • Valencia tends to be very restrictive — expect tougher scrutiny and the longest processing times.

  • Tarragona, by contrast, is generally more flexible, which is why it's often a smart choice for autónomo applicants.

  • Barcelona typically wants to see one or two Spanish contracts to prove your economic link is real.

The golden rule: your work location must match where you're registered (empadronado). Authorities expect coherence between the region you're applying in, where you'll actually operate, and your local registration. Before you submit anything, do — or get help with — region-specific research: the very same file can sail through in one province and stall in another.

5. After Approval: Duration, Renewal & Bringing Your Family

How long your permit lasts

As noted earlier, the initial permit is generally granted for one year if you arrive without prior work authorization; if you already held legal work authorization, it can be longer. It covers both self-employed and employed work, giving you real flexibility in how you earn.

Renewing

Renewals are issued for four additional years at a time, and must be filed in the same region where you're empadronado. At renewal, the authorities look closely at whether your business is genuinely up and running: is it actively generating income in Spain? Do you have real clients and collaborations, especially Spanish ones? Are your Social Security (autónomo) contributions up to date? The message is simple — maintaining real economic activity and staying compliant is what keeps your status renewable, and ultimately opens the door to permanent residency.

Bringing your family

Dependents are possible, but the process is region-dependent. The general path is that the main applicant is approved first, the family member then applies through family reunification (from the consulate), and you'll need to show *adequate housing (vivienda adecuada). Some regions — such as Barcelona, Valencia and País Vasco — may allow joint family applications*, so it's worth checking what's possible where you're headed.

6. Thriving in Spain as a Self-Employed Individual

You've got the visa. Now it's time to actually settle in and make the most of your new Spanish chapter. Here's how to find your feet in the local business landscape.

a. Adapting to Spanish Business Culture

  • Relationships come first. Spaniards value personal connection and trust. Coffee, lunch, and a bit of small talk aren't a detour from doing business — they often are the business.

  • Warm and expressive. Expect direct, animated conversation. Passion isn't unprofessional here; it's how people show they care.

  • A different rhythm. Long lunches, later working hours, and the occasional slower August are part of the flow. Lean into it rather than fighting it.

b. Networking and Building Connections

  • Join local groups and associations. Industry meetups and business associations boost your visibility and help you read the local market.

  • Show up to events. Spain's cities host a steady stream of professional gatherings — perfect for meeting collaborators and future clients (and, handily, useful evidence of your economic link to Spain).

  • Learn the language. Plenty of people speak English, but even conversational Spanish opens doors (and hearts) that stay closed otherwise.

c. Navigating the Legal and Fiscal Landscape

  • Taxes and invoicing. As an autónomo you'll handle income tax (IRPF) and, in most cases, VAT (IVA), plus monthly Social Security (RETA) contributions. A local gestor or accountant is worth their weight in gold here.

  • Stay registered and compliant. Keeping your autónomo status, tax filings, and Social Security contributions in order isn't just good practice — it's exactly what keeps your visa renewable down the line.

7. Lifestyle Tips for Success and Balance

Spain is synonymous with quality of life, and balancing work with genuine downtime tends to make you more productive, not less.


  • Live the buena vida. Make time for the terraces, the markets, the long dinners, the coastline. This is a big part of why you moved.


  • Explore the regions. From Andalusia to the Basque Country to the Mediterranean coast, each region has its own character, cost of living, and opportunities. Look beyond your first postcode.

  • Protect your boundaries. As your own boss, work-life balance is yours to design. Spain will happily remind you that evenings and weekends are for living.

8. Your Spanish Adventure Awaits

Ultimately, the self-employed visa Spain ushers you into a country brimming with opportunity — a place where your ideas can grow amid extraordinary landscapes, deep culture, and a pace of life that somehow makes room for both ambition and joy.

Before you go, keep the four things that matter most front of mind: a strong economic link to Spain, a high-quality, certified business plan, an awareness that regional differences can decide your case, and a file where your financials, contracts and activity justification all tell one coherent story. Get those right, and the rest is just paperwork — the kind we're very happy to help you tame.



How MoveWise Can Assist You

Applying for a Self-Employed Visa Spain can feel overwhelming, but MoveWise is here to simplify the process. Our mission is to make your application journey smooth and stress-free with a range of expert services:

  • Tailored Support: We adapt our services to fit your unique situation, ensuring a hassle-free experience.

  • Optimized Scheduling: We streamline your application timeline to ensure everything progresses on schedule.

  • End-to-End Support: From preparing documents to final submission, we take care of every detail of your application.

  • Tax Guidance: Our specialists provide clarity on the tax obligations and options associated with your SEV.

  • Thorough Documentation: We ensure every document is correctly prepared and meets all official requirements.

  • 100% money back guarantee: If your application is not approved, we offer a full money-back guarantee as a testament to our commitment.

The Self-Employed visa for Spain offers a fantastic opportunity to live abroad while working remothely, granting you the freedom to explore and enjoy the country’s vibrant culture and relaxed lifestyle. 


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While the requirements for obtaining a Self-Employed visa for Spain are straightforward, preparing the necessary documents and navigating the

application process can be challenging. Mistakes or incomplete paperwork could put your application at risk. If you have any doubts or questions about the Self-Employed Visa process, BOOK TODAY a 100% Free Consultation.

We’re here to help you every step of the way.


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