We help remote employees and freelancers from the US, the UK, Norway and beyond move to Spain legally with the international teleworking visa. Keep your job, bring your family, and have your case handled from start to finish.
Real clients who now have their life in Spain on track.
I thought it would be far too complicated at my age, but they handled every document for me. I'm now in Spain with all my paperwork in order.
I kept working the whole time while they moved my case forward in parallel. Before I knew it, my residence card was in my hand. They explained every step without the legal jargon.
What gave me peace of mind was always talking to the same person and knowing exactly where things stood. No magic promises, just a process done right from start to finish.
Personal documents are blurred to protect each client's privacy.
Spain's international teleworking visa, introduced in 2023, lets you live in the country while you keep working remotely for companies or clients based outside Spain. It is the legal route for digital nomads and remote professionals who want to make Spain their home.
You are hired by a company based outside Spain and work remotely. You stay in the same job, now living in another country.
You serve clients abroad. Most of your income comes from outside Spain and you run your work from wherever you are.
The list below is the general picture. Every case is reviewed individually before any application.
Amounts and conditions are set by the Spanish government and can change. In the first call we confirm your real situation before moving forward.
Your spouse or partner and dependent children can join the same process and live with you.
When applied for inside Spain, the authorization can be valid for up to 3 years and is renewable.
It opens the way to long‑term residency and, in time, to citizenship.
As a resident you move freely across the Schengen area to live and travel.
As a resident, you gain access to Spain's healthcare system.
In some cases you may apply for Spain's special tax regime for inbound workers. We assess whether it fits you.
We handle both scenarios. In the first call we define which one fits your case.
We prepare the full file and submit the visa at the Spanish consulate before your move, so you arrive with everything already underway.
If you are already on Spanish soil or need to regularize your status, we run the residence authorization request directly in Spain.
We understand your situation, confirm whether you qualify and design the right strategy.
A complete checklist, with guidance on sworn translations and apostilles.
We submit your request through the correct channel, at the consulate or inside Spain.
We follow the resolution, the residence card (TIE) and your settling in.
Immigration is not a random form online. It is the right document, on time, through the right channel. That is what we take care of.
You are never on your own at any stage. We follow the case until the residency comes through.
We guide every document, translation and apostille so the application arrives complete.
You speak directly with the person handling your case, with no bot in between.
If there is a refusal, we advise on the available administrative appeals instead of starting over.
Spain was named the world's top destination for digital nomads in 2025 by global industry indexes.
International teleworking authorizations granted since the visa launched in 2023.
Digital nomad visas issued in 2025 alone, according to the Spanish government.
Sources: Spain's Ministry of Inclusion and migration observatories (public data, 2024 and 2025). Figures are approximate and may vary by source.
Language is not a formal requirement of the teleworking visa. Speaking Spanish helps your day‑to‑day life, but it is not what decides the approval.
Yes. Your spouse or partner and dependent children can be included in the same process and live with you in Spain.
No, it is the opposite. The whole point of the visa is to let you keep your remote job while you move to Spain.
Applications filed inside Spain are usually answered in about 20 business days. Through a consulate the timing varies. We give you an estimate for your case in the first assessment.
The request can be handled there to regularize your status. That is one of the two routes we cover.
No. The final decision always rests with the Spanish government, and no serious firm promises a guaranteed approval. Our job is to prepare your case as strongly as possible and guide you through every step.
Send us your details and we will tell you, plainly, whether you qualify and what your process would look like.