Spain is high-tax, unless you capture Beckham
The single most important fact about Spanish tax for a nomad is that the country is, by default, a high-tax place, and the entire game is whether you qualify for the special regime that changes that. Become an ordinary Spanish tax resident and you are taxed on worldwide income at progressive rates that climb to 47 percent, with savings income taxed up to 28 percent. That is a serious bill, and it is what awaits anyone who moves to Spain without planning. The Beckham Law exists precisely to rewrite that outcome for incoming workers, and capturing it is the difference between Spain as a smart base and Spain as an expensive one.
So unlike Georgia or the UAE, where the favorable position is close to automatic, Spain demands that you actively qualify for and apply to its good regime. Get it right and Spain rivals anywhere in Europe. Get it wrong, or miss the window, and you pay full freight.
What the Beckham Law gives you
The Beckham Law, formally the Special Regime for Inbound Workers, is the reason high earners choose Spain. For those who qualify, it applies a flat 24 percent to Spanish-source employment income up to 600,000 euros a year, with anything above taxed at 47 percent, in place of the normal progressive scale. More valuable still for a remote worker, it largely exempts foreign-source income, so foreign dividends, foreign capital gains, and similar earnings generally fall outside Spanish tax, and it limits wealth tax to assets located in Spain rather than your worldwide net worth. The regime runs for the year you arrive plus the following five, six years in total.
For a salaried remote worker earning well from a foreign employer, that combination is one of the best in Western Europe, and arguably stronger than Portugal's post-NHR regime for pure income. It turns Spain from a high-tax country into a flat-24-percent one for the duration, while leaving most of your non-Spanish income untouched.
Who actually qualifies, and the autónomo problem
The catch is eligibility, and it is where many nomads come unstuck. Beckham was built around employees of foreign companies who relocate to Spain, and the 2025 court rulings that confirmed Digital Nomad Visa holders can use it were specifically about employees working for foreign employers. Self-employed freelancers operating as Spanish autónomos sit in a far murkier position and frequently cannot access the regime cleanly, which drops them back onto the regular progressive rates. This is the single biggest tax trap in Spain for nomads: a freelancer who assumes the headline 24 percent applies to them can be very wrong.
The practical lesson is that your employment structure drives your Spanish tax outcome more than anything else. If you are a salaried employee of a foreign company, Beckham is likely within reach and worth the effort. If you are a freelancer, take Spanish advice before you arrive on whether any structure gets you into the regime, because the default for autónomos is the high progressive rates.
The six-month window
Beckham is not automatic even for those who qualify. You must apply for it, and the deadline is strict: within six months of registering with Spanish social security. Miss that window and you lose access to the regime for your entire stay, defaulting to ordinary residency taxation. This is an easy, expensive mistake, and it is why anyone serious about the Spanish tax advantage lines up an asesor fiscal before the move and treats the Beckham application as a first-week priority rather than something to handle later.
The standard rates, if Beckham does not apply
If you do not qualify for Beckham, or you let the window lapse, Spain taxes you as an ordinary resident on worldwide income. General income, including salary and self-employment, runs on a progressive scale that combines state and regional brackets and reaches roughly 47 percent at the top, with the exact top rate varying by autonomous community. Savings income, covering dividends, interest, and capital gains, is taxed on its own scale from 19 percent up to 28 percent. These are normal Western European rates, neither punitive nor a bargain, but they are a world away from the nomad regimes elsewhere in this guide, which is why the Beckham question matters so much.
Wealth tax, and why the region matters
Spain is one of the few countries with a genuine wealth tax, and it varies so much by region that where you live can change your bill substantially. Some autonomous communities, Madrid most famously, apply a near-total reduction that effectively zeroes ordinary wealth tax, while others levy it at rates up to around 3.5 percent on large fortunes. On top of that sits a national Solidarity Wealth Tax aimed at net wealth above three million euros, designed to catch those whose region had set wealth tax low. Under the Beckham regime, wealth tax reaches only your Spanish assets, which is a meaningful shield for anyone with significant wealth held abroad. For everyone else, the regional choice is a real planning lever, and it is one more reason to take local advice.
IVA and the everyday taxes
The tax you feel daily is IVA, value-added tax, at a standard 21 percent, with reduced rates on essentials like some food and transport. It is higher than the consumption taxes in the Gulf or much of Asia and is simply built into prices. Property and local taxes are modest by comparison. None of this is income tax, but the 21 percent IVA is part of why the cost of everyday life in Spain sits where it does.
Crypto, and the reporting you cannot skip
Crypto is taxed straightforwardly for residents: gains fall under savings income at 19 to 28 percent. The part nomads underestimate is reporting. Spain requires residents to declare foreign-held crypto and other foreign assets on the Modelo 721 and related forms, and the penalties for getting it wrong have historically been severe. Under Beckham, foreign-source crypto gains may be exempt, but the declaration obligations still need careful handling. Treat Spanish crypto compliance as a real task for your asesor rather than an afterthought.
The treaty layer and US citizens
Spain has a broad double-taxation treaty network covering around 90 countries, including a comprehensive treaty with the United States, which helps residents avoid being taxed twice and coordinates the two systems. As everywhere, US citizens remain taxed by the IRS on worldwide income regardless of living in Spain, and rely on the Foreign Tax Credit and the Foreign Earned Income Exclusion to manage the overlap. The interaction of Beckham with US taxation is genuinely intricate, since exempt-in-Spain income may still be taxable at home, so Americans should use an advisor fluent in both systems rather than treating Beckham as a clean win on its own.
The nomad takeaway
Spain rewards planning more than almost any country in this reference. The path to a good outcome is specific: arrive as a salaried employee of a foreign company on the Digital Nomad Visa, register for social security, and apply for the Beckham regime within six months, after which you pay a flat 24 percent on Spanish-source income and shelter most foreign income for six years. Do that and Spain is a top-tier base. Skip it, miss the window, or arrive as an autónomo without structuring advice, and you face ordinary high Spanish rates that erase the appeal. The single best money you can spend here is on an asesor fiscal before you move.
For how to obtain the visa that opens this door, see the visa page, and for the longer arc of settling and citizenship, the residency page. For the cost of actually living here, see the Valencia city guide.