Can a foreigner register as autónomo? (2026 guide)
Updated: May 2026.
Yes. Foreigners can register as autónomo, and tens of thousands do every year. The path depends on one thing: your passport. EU/EEA/Swiss citizens can register with nothing more than a NIE. Non-EU citizens need an immigration authorization that explicitly covers self-employment, secured before they enter Spain. Get this part wrong and Hacienda rejects the alta on day one.
Quick answer
EU, EEA, Swiss: yes, with NIE. Treat it as administrative paperwork, not immigration.
Non-EU with the right visa or permit: yes. The four legitimate paths are the cuenta propia residence permit, the Digital Nomad Visa, the entrepreneur visa (Ley 14/2013), and family reunification with a self-employment endorsement.
Non-EU on a tourist stamp: no. Cannot register from inside Spain on a Schengen tourist entry.
Non-EU on a student visa: only if the visa explicitly authorizes self-employment, which most do not.
Time to set up: 4-8 weeks for EU, 3-5 months for non-EU including the consulate visa.
Who counts as a "foreigner" here
For Spanish tax and Social Security purposes, "foreigner" means anyone who is not a Spanish national. That splits two ways:
EU/EEA/Swiss nationals: Free movement applies. You can live and work as self-employed without an immigration permit. The administrative requirements are the same as for a Spanish national.
Non-EU nationals (everyone else): Spanish immigration law applies. You need a residence and work permit that authorizes self-employment, in addition to the standard administrative steps.
UK citizens have been treated as non-EU since the Brexit transition ended on 31 December 2020.
EU, EEA, and Swiss citizens
If you hold an EU/EEA/Swiss passport, you have the right to work as self-employed without any immigration authorization. The process is purely administrative.
What you need before you alta:
NIE (Número de Identidad de Extranjero): apply with Form EX-15 from your home country at a Spanish consulate, or with Form EX-18 plus the green residency certificate (Certificado de Registro de Ciudadano de la Unión) once you've moved to Spain. Appointments in Madrid and Barcelona run 2-6 weeks out.
Empadronamiento: register at your local town hall with proof of address. Most autonomous communities require this for the EX-18 path.
Spanish IBAN: Seguridad Social debits the cuota directly.
Digital certificate (FNMT) or Cl@ve: for filing Modelo 036 and the RETA alta online.
Once you have the NIE and the digital certificate, the alta itself takes one to five working days end to end.
Non-EU citizens: the four legitimate paths
Non-EU citizens cannot turn up on a tourist stamp and register as autónomo. The authorization to work as self-employed must be granted before you enter Spain. Four legitimate routes:
Cuenta propia residence permit (Autorización de residencia y trabajo por cuenta propia). The classic route. File at a Spanish consulate in your home country. Requires a viable business plan, proof of qualifications, capital sufficiency, and a CCAA labour market assessment in some cases. Processing 1-3 months.
Digital Nomad Visa (Visado para teletrabajadores de carácter internacional, Ley 28/2022). Live locally while working remotely for foreign clients or a foreign employer. Up to 20% of your income may come from Spanish clients. Five-year initial duration possible if you apply from inside Spain on a tourist stamp (the only exception to the from-abroad rule), three years if you apply from your home country. Combine with the Beckham regime where eligible.
Entrepreneur visa under Ley 14/2013. For "innovative" or "high economic interest" projects. ENISA evaluates the project. Faster processing than cuenta propia.
Family reunification authorization with self-employment endorsement. Spouses and adult children of legal residents can request a work authorization that covers self-employment as part of the family reunification process.
Student visas usually permit only part-time employment, not self-employment. Check the small print before you alta. Working students who alta as autónomo without explicit visa authorization face permit revocation plus the AEAT and TGSS fines for unregistered activity.
The NIE: every foreigner needs one
The NIE is your tax and Social Security identifier. Nothing moves without it.
EU/EEA/Swiss nationals: apply yourself with Form EX-15 (from abroad) or EX-18 (from Spain). Bring your passport, proof of intention to work, proof of address (empadronamiento for EX-18), and the tax fee (Modelo 790-012, around €10-12).
Non-EU nationals: the NIE is assigned automatically as part of your residence and work permit. You do not apply for it separately.
NIE appointments in Madrid, Barcelona, Málaga, and Valencia are the bottleneck. Book the slot the moment you have a date for your move.
The registration process once you're authorized
Once the NIE is in hand and you have the right to work, the alta is the same for everyone. The full step-by-step is at how to register as a freelancer. The two-step short version:
Modelo 036 at AEAT. Filed before your activity start date. Modelo 037 was abolished on 9 February 2025 by Orden HAC/1526/2024; every alta now uses Modelo 036.
RETA alta in Importass using Modelo TA.0521. File up to 60 days before the activity start date and no later than the start day itself. The alta date is the moment your cuota clock starts.
Order matters: 036 first, RETA second, on the same day or with RETA up to 60 days later. The reverse fails and your tarifa plana election can be denied.
What it actually costs
Registration with AEAT and TGSS is free. The recurring and one-off costs:
NIE (EU citizens): Modelo 790-012 fee, approximately €10-12.
Tarifa plana, year 1: €80 base + 0.9% MEI = €88.64/month.
Year 2 onwards: €205.88 to €607.31/month, depending on your real net profit (15 brackets).
IRPF and IVA: 20% IRPF advance quarterly + IVA quarterly, on top of the cuota.
Non-EU consulate visa fees: typically €60-€200 for the visa itself; €200-€500 with document preparation, legalisation, and translation.
Empadronamiento and EX-18 administrative fees (EU): €10-€20.
EU/EEA/Swiss: NIE appointment 2-6 weeks. Empadronamiento 1-2 weeks (longer in Barcelona). Alta itself 1-5 working days. Total: roughly 4-8 weeks.
Non-EU, cuenta propia or entrepreneur visa: Consulate visa 1-3 months. Move to Spain. NIE comes with the visa. Alta 1-5 working days. Total: 3-5 months.
Non-EU, Digital Nomad Visa: 1-3 months from a consulate, or roughly 20-45 days if applied from inside Spain on a tourist stamp.
Start earlier than you think. Consulate slots and NIE appointments are the chokepoints, not the alta.
Common reasons applications are rejected
Non-EU applicant arrives as a tourist and tries to alta from Spain. Rejected. Authorization must come first.
Visa does not cover self-employment. Most student visas, family-only reunifications, and intra-corporate transfer permits do not. Check the resolution before you alta.
UK citizen applies under EU rules. Post-Brexit UK nationals are non-EU.
Modelo 036 filed after RETA alta. Date conflict, tarifa plana denied.
Wrong IAE epígrafe for the activity that will be performed. Hacienda reclassifies retroactively.
Digital Nomad Visa applicant earning >20% from Spanish clients. Breaches the visa condition; may convert to standard cuenta propia or trigger revocation.
Alternatives if you can't go autónomo
Set up a Sociedad Limitada (SL). A non-resident foreigner can incorporate an SL without a residence permit. The SL itself is a legal entity; if you also want to take a salary as the administrator, you still need a residence and work permit. Useful when partners share the business or capital is significant.
Beckham Law via a Spanish employment contract. If you can secure a Spanish employment contract (or an EOR contract), the special impatriate regime gives you a 24% flat tax for six years. See Beckham Law for expats.
Employer of Record (EOR). Continue working for your foreign employer through a Spanish EOR. You're an employee, not an autónomo, but you live and work legally.
Wait for a different visa. If the cuenta propia route is rejected, the Digital Nomad Visa or entrepreneur visa often succeeds with the same business plan.
2026 changes affecting foreign autónomos
Tarifa plana €80 + MEI 0.9% = €88.64/month, continued under RDL 16/2025.
15-tramo cuota frozen at 2025 levels for 2026; only MEI moved (0.8% to 0.9%).
Modelo 037 abolished. All altas now use Modelo 036.
Verifactu mandatory for autónomos from 1 July 2027. Pick a compliant invoicing tool when you alta.
DGT V1207-25 and V1068-25 clarified that Beckham-eligible inbound workers can also serve as administrators of Spanish companies (relevant to the SL alternative).
Cuenta propia application backlogs at consulates in Buenos Aires, México DF, Bogotá, and London. Build extra weeks into the timeline.
FAQ
Can I register as autónomo on a Schengen tourist visa? No, unless you hold an EU/EEA/Swiss passport. Non-EU tourists must leave Spain and apply for a residence permit covering self-employment from a consulate.
Do UK citizens follow EU or non-EU rules? Non-EU since 1 January 2021.
Can I register the SL first and worry about my visa later? The SL itself yes, but you cannot earn personal income from it without a work permit.
Does the Digital Nomad Visa let me bill Spanish clients? Up to 20% of your income may come from Spanish clients while on the DNV.
Do I lose tarifa plana if I'm a foreigner? No. Tarifa plana applies to anyone newly altaing in RETA who has not been altaing in the last 2 years (3 years if used before).
Can my spouse work as autónomo on a family reunification? Yes, if the family reunification authorization includes the self-employment endorsement, granted automatically in most cases since the 2022 reform.
Where renn fits
renn handles the alta end to end for foreign autónomos: the Modelo 036 with the right IAE epígrafe for your activity and visa class, the RETA alta in Importass on a coordinated date, the tarifa plana election, the mutua selection, the regional cuota cero application where you qualify, and Verifactu-compliant invoicing from day one. Real accountants on the file, the platform handling the paperwork rhythm.