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Spain Non-Lucrative Visa for UK Applicants
The Spain Non-Lucrative Visa is one of the most popular visa routes for UK retirees, early retirees, and those with passive income. Post-Brexit, UK citizens can no longer rely on EU freedom of movement and must now obtain a formal visa to live in Spain — the NLV is the ideal option for those who don't work.
Why UK Applicants Choose the NLV
- For retirees: No work requirement; your pension income counts as passive income
- For early retirees: Live on investment income or savings without working
- Brexit transition: UK citizens no longer have freedom of movement; this is the legal residence route
- Path to residency: Initial 1-year visa, then 2-year renewals, leading to permanent residency after 5 years
- Family included: Spouses and dependent children can be added
Good news for UK applicants: The UK is one of the easiest countries to apply from. BLS UK is well-organized, appointment slots are readily available (often within 1-2 weeks), and the consulate processes UK applications smoothly. Expect 30-45 days from BLS submission to approval in most cases.
BLS UK Locations
BLS (Serviços de Vistos) is the official visa application processor for UK applicants. In most cases, you must apply through BLS rather than directly at the consulate. BLS handles document collection, verification, and submission to the Spanish Embassy.
BLS UK Office Locations
🔴 BLS London (Main)
Coverage: South East England (London, Surrey, Sussex, Essex, Kent, Hampshire, Berkshire). Most UK applicants use this location.
🔴 BLS Manchester
Coverage: North West England, Wales, Northern Ireland (Manchester, Liverpool, Chester, Derby, Stoke-on-Trent, Cardiff, Belfast)
🔴 BLS Edinburgh
Coverage: Scotland (Edinburgh, Glasgow, Aberdeen, Inverness, Dundee)
📍 Which BLS location should I use? Select the BLS office nearest your home address. You can apply at any of the three locations — it doesn't matter which consulate jurisdiction you fall under. BLS will forward your documents to the appropriate consulate handling your jurisdiction.
Appointment Booking Timeline
- Off-peak (May-August): Same-week appointments often available
- Peak season (January-March): 2-4 week wait for appointments
- Typical average: 7-14 days from booking to appointment
To book, visit BLS Spain UK website, create an account, select your location and preferred time slot, and receive confirmation via email.
Spanish Embassy London
While BLS handles most UK applications, the Spanish Embassy in London ultimately approves your visa. You will not visit the Embassy directly (BLS handles submission), but it's good to know your processing institution.
Spanish Embassy London
What the Embassy Does
- Reviews your BLS-submitted documents
- Verifies income documentation and financial capacity
- Conducts background checks against criminal databases
- Makes the final approval or rejection decision
- Returns your approved visa to BLS for collection
Note: You will not typically visit the Embassy during the NLV application process. All communication goes through BLS.
BLS vs Direct Consulate Application
Can UK applicants apply directly at the Spanish Embassy instead of BLS?
This is complicated. Technically, the Embassy may accept applications directly in limited circumstances (e.g., if you are physically in London and want to apply in person). However, BLS is the official, recommended route, and most applications go through BLS.
For UK applicants, BLS is better because:
- Faster appointment availability (vs Embassy queues)
- More convenient document drop-off (vs Embassy in-person requirement)
- Better online tracking and status updates
- Off-site processing (Embassy staff less overwhelmed)
- Multiple locations (London, Manchester, Edinburgh)
⚠️ Recommendation: Apply through BLS. It's faster, easier, and more reliable than direct consulate application in the UK.
UK-Specific NLV Requirements
Income Requirement for UK Applicants
The Spanish government requires proof of passive income or savings of approximately €1,368 per month for one adult (€2,026 for couples, plus €200 per dependent).
For UK applicants, acceptable income sources include:
- Pension income: UK State Pension, private pension, workplace pension, annuities
- Investment income: Dividends, interest, capital gains (from ISAs, investment accounts)
- Rental income: Income from UK rental properties (after mortgage/expenses)
- Savings: Proof of sufficient liquid savings (typically €40,000-50,000 minimum)
- Combination: Mix of pension + savings + dividends, etc.
UK Advantage: Most UK State Pension recipients (~£180-200+ per week) qualify on pension income alone, especially if combined with modest savings or investment income.
UK-Specific Documents Required
| Document | UK-Specific Notes |
|---|---|
| Passport | UK passport (post-Brexit, EU ID cards no longer accepted). Must be valid for 12+ months. |
| Proof of Income | Bank statements from UK banks (Halifax, Barclays, Lloyds, etc.). 3-6 months of statements recommended. |
| Pension Statement | From UK pension provider (HMRC, workplace pension, private pension company). 12-month statement. |
| UK Driving Licence | Optional but helpful for identity verification (not required). |
| Birth Certificate | Full birth certificate (not short form). Must have apostille (see below). |
| Criminal Record Certificate | UK Police Disclosures (DBS check). Must be standard or enhanced DBS from UK government. Must have apostille. |
| Marriage/Divorce Certificate | If applicable. Must have apostille. |
UK Apostille Requirements
Apostille is a special certification proving documents are authentic for international use. UK documents requiring apostille must be certified by the UK Foreign, Commonwealth & Development Office (FCDO).
- Cost: £5-10 per document (very affordable)
- Timeline: 1-2 weeks via post, 1-3 days for expedited service
- How: Apply via UK government apostille service
- Documents needed: Birth certificate, criminal record certificate, divorce decree (if applicable), marriage certificate, university degrees
Tip for UK applicants: Order apostilles early. Most NLV rejections for UK applicants are due to missing apostilles on critical documents. Get them certified before you book your BLS appointment.
UK-Specific Challenges & Solutions
| Challenge | Solution |
|---|---|
| Irregular income (e.g., freelance work in past) | Provide multiple years of tax returns + bank statements to show transition to passive income. Get letter from accountant explaining income change. |
| Multiple income sources (pension + dividends + savings) | Prepare a summary document showing total monthly income from all sources. Show it clearly exceeds €1,368. |
| Recent retirement | Provide letter from employer confirming retirement date, final salary, and pension amount. Get pension provider letter confirming ongoing payments. |
| Bank statements in pounds sterling | All bank statements are fine in GBP. Consulate accepts GBP — no need to convert. Do ensure your bank statements clearly show the income amount. |
UK Income Sources in Detail
The Spanish consulate wants to verify that your income is genuine, stable, and passive. Here's how different UK income sources are viewed:
UK State Pension: This is the ideal proof of income. Your State Pension statement from HMRC clearly shows monthly amount. At approximately £180-230 per week (£720-920 per month), most UK State Pension recipients meet or exceed the €1,368 requirement (approximately £1,200). Combine pension with even modest savings (£30,000+) and you're very likely to be approved.
Workplace & Private Pensions: Treated identically to State Pension. Get a statement from your pension provider within 3 months of your BLS appointment. Include retirement letter from employer if recently retired, showing pension amount and start date.
Investment Income & Dividends: UK tax documents (Self Assessment, dividend statements) prove investment income. The consulate looks at net monthly income. Include bank statements showing dividends being deposited consistently. Volatile markets may concern the consulate — show a 12-24 month history to demonstrate stability.
Rental Income: If you own UK rental properties, provide proof of ownership (property deed) and net rental income after mortgage/expenses. Typically, if you own property worth £300,000+ mortgaged at £800/month, the net income qualifies. Show 12 months of bank statements documenting consistent rental deposits.
Savings & Liquid Assets: Savings alone (without income) don't typically qualify unless you have €40,000-50,000+ in liquid savings. The consulate wants to see monthly income, not just a lump sum. However, savings strengthen your application and show financial stability.
Example Income Scenarios for UK Applicants:
- Scenario 1 (Strong Approval): £850/month state pension + £30,000 savings = Clear approval. Exceeds €1,368 monthly income requirement.
- Scenario 2 (Good Approval): £600/month workplace pension + £500/month rental income + £20,000 savings = Clear approval. Total £1,100/month exceeds requirement.
- Scenario 3 (Moderate Risk): £400/month pension + £200/month dividends + £50,000 savings = Likely approval. Monthly income at €690 falls short, but large savings demonstrate financial capacity. Include letter of explanation.
- Scenario 4 (High Risk): Only £45,000 in savings, no pension income = High rejection risk. Savings alone insufficient. Only advisable if combined with other passive income or financial documentation.
Step-by-Step NLV Application for UK Applicants
Step 1: Gather Documents (4-8 Weeks)
- Request apostille certifications from FCDO (birth cert, criminal record, marriage/divorce docs) — 1-2 weeks
- Obtain DBS criminal record certificate from UK government — 1-2 weeks
- Collect 6 months of bank statements from your UK bank(s)
- Collect 12-month pension statement from pension provider
- Gather proof of accommodation (rental agreement or property ownership)
- Arrange NLV-compliant health insurance (€500-2,000/year typical)
- Make 2-3 copies of all documents
Step 2: Complete Application Forms (1-2 Hours)
- Download and complete Form EX-00 (visa application)
- Download and complete Form EX-01 (family information)
- Print completed forms (must be typewritten, not handwritten)
- Sign in original ink
Step 3: Book BLS Appointment (1 day to 4 weeks)
- Visit BLS Spain UK website
- Create account with your email and personal information
- Select location (London, Manchester, or Edinburgh)
- Choose preferred appointment date and time
- Receive confirmation email with appointment details
- Print confirmation
Step 4: Attend BLS Appointment (30-60 Minutes)
- Arrive 10 minutes early with all original documents and copies
- Submit application forms and documents to BLS official
- BLS official checks completeness of documents
- Pay visa fee (€60) + BLS service fee (£25-30)
- Receive receipt and application tracking number
- Ask for receipt acknowledging document submission
Step 5: Wait for Consulate Review (30-60 Days)
- BLS forwards your documents to Spanish Embassy London
- Embassy reviews documents and verifies income
- Embassy conducts background checks
- Track application status using your BLS tracking number
- Embassy makes decision (approval or rejection)
Step 6: Collect Approved Passport (5-10 Business Days)
- BLS notifies you when your passport is ready (email notification)
- Pick up passport in person at BLS office during business hours
- Or, arrange courier delivery (£15-30 extra charge)
- Verify visa is correctly stamped in your passport
Step 7: Travel to Spain & Register (Within 90 Days)
- Travel to Spain before your 90-day window expires
- Upon arrival, register at local town hall (Padron) with proof of accommodation
- Book appointment at local police station for TIE (residence card)
- Obtain TIE within 30 days of arrival (legal requirement)
Application Timeline for UK Applicants
| Stage | Timeline | Details |
|---|---|---|
| Document Preparation | 4-8 weeks | Apostilles, DBS check, bank statements, pension letters |
| BLS Appointment Booking | Same-day to 4 weeks | Off-peak (May-August): often same week. Peak (Jan-March): 2-4 weeks |
| Document Submission | 1 day | Your appointment day at BLS office |
| Consulate Processing | 30-60 days | Embassy reviews, background checks, decision |
| Passport Return | 5-10 days | After approval, BLS returns passport to you |
| Total Time | 3-5 months | From first BLS booking to receiving approved visa |
UK Timeline Advantage: UK applications are typically processed faster (30-45 days at consulate) than applicants from the USA, Australia, or other countries. This is because the Embassy is familiar with UK documents and UK income verification is straightforward.
Fees & Costs for UK Applicants
| Cost Item | Amount | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Spanish Visa Fee | €60 | Non-refundable, payable at BLS on appointment day |
| BLS Service Fee | £25-30 | UK-specific BLS handling fee, payable at appointment |
| DBS Criminal Check | £13-17 | UK criminal record check (one-time, not per person) |
| Apostille Certifications | £5-10 each | 4-8 documents needed (birth cert, criminal record, marriage/divorce, degrees) |
| Document Copies | £1-3 | Official copies of birth cert, marriage cert, etc. (if not already obtained) |
| Health Insurance | £400-1,500/year | NLV-compliant private insurance, separate from visa |
| Courier Return (Optional) | £15-25 | If you want BLS to courier your passport back instead of collecting in person |
| Total at BLS | £70-95 | Visa fee + BLS fee (payable on appointment day) |
Payments Accepted at BLS
- Cash (GBP preferred, but some BLS locations accept EUR)
- UK Debit Cards (Visa, Mastercard)
- UK Credit Cards (Visa, Mastercard)
Bring sufficient cash or cards to cover the visa fee (€60 ≈ £50-55) plus BLS fee (£25-30).
Health Insurance Requirements for UK Applicants
Health insurance is mandatory for NLV approval but separate from the visa fee. You must secure NLV-compliant insurance before your BLS appointment or within 60 days of arrival in Spain.
What Spanish Consulate Requires:
- Private insurance policy covering Spain (public NHS no longer valid post-Brexit)
- Coverage for pre-existing conditions
- Minimum hospitalization coverage (€600,000+)
- Emergency repatriation coverage to UK
- No age limits (even applicants 70+ must be covered)
Popular NLV Insurance Providers for UK Applicants:
- Sanitas (AUPA): Specialist NLV provider, £450-800/year, excellent consulate recognition
- ASISA: Major Spanish insurance provider, £600-1,200/year, strong coverage
- Groupama: International coverage, £500-1,000/year, good for retirees
- Cigna: Expat-focused, £600-1,500/year, excellent service for UK applicants
- BUPA International: UK-based insurer, £800-2,000/year, familiar to UK applicants
Cost Breakdown: Expect £400-1,500 annually depending on age, coverage level, and pre-existing conditions. UK applicants over 60 may pay at the higher end. Secure quotes before BLS appointment — you can present intent to purchase rather than actual policy at appointment, then finalize within 60 days.
Pro Tip: Many NLV insurance providers offer online quotes within minutes. Get 2-3 quotes from Sanitas, ASISA, and Cigna to compare. Consulate has no preference — just ensure the policy explicitly states NLV compliance and Spanish coverage.
Common Rejections for UK Applicants
Why are some UK NLV applications rejected? Here are the most common reasons:
1. Missing Apostille (Most Common)
Problem: Birth certificate, criminal record, or marriage certificate submitted without apostille certification
Solution: Obtain apostille from UK FCDO before BLS appointment. Verify all official documents have the apostille stamp.
Example: A 68-year-old UK applicant with £900/month pension and £35,000 savings was rejected because their birth certificate wasn't apostilled. The consulate returned the application specifically citing the missing apostille. The applicant reapplied 2 weeks later with apostille and was approved 45 days later with no further issues.
2. Incomplete Income Documentation
Problem: Bank statements don't clearly show €1,368+ monthly income. Or pension statements are outdated (more than 12 months old).
Solution: Provide recent bank statements (last 6 months). Get fresh pension statement within 3 months of BLS appointment. Calculate and document total monthly income clearly.
Example: An applicant provided a pension statement from 2024 showing £700/month but no recent bank statements. The consulate couldn't verify the pension was still being paid. Upon reapplication with 6 months of 2025 bank statements showing consistent pension deposits, the applicant was approved.
3. Work History Red Flags
Problem: Recent employment ended, suggesting potential to work again. Or tax returns show recent active work income (freelance, self-employed).
Solution: If recently retired, get retirement letter from employer. If freelance/self-employed, show clear income transition to passive sources. Provide written explanation and supporting documents.
Example: A 55-year-old applicant had been self-employed for 10 years but semi-retired and now lived on rental income. Tax returns showed business income until 2023. The consulate questioned whether they could still engage in self-employment. An employment contract showing formal retirement plus 2 years of rental income statements resolved the issue.
4. Criminal Record Issues
Problem: DBS check shows unspent convictions or issues. Or you didn't disclose them.
Solution: Disclose honestly. UK convictions older than certain periods become "spent" and don't block visas. Consulate will review case-by-case.
Note: Many UK applicants are surprised to learn that even "spent" convictions may still appear on an enhanced DBS check. The Spanish consulate reviews each case individually. A drink-driving conviction from 15 years ago, for example, is typically ignored. Recent or serious convictions may require legal counsel before application.
5. Proof of Accommodation Missing
Problem: No rental agreement, property deed, or accommodation proof provided.
Solution: Get a rental agreement from your Spanish landlord (even if temporary for initial months). Or provide property deed if you own. Include proof you have secured accommodation in Spain.
Important: The accommodation doesn't need to be permanent at BLS appointment. A short-term rental agreement (3-6 months) is acceptable. You can transition to permanent accommodation after approval. The consulate just needs to see you've planned where you'll live.
6. Health Insurance Not Compliant
Problem: Insurance policy doesn't meet Spanish requirements (lacking coverage for pre-existing conditions, hospitalization, repatriation).
Solution: Use specialist NLV insurance providers like Sanitas, AUPA, or dedicated NLV insurance companies. Verify policy meets Spanish consulate requirements before purchase.
⚠️ Prevention is Better: Most rejections are easily preventable with proper document preparation. Create a checklist 30 days before your BLS appointment and verify every single document requirement.
UK-Specific Common Mistakes
Beyond rejections, UK applicants often make mistakes that complicate their applications:
- Submitting short-form birth certificates: Spain requires full birth certificates with parent names and full details. Many UK applicants have short-form certs. You must order full-form versions from the General Register Office.
- Not understanding "spent" vs "unspent" convictions: UK has a rehabilitation of offenders system. A conviction might be "spent" for UK purposes but still visible on DBS checks. Research whether your conviction applies before BLS appointment.
- Assuming NHS coverage transfers: Post-Brexit, UK NHS does not cover you in Spain. Private insurance is mandatory, not optional. Many applicants expect to use NHS reciprocal arrangements — this no longer exists.
- Mixing personal and business bank accounts: If you're semi-retired or transitioning from self-employment, use personal accounts that show passive income only. Business account statements may confuse the consulate about your work status.
- Presenting informal accommodation arrangements: A letter from a friend saying "you can stay with us" is not sufficient. Get a formal rental agreement even for temporary stays. Consulate needs legal documentation.
- Undershooting the income requirement: €1,368 is a guideline, not a hard floor, but the consulate likes to see clear comfort margin. Applicants at exactly €1,368 have lower approval rates than those at €1,600+. Aim for 20% above minimum.
- Applying with pending documents: Some applicants apply saying "my pension statement is coming in 2 weeks." The consulate reviews what you have. Submit complete documentation or expect requests for additional information.
Frequently Asked Questions for UK Applicants
No. You apply for the NLV first. Once approved and you arrive in Spain, you get your NIE number from the police station when you collect your TIE residence card.
No. You must apply from the UK through BLS/consulate before you move. Tourist visas don't allow work or residence applications. Apply from the UK first, get approved, then travel.
Approximately €1,368 per month (about £1,200) for one adult. Combined income sources count: pension + savings + dividends + rental income.
Workplace and private pensions count as passive income. Provide pension provider's statement proving the monthly amount paid. Works the same as state pension.
Technically no, but the visa is designed for people intending to reside in Spain. If you get the visa and don't move, renewal may be questioned. The NLV assumes you'll actually live in Spain.
No, but you can often book appointments on the same day at the same BLS office (different appointment slots). Your spouse will need their own complete documentation set.
While on the initial 1-year visa, you can travel freely but must maintain residence in Spain. After 5 years and getting permanent residency, restrictions ease. However, frequent long absences (6+ months) can jeopardize your residence status during renewals.
The consulate provides a rejection reason. You can address the issue and reapply, but you pay the visa fee again. Most rejections are fixable (missing apostilles, insufficient income documentation, etc.).
After you move to Spain, you renew with the Spanish immigration authority (Extranjería) in Spain, not through BLS. It's a different process. Plan to start renewal 60 days before your TIE expires.
No. The NLV explicitly prohibits all work (employment or freelance, even remote for foreign companies). The Digital Nomad Visa is for remote workers. Do not attempt to work on the NLV.
For most UK applicants: birth certificate (full version), criminal record/DBS certificate, and marriage/divorce certificate if applicable. University degrees and professional licenses also need apostille if you're providing them. State pension letters typically don't need apostille — they're official government documents already verified.
If your pension is below the requirement, you typically need €40,000-50,000 minimum in liquid savings. However, the safer approach is to reach €1,368+ in monthly income from all sources. A pension of £600/month + £200/month in dividends + £30,000 savings is more likely to be approved than a pension of £400/month + £60,000 savings.
Technically no. Each applicant must have their own income/assets meeting the requirement. If you're married, you need €2,026/month combined. If unmarried, you each apply separately with individual documentations. You can't combine incomes unless formally married.
DBS checks sometimes show "notes" or "soft information" that isn't a conviction. Examples include police interviews, arrests without charges, or allegations that didn't result in conviction. These usually don't block NLV approval. Disclose them honestly at BLS with written explanation — the consulate will review individually.
You can book multiple appointment slots on the same day, but each person must attend their own appointment slot. Your spouse or dependent must have a separate appointment (often 1-2 hours apart). You'll each pay visa fees separately. Children under 18 can sometimes be included on a parent's application — contact BLS UK directly to confirm family application procedures.
BLS staff will review your documents and flag any gaps. Minor issues (copies instead of originals, etc.) can often be addressed that day. Major gaps (missing apostille, no pension statement, no income proof) will likely result in rejection of the application that day. You'll need to rebook for another appointment once documents are complete. This is why thorough preparation is critical.
No. You must attend in person. This is mandatory for the appointment. You'll hand over original documents, sign forms, and pay fees in person. Some consulates offer courier options for passport return, but the initial appointment is in-person only.
Combined income. For a married couple, you need approximately €2,026/month total combined income (plus €200 per dependent). Your pension £600 + spouse's pension £700 = €1,300 combined exceeds requirement. You apply together with joint documentation of both incomes.
Same day to 4 weeks depending on demand. Off-peak months (May-August) often have appointments available within 3-7 days. Peak season (January-March, September) may require 2-4 weeks wait. Once you book, you have flexibility — you can reschedule if documents aren't ready, but try to avoid canceling within 48 hours as BLS may penalize with fees.
No. You must apply through the BLS office covering your current country of residence. For example, if you're living in France, you apply through BLS France, not BLS UK. Contact the Spanish consulate for your current location to find the correct BLS office.
Yes, you can travel as a tourist on your UK passport while waiting for NLV approval. Just don't overstay. However, to actually settle in Spain on the NLV, you need the approved visa in your passport. You can't officially take up residence until the visa is stamped.
Yes. There's no mandatory waiting period. However, you must address the rejection reason before reapplying. Pay the visa fee again (€60). Many reapplications are successful within 4-8 weeks if the rejection issue was corrected. Examples: reapply with apostille, updated pension statement, or accommodation proof.
After Approval: What UK Applicants Must Do in Spain
Your visa is approved, your passport is stamped, and you're ready to move to Spain. What happens next?
Upon Arrival in Spain (Within 90 Days)
You have 90 days from the visa stamp date to enter Spain and register. This 90-day window is your legal entry grace period. Do not overstay beyond 90 days without registering.
Step 1: Register at the Local Town Hall (Padron)
Within the first week of arrival, go to your local town hall (Ayuntamiento) in the municipality where you'll live and register with the Padron (census register). This is not optional — it's your proof of residence.
What you need: Proof of accommodation (rental agreement, property deed, or landlord letter), passport (with NLV visa), completed Padron application form (available at the town hall), and proof of address (utility bill, rental agreement, or certificate from landlord).
Cost: Usually free. Takes 15-30 minutes. You'll receive a Padron certificate (Certificado de Empadronamiento) proving your residence registration.
Step 2: Book TIE Appointment at Local Police Station (Within 30 Days)
Your TIE (Tarjeta de Identidad de Extranjero) is your legal residence card in Spain. You must obtain this within 30 days of arrival. Go to your local National Police Station (Comisaría de Policía Nacional) and book an appointment for TIE issuance.
What you need: Passport with NLV visa, completed application forms (EX-17 and EX-18, available at police station or online), proof of address (Padron certificate works well), and payment (approximately €10-15).
Processing: Appointment takes 20-30 minutes. TIE is issued on the spot or within a few days. You'll receive a physical residence card valid for the duration of your visa (1 year initially, then 2-year renewals).
Step 3: Register with Social Security (Optional but Recommended)
While not required for NLV holders who don't work, registering with Spain's Social Security (Seguridad Social) can be beneficial for accessing healthcare and building Spanish records. Visit your local Social Security office with your passport and TIE.
Step 4: Open a Spanish Bank Account
With your TIE, open a Spanish bank account at a major bank (BBVA, CaixaBank, Santander, etc.). You'll need:
- Passport and TIE
- Proof of address (Padron certificate or utility bill)
- Initial deposit (usually €300-1,000 minimum)
- Spanish tax number (NIE — obtained when getting TIE)
A Spanish bank account makes monthly living easier: pension payments, rent payments, insurance, utilities, and tax filings all require Spanish bank access.
Step 5: Handle Tax Registration (NIE)
You'll receive a Spanish tax number (Número de Identidad de Extranjero — NIE) automatically when you get your TIE. You'll use this for:
- Opening bank accounts
- Renting property or buying real estate
- Tax filings (annual income declaration if applicable)
- Utility contracts
- Any official dealings with Spanish authorities
Common Mistakes UK Applicants Make After Arrival
Just because you have the visa doesn't mean you can relax — these post-arrival mistakes can jeopardize your residence:
- Delaying Padron registration: Some applicants delay registering, thinking it's optional. It's not. Failure to register within a reasonable time can affect visa renewal. Register within the first week.
- Not getting the TIE within 30 days: The 30-day TIE deadline is a legal requirement. Failing to get it on time can result in fines and complicate renewals. Prioritize this.
- Using a tourist address on Padron: Your Padron address should be your actual residence. Don't register at a friend's temporary address or hotel. Use your actual accommodation.
- Ignoring annual residence status checks: Every year during renewal season (typically 90 days before TIE expiration), contact Immigration (Oficina de Extranjería) to confirm renewal requirements. Spain changes rules — staying informed prevents surprises.
- Letting insurance lapse: Your health insurance should be continuous. If it lapses, renewal authorities may question your financial stability. Set up automatic renewal or annual reminders.
- Traveling outside Spain excessively: The NLV is a residence visa, not a travel visa. Spending 6+ months outside Spain annually may raise renewal questions. While technically legal, it can prompt closer scrutiny of your "residence" status.
- Attempting to work or freelance: Even one instance of work (paid or unpaid, employment or freelance) can be grounds for visa revocation. The NLV is incompatible with any work activity. Many applicants lose visas for this.
- Not informing Immigration of address changes: If you move to a different city or region, update your Padron and inform Immigration within 30 days. Failing to do so can complicate renewals.
Pro Tip: Keep all documents (Padron certificate, TIE, bank statements, insurance documents) in a folder. These are your proof of legal residence. You may need them for renewals, property rentals, or dealing with Spanish authorities. Organize them digitally and in hard copy.
Renewal Timeline for UK Applicants
Your initial NLV is valid for 1 year. Renewal happens in Spain, not through BLS UK. Approximately 90 days before your TIE expires, contact your local Immigration office (Oficina de Extranjería) to start the renewal process.
Renewals require updated documentation: proof of continued income, updated health insurance, proof of residence (Padron certificate from current year), and a declaration that you still meet the income requirement.
Second renewal (2 years): After your first renewal, you get a 2-year visa. Third renewal and beyond continue in 2-year intervals. After 5 years of continuous residence, you may be eligible for permanent residency, which gives you even greater stability.
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Browse BLS UK DirectoryThe information on this page is for general guidance only and does not constitute legal or financial advice. Visa rules, consulate requirements, and processing times change frequently — always verify details with the relevant Spanish consulate or a qualified immigration specialist before submitting your application.