Spain vs United Arab Emirates

Spain

7.06 / 10

United Arab Emirates

7.47 / 10

United Arab Emirates leads overall

Score comparison table

DimensionSpainUnited Arab Emirates
Lucky Nomads World Index
7.06 / 107.47 / 10
SafetyShield Index
8.5 / 108.7 / 10
Affordability Index
6.3 / 105.2 / 10
Entry Ease Index
6.6 / 106.3 / 10
Tax Freedom Index
3.3 / 109.6 / 10
WiFi Index
8.6 / 109.7 / 10
Admin Ease Index
8.0 / 108.6 / 10
Healthcare Index
8.7 / 108.3 / 10
City Comfort Index
8.8 / 109.1 / 10
WeatherComfort Index
7.3 / 107.2 / 10
Banking Index
8.8 / 107.6 / 10
GeoStability Index
7.8 / 107.8 / 10
Justice & Order Index
7.8 / 105.8 / 10
Quality of Life Index
8.2 / 108.1 / 10
Open Society Index
8.7 / 103.6 / 10
Flight Index
7.1 / 109.8 / 10
Environmental Quality Index
8.5 / 106.0 / 10
English Index
5.7 / 106.0 / 10
Wealth Protection Index
5.8 / 108.5 / 10

Tax, economy, and demographics

DimensionSpainUnited Arab Emirates
Corporate income tax
25%Very high
9%Ultra low
Corporate tax basis
WorldwideWorldwide
Residence-basedResidence-based
Personal income tax (marginal)
47%High
0%Ultra low
Personal tax basis
WorldwideWorldwide
No personal income taxNo personal income tax
Population
49.6 M×4.28
11.6 M
Area
505,990 km²×6.05
83,600 km²
Population density98 /km²138 /km²
CapitalMadridAbu Dhabi
CurrencyEUR (Euro)AED (United Arab Emirates dirham)
Main airportMAD (Adolfo Suárez Madrid-Barajas Airport)DXB (Dubai International Airport)
Phone code+34+971
Internet TLD.es.ae

Visa access controls

Your access

Pick your nationality above to see how long you can stay in each country and whether you need a visa.

Passport power

Mobility strength of each country's passport, useful if you are weighing it as a future citizenship.

Spain passport

#4

Henley rank

185

Visa-free destinations

  • Schengen visa-free
  • UK visa-free
  • US ESTA
  • Canada eTA
  • Australia eTA

United Arab Emirates passport

#2

Henley rank

187

Visa-free destinations

  • Schengen visa-free
  • UK visa-free
  • Canada eTA

Verdict

For professionals who prioritize tax freedom index, United Arab Emirates leads with 9.6 / 10 versus 3.3 / 10 for Spain. On open society index, Spain is at 8.7 / 10 compared with 3.6 / 10 for United Arab Emirates.

Who should choose which country

Who should choose Spain

  • Professionals who prioritize banking index (accessible, stable banking for expats)
  • Professionals who prioritize city comfort index (high urban quality of life)
  • Professionals who prioritize healthcare index (strong healthcare access and quality)

Who should choose United Arab Emirates

  • Professionals who prioritize flight index (exceptional flight index)
  • Professionals who prioritize wifi index (world-class digital infrastructure)
  • Professionals who prioritize tax freedom index (exceptional tax freedom)

Frequently asked questions

  • Spain

    Can foreign residents open bank accounts and deploy capital in Spain without friction?

    Spain is a European Union (EU) and euro-area banking jurisdiction operating under the Single Supervisory Mechanism (SSM), in which the European Central Bank (ECB) directly supervises significant institutions while the Banco de España oversees less significant banks and macroprudential policy, the Comision Nacional del Mercado de Valores (CNMV) supervises securities markets and investment services, and Sepblac acts as the financial intelligence unit and anti-money laundering and counter-terrorist financing supervisory authority. The largest domestic banks by assets are Santander, CaixaBank, Banco Bilbao Vizcaya Argentaria (BBVA), Banco Sabadell and Bankinter, followed by Unicaja, Abanca, Kutxabank and Ibercaja and a layer of cooperative and rural banking groups, while international institutions such as HSBC, Citi, Deutsche Bank and BNP Paribas operate mainly through corporate, institutional, private banking and wealth management arms rather than full mass-retail networks. Spain applies the EU anti-money laundering framework through Ley 10/2010 of 28 April, with the new EU package of Regulation (EU) 2024/1624 and Directive (EU) 2024/1640 taking effect mainly from 10 July 2027 under phased transposition and application dates. Foreign residents and non-residents can open Spanish accounts, but onboarding is risk-based rather than frictionless, with institutions requiring identity documents, proof of resident or non-resident status, the Numero de Identidad de Extranjero (NIE) where applicable, proof of address and evidence of economic activity, and higher-value, private banking, complex-structure, foreign-wealth or politically exposed profiles triggering enhanced due diligence with source-of-funds and source-of-wealth evidence. Processing times are not fixed by law and depend on the institution, the client profile and the completeness of documentation. Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act (FATCA) and Common Reporting Standard (CRS) reporting is fully operational. Cryptoassets are legal and taxed under ordinary Spanish rules, and the Markets in Crypto-Assets (MiCA) framework applies, with the CNMV as the competent authority for crypto-asset service provider authorization and the Banco de España retaining functions over e-money and asset-referenced token issuers. The Banco de España legacy provider registry stopped accepting new entries on 30 December 2024, and the Spanish transition window for pre-existing providers runs to 30 June 2026. Capital movements within the EU and between Spain and third countries are free under Article 63 of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union (TFEU), subject to anti-money laundering controls, sanctions and tax reporting. Physical means of payment, meaning cash and bearer instruments, must be declared on form S-1 under Article 34 of Ley 10/2010 from EUR 10,000 when entering or leaving Spain and from EUR 100,000 for internal movements within Spanish territory, while bank transfers are not subject to this cash declaration. Spanish tax residents may also face the Modelo 720 informative return on foreign assets above EUR 50,000 per reportable category, covering foreign accounts, securities and rights, and real estate, and the Modelo 721 informative return on cryptoassets situated abroad above EUR 50,000, meaning cryptoassets custodied by non-resident providers, with self-custody wallets outside its scope. Foreign nationals can acquire Spanish real estate without a general nationality-based prohibition, subject to the NIE, tax, anti-money laundering, notarial and land registry formalities. The main exception is the restricted foreign-ownership zones under Ley 8/1975 and Royal Decree 689/1978, which require military authorization and are far broader than isolated military perimeters, covering insular territories, Cartagena, the Strait of Gibraltar, the Bay of Cadiz, the Portuguese and French border areas, Galicia and the Spanish territories in North Africa, with EU citizens exempt from this authorization and European Economic Area (EEA) nationals generally treated as equivalent in practice. Agricultural land carries no general nationality-based restriction but remains subject to ordinary land, planning, environmental and defense-zone rules. Mortgage financing is available to foreign buyers as a matter of market practice rather than right and is profile-dependent, with EU non-residents commonly accessing 60 to 70 percent loan-to-value and non-EU buyers more often 50 to 60 percent, under fixed, variable or mixed structures rather than only Euribor-linked pricing. Capital deployment into Spanish equities, bonds and funds is open to non-residents through regulated intermediaries, and withholding tax can be reduced under an applicable double tax treaty, although treaty relief requires a certificate of tax residence and is not automatic.

  • United Arab Emirates

    Can foreign residents open bank accounts and deploy capital in the United Arab Emirates without friction?

    UAE residents holding an Emirates ID generally face low banking friction, especially with digital banks such as Wio Personal, Mashreq Neo and Liv, where onboarding can be completed within minutes or hours via app. Traditional banks Emirates NBD, FAB, ADCB, RAKBANK, HSBC UAE, Mashreq and Dubai Islamic Bank typically require passport, Emirates ID, proof of UAE address and income or salary documentation, with timelines from 2 to 7 days. Non-resident onboarding is materially more selective and bank-specific, often limited to savings or non-cheque accounts, with banks requesting passport, proof of overseas address, recent foreign bank statements, tax details, source-of-funds evidence and a bank reference letter. Timelines and minimum balances vary materially by bank, product, nationality, country of residence and risk profile, so they should not be presented as fixed rules. The Central Bank of the UAE (CBUAE) regulates the sector and the UAE was removed from the Financial Action Task Force (FATF) list of jurisdictions under increased monitoring on 23 February 2024, after just under 2 years on the grey list since its inclusion on 4 March 2022. UAE banks continue to apply strict Know Your Customer (KYC), Anti-Money Laundering (AML) and Counter Financing of Terrorism (CFT), Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act (FATCA), Common Reporting Standard (CRS) and sanctions screening at onboarding and on an ongoing basis, with Customer Due Diligence (CDD) triggered at AED 55,000 for occasional transactions for licensed financial institutions and Designated Non-Financial Businesses and Professions (DNFBPs), and AED 3,500 for Virtual Asset Service Providers (VASPs), alongside enhanced scrutiny on higher-risk profiles regardless of threshold. There are no general foreign exchange controls, the dirham is pegged to the US dollar at AED 3.6725 since 22 November 1997, and capital transfers in and out of the country are generally unrestricted subject to AML, sanctions and tax reporting compliance. Foreign nationals can buy freehold real estate in designated freehold and investment areas, including major zones of Dubai, government-listed investment areas of Abu Dhabi, and designated developments of Ras Al Khaimah such as Al Marjan Island, Al Hamra Village and Mina Al Arab, but foreign ownership is not unrestricted across the whole UAE and varies by emirate. Capital can also be deployed through Dubai International Financial Centre (DIFC) and Abu Dhabi Global Market (ADGM) structures, where ADGM directly applies English common law under the Application of English Law Regulations 2015, while DIFC operates under its own codified common-law-based framework with English precedent as persuasive but not binding. Crypto assets are regulated through the Virtual Assets Regulatory Authority (VARA) in Dubai, the ADGM Financial Services Regulatory Authority (FSRA) in Abu Dhabi, and federal Securities and Commodities Authority (SCA) frameworks, with active VARA VASP licences confirmed for Binance FZE, OKX Middle East Fintech and Foris DAX Middle East (Crypto.com), while Bybit operates under an SCA Virtual Asset Platform Operator Licence obtained in October 2025, and Kraken (via Payward FZCO) holds VARA preliminary approval granted in May 2026 pending full VASP issuance. Crypto holdings and digital-currency investor status do not qualify by themselves for UAE Golden Residence eligibility per the joint Federal Authority for Identity, Citizenship, Customs and Port Security (ICP), SCA and VARA clarification of 6 July 2025. Since the escalation of the 2026 Iran conflict that started on 28 February 2026 and reached a ceasefire in April 2026, UAE banks have continued operating US dollar channels, with UAE Banks Federation chairman Al Ghurair confirming on 13 May 2026 that there is no systemic dollar shortage or capital flight concern. The CBUAE deployed an emergency resilience package on 18 March 2026 with temporarily lower liquidity ratios and expanded access to funding, and over 65,000 customers took up loan deferrals, fee waivers and interest relief through May 2026. The UAE is also in discussions with the US Federal Reserve and Treasury for a potential currency swap line, signalling a precautionary stance rather than a stress event. Compliance teams are likely to apply heightened source-of-funds scrutiny and transaction monitoring on Iran-linked, Lebanon and Hezbollah-linked, and Russia-linked exposure, in line with CBUAE targeted financial sanctions obligations, although this is not documented as a uniform cross-bank rule.

  • Spain

    How does taxation apply to residents and foreign-source income in Spain?

    Spain operates a worldwide taxation system for both companies and individuals, modulated by a dense network of special regimes and the 95 percent participation exemption mechanism. The general corporate income tax (CIT) rate is 25 percent under Ley 27/2014, the Corporate Income Tax Law (LIS), but Ley 7/2024 added a transitional reduced-rate schedule under the new Disposicion Transitoria 44 LIS effective 1 January 2025: microenterprises with turnover below EUR 1 million are taxed on a progressive scale (21 percent on the first EUR 50,000 and 22 percent on the rest in 2025, falling to 17 and 20 percent from 2027), and small companies with turnover below EUR 10 million move from 24 percent in 2025 down to 20 percent by 2029. Emerging companies certified by the Empresa Nacional de Innovacion (ENISA) under Ley 28/2022 are taxed at 15 percent for the first profitable year plus the 3 following, with deferral of CIT payment for the first 2 profitable years and exemption from fractional payments. The Canary Islands Special Zone (ZEC) under Ley 19/1994 applies a 4 percent corporate rate on income from activities materially carried out in the Canary Islands, capped at EUR 1.8 million plus EUR 500,000 per additional employee above the statutory minimum, requiring at least one Canary-resident director, EUR 100,000 (Tenerife, Gran Canaria) or EUR 50,000 (other islands) of fixed-asset investment within 2 years and 5 or 3 jobs created within 6 months, with new entity registrations authorized until 31 December 2026 and tax benefits available until 31 December 2032 subject to the EU State aid framework. The Patent Box under Article 23 LIS grants a 60 percent reduction on net income from licensing or sale of qualifying intangibles (patents, utility models, legally protected designs and models, and advanced registered software derived from research and development), excluding trademarks, ordinary software, secret formulas and procedures and commercial know-how, under the OECD Modified Nexus Approach, dropping the effective rate to approximately 10 percent. The Entidad de Tenencia de Valores Extranjeros (ETVE) holding regime under Articles 107 to 108 LIS combined with the Article 21 LIS participation exemption taxes qualifying foreign dividends and capital gains at approximately 1.25 percent (5 percent of 25 percent) and exempts outbound distributions to non-resident shareholders. Personal income tax is progressive. The state scale tops at 24.5 percent above EUR 300,000 of general income, and adding the autonomous community scale produces a combined top rate of 47 percent under the default reference, ranging by region from 45 percent in Madrid to 50 percent in Catalonia, 51.5 percent in La Rioja and 54 percent in the Valencian Community. Savings income (dividends, interest, capital gains) is taxed at 19 percent up to EUR 6,000, 21 percent up to EUR 50,000, 23 percent up to EUR 200,000, 27 percent up to EUR 300,000 and 30 percent above, the top bracket having risen from 28 to 30 percent under Ley 7/2024 effective 1 January 2025. The Beckham Law under Article 93 of the Personal Income Tax Law (LIRPF), expanded by Ley 28/2022 effective 1 January 2023, allows qualifying inpatriates with no Spanish tax residence in the prior 5 tax years to be taxed under Non-Resident Income Tax (IRNR) rules at a flat 24 percent up to EUR 600,000 and 47 percent above for 6 tax years. Employment and entrepreneurial business income is taxed wherever it arises, while foreign-source passive income such as dividends, interest and capital gains stays outside the Spanish tax net. The 2023 reform extended Beckham to employee digital nomads, entrepreneurs with ENISA certification and highly qualified professionals serving startups, plus spouses and children under 25. Spain levies wealth tax on worldwide assets above EUR 700,000 (with a EUR 300,000 primary residence allowance) and progressive rates from 0.2 to 3.5 percent, with material autonomous community variation. Madrid and Andalusia maintain a 100 percent rebate that neutralizes ordinary wealth tax for net worth below the large-fortune threshold, but since 2023, under Madrid Ley 12/2023 and the equivalent Andalusian measure, that rebate becomes a variable one for taxpayers liable to the federal large-fortune tax, so net worth above EUR 3 million is effectively taxed regionally rather than escaping wealth taxation. The Balearic Islands raised their exemption to EUR 3 million effective 1 January 2024 and Valencia to EUR 1 million, while Catalonia maintains a EUR 500,000 exemption with the highest progressive rates. The Impuesto Temporal de Solidaridad de las Grandes Fortunas (ITSGF), introduced for the 2022 and 2023 tax years as a federal anti-arbitrage floor on net worth above EUR 3 million and extended by Real Decreto-ley 8/2023 until wealth taxation is reformed within the regional financing system, applies regardless of region with credit for regional wealth tax paid. Inheritance and gift tax applies with major regional variation, effectively near-zero for close family in Madrid, Andalusia and the Valencian Community (the last through a 99 percent bonus on Groups I and II since 28 May 2023 under Ley 6/2023), while Catalonia and a few other communities such as Asturias can remain materially more expensive for larger estates depending on the relationship and estate size. Capital gains on principal residence sale are exempt under reinvestment rules. Spain has an extensive double tax treaty network covering all major OECD jurisdictions, comprehensive Latin American coverage given language and historical ties, and full Parent-Subsidiary and Interest-Royalties Directive access within the EU.

  • United Arab Emirates

    How does taxation apply to residents and foreign-source income in the United Arab Emirates?

    There is no federal personal income tax, no wealth tax, no inheritance tax and no capital gains tax for individuals on personal investments. A natural person becomes a UAE tax resident under Cabinet Decision No. 85 of 2022 by having both usual or primary place of residence and centre of financial and personal interests in the UAE, by being physically present at least 183 days in a 12-month period, or by being physically present at least 90 days in a 12-month period while holding UAE or GCC nationality or a valid UAE residence permit and having either a permanent place of residence or a job or business in the UAE. Resident individuals running a business stay outside the corporate tax net under Article 11 of Federal Decree-Law No. 47 of 2022 and Cabinet Decision No. 49 of 2023 while their annual gross business turnover stays at or below AED 1,000,000, with wage, personal investment income and real estate investment income excluded from the test regardless of amount. Federal corporate tax of 9% applies to companies on taxable profits above AED 375,000 under Federal Decree-Law No. 47 of 2022, with corporate residents taxed on worldwide income subject to a foreign permanent establishment exemption under Article 24 (election all-or-nothing, requires at least 9% tax in the foreign jurisdiction). Value Added Tax of 5% applies under Federal Decree-Law No. 8 of 2017. A Domestic Minimum Top-up Tax of 15% applies from 1 January 2025 under Federal Decree-Law No. 60 of 2023 and Cabinet Decision No. 142 of 2024 to multinational groups with global consolidated revenue of at least EUR 750,000,000 in at least two of the four preceding fiscal years. The Qualifying Free Zone Person regime under Article 18 of Federal Decree-Law No. 47 of 2022, Cabinet Decision No. 100 of 2023, Ministerial Decision No. 229 of 2025 (qualifying and excluded activities, replacing Ministerial Decision No. 265 of 2023), Ministerial Decision No. 230 of 2025 (recognised price reporting agencies) and Ministerial Decision No. 84 of 2025 (audited financial statements requirement) preserves the 0% rate on qualifying income provided substance, audited financials, transfer pricing and qualifying activity tests are met. Qualifying Intellectual Property income (patents, copyrighted software) also benefits from the 0% rate using a modified nexus formula in line with BEPS Action 5. Non-qualifying revenue above the de minimis threshold (the lower of 5% of total revenue or AED 5,000,000) causes loss of Qualifying Free Zone Person status for the current and four subsequent tax periods, exposing the entity to 9% corporate tax on its full taxable income rather than only on the non-qualifying portion. The Participation Exemption under Article 23 (Ministerial Decision No. 116 of 2023 for tax periods before 1 January 2025, Ministerial Decision No. 302 of 2024 for tax periods from 1 January 2025 onwards) exempts qualifying dividends and capital gains derived by a UAE taxable person from a qualifying participation, subject to a minimum 5% ownership (or AED 4,000,000 acquisition cost), a 12-month holding period and a 9% subject-to-tax test on the participation, with the 50% asset test required only where the participation is a related party. Domestic UAE-to-UAE dividends are automatically exempt under Article 22 without conditions. The Family Foundation Exemption under Article 17 (Ministerial Decision No. 261 of 2024 and FTA Public Clarification CTP008 of September 2025) allows family foundations and trusts (DIFC and ADGM structures, qualifying foreign foundations or trusts, and structures recognised under the UAE Federal Trust Law) to elect fiscal transparency, with income attributed to underlying beneficiaries. The Qualifying Investment Fund and Qualifying Limited Partnership exemption under Article 10 and Cabinet Decision No. 34 of 2025 covers regulated investment funds, real estate investment funds and limited partnerships, with pass-through treatment available subject to multiple conditions including regulatory oversight, diversification, beneficiary, ancillary income and distribution tests. The Research and Development Tax Credit (Phase 1) was introduced by Cabinet Decision No. 215 of 2025 issued in December 2025 and Ministerial Decision No. 24 of 2026 issued on 18 March 2026, effective for tax periods beginning on or after 1 January 2026. The regime operates on tiered, expenditure-based credit rates: 15% on the first AED 1,000,000 of qualifying expenditure with at least 2 R&D staff, 35% on AED 1,000,000 to AED 2,000,000 with at least 6 R&D staff, and 50% on AED 2,000,000 to AED 5,000,000 with at least 14 R&D staff, capped at a maximum non-refundable credit of AED 2,000,000 per entity per tax period. Pre-approval from the Emirates Research and Development Council is mandatory and minimum AED 500,000 of qualifying expenditure per project is required. The non-refundable credit can be applied against UAE corporate tax and, through intra-group transfer, against UAE Domestic Minimum Top-up Tax, and is expected to qualify as a Qualified Tax Incentive under the OECD Substance-Based Tax Incentive Safe Harbour framework once domestically enacted. Small Business Relief under Article 21 and Ministerial Decision No. 73 of 2023 treats resident persons with revenue at or below AED 3,000,000 as having no taxable income for tax periods ending on or before 31 December 2026. The UAE has concluded 137 double tax treaties, the densest network in the Gulf alongside Saudi Arabia, with 193 DTAs and Bilateral Investment Treaties combined according to the Ministry of Finance. Excise tax applies to tobacco (100%), energy drinks (100%) and e-cigarettes (100%) under Federal Decree-Law No. 7 of 2017, while sweetened drinks are taxed from 1 January 2026 under Federal Decree-Law No. 7 of 2025 and Cabinet Decision No. 197 of 2025 on a tiered volumetric model based on sugar content per 100 ml: below 5 grams the rate is zero, between 5 and 8 grams the rate is AED 0.79 per litre and at 8 grams or more the rate is AED 1.09 per litre. Under this model, carbonated drinks are no longer treated as a separate excise category. Property registration in Dubai carries a 4% Dubai Land Department fee, legally split 2% buyer and 2% seller under Dubai Law No. 7 of 2006, although in practice the buyer typically bears the full 4%.

  • Spain

    What long-term residence options exist in Spain for internationally mobile individuals?

    Spain offers four particularly relevant long-term residence routes for internationally mobile non-EU nationals, following the abolition of the Golden Visa on 3 April 2025 by Ley Orgánica 1/2025 of 2 January 2025, which left Articles 63 to 67 of Ley 14/2013 without content rather than formally repealing them. The Digital Nomad Visa (DNV), created by the Ley 28/2022 Startup Act in force since 23 December 2022 and codified in Chapter V bis of Ley 14/2013, is the canonical route for non-EU remote workers and freelancers serving foreign companies. It requires a 2026 minimum income of EUR 2,849 per month for the main applicant, equal to 200 percent of the Spanish minimum wage (SMI) on its annualized 12-payment basis of EUR 1,424.50 per month, the SMI itself being set at EUR 1,221 per month over 14 payments by Royal Decree 126/2026, with EUR 1,069 added for the first dependent and EUR 356 for each additional family member. Applicants must hold a degree from a recognized institution or document at least 3 years of relevant professional experience, and salaried applicants may work only for companies located outside Spain while self-employed applicants may bill Spanish clients for no more than 20 percent of their total professional activity. The DNV consular visa under Article 74 quater is valid for up to 1 year, and within 60 calendar days before its expiry the holder may apply in Spain through the Unidad de Grandes Empresas y Colectivos Estratégicos (UGE-CE) for the residence authorization under Article 74 quinquies, valid for up to 3 years and renewable in 2-year periods, with eligibility for long-term residence after 5 years of continuous legal residence. The Non-Lucrative Visa, now governed by Articles 61 to 64 of Royal Decree 1155/2024, the general immigration regulation in force since 20 May 2025 that replaced Royal Decree 557/2011, targets retirees and financially independent individuals with sufficient savings, assets or periodic income and no work permitted in Spain. It requires 400 percent of the Indicador Público de Renta de Efectos Múltiples (IPREM), equal to EUR 28,800 per year, plus 100 percent of the IPREM, equal to EUR 7,200 per year, for each dependent. Initial validity is 1 year and renewals run in 2-year periods, with renewal conditioned since the 2025 reform on having resided in Spain for more than 183 days in the calendar year under Article 64.2.f of the regulation. The Highly Qualified Professional permit under Article 71 of Ley 14/2013, as amended by Ley 11/2023 transposing Directive (EU) 2021/1883, is the fast-track salaried route, processed by the UGE-CE within 20 working days with approval by positive administrative silence if no decision is issued, valid for 3 years and renewable for 2 years, the 2023 reform having removed the former employer size and turnover thresholds. The Entrepreneur Visa under Article 69 of Ley 14/2013 requires a favorable report from the Empresa Nacional de Innovación (ENISA) assessing the innovation, scalability and viability of the project. There is no fixed statutory minimum capital, the authorization is valid for 3 years and renewable for 2 years, and family members may apply jointly and obtain residence and work rights, with their status remaining linked to the principal holder. All four routes count toward long-term residence after 5 years of continuous legal residence and toward Spanish citizenship after 10 years, reduced to 2 years for nationals of Ibero-American countries, Andorra, the Philippines, Equatorial Guinea, Portugal and Sephardic Jews of Spanish origin, provided the residence is legal, continuous and immediately prior to the application. Existing Golden Visa holders are unaffected by the abolition, since applications filed before 3 April 2025 continue under the prior rules and authorizations already granted retain their validity and may be renewed under the rules in force at the time of the original grant.

  • United Arab Emirates

    What long-term residence options exist in the United Arab Emirates for internationally mobile individuals?

    The UAE long-term residence framework is governed by Federal Decree-Law No. 29 of 2021 on Entry and Residence of Foreigners and Cabinet Resolution No. 65 of 2022, and includes several self-sponsored and sponsored residence routes: Golden Residence, Green Residence, Blue Residency, Taskeen property-linked residence, Virtual Working Programme, Investor or Partner Residence, Retirement Residence, and employer-sponsored Work Residence. The Federal Authority for Identity, Citizenship, Customs and Port Security (ICP) administers federal applications, jointly with the General Directorate of Residency and Foreigners Affairs (GDRFA) for residence files issued by Dubai. The Golden Residence is a long-term renewable self-sponsored permit issued for ten years in most categories, with shorter durations for selected sub-categories such as some students and entrepreneurs. The investor routes require AED 2,000,000 in UAE real estate, in a public investment fund, sukuk, bank deposit or approved investment funds, or in UAE company shares evidenced by an audited financial report, plus an alternative tax-contribution route for partners paying at least AED 250,000 per year in UAE corporate tax verified by the Federal Tax Authority. The previous 50 percent paid-equity requirement on the property route was removed by federal policy circular of 20 February 2026, so mortgaged and off-plan units now qualify provided the Dubai Land Department certifies a valuation of at least AED 2,000,000 and the lending bank issues a No Objection Certificate. The entrepreneur path requires an AED 500,000 incubator-backed innovative project documented by an auditor report and an endorsement from competent authorities or an approved incubator. The talent paths cover specialised professionals earning at least AED 30,000 per month with approved credentials in priority fields such as data science, artificial intelligence, healthcare and clean-energy engineering, executive directors earning at least AED 50,000 per month with five years of experience and a certified degree, scientists nominated by the UAE Council for Scientists, doctors approved by the Ministry of Health and Prevention, inventors recommended by the Ministry of Economy, creatives approved by the relevant cultural authority, and athletes recommended by sports councils. Outstanding high school students with a final score of 95 percent or above, graduates of UAE universities with a GPA of at least 3.5 for Class A institutions or 3.8 for Class B institutions, and graduates of internationally ranked top 100 universities with a GPA of at least 3.5 also qualify within two years of graduation. The Artificial Intelligence Office runs the National Program for Coders, targeting up to 100,000 ten-year Golden Visas for software engineers and specialists in AI, data science and electrical engineering across all nationalities and age groups. A formal expansion of Golden Residence eligibility was announced on 23 April 2026, adding long-serving nurses at Dubai Health following the May 2025 directive of the Crown Prince of Dubai, outstanding teachers nominated by the Knowledge and Human Development Authority (KHDA) in Dubai and the Department of Knowledge (RAK DOK) in Ras Al Khaimah, e-sports professionals and game developers through sports councils, digital content creators through the Dubai Creators HQ programme, and Waqf donors contributing at least AED 2,000,000 to a certified Islamic endowment under the GDRFA Dubai and Awqaf Dubai cooperation agreement signed at GITEX Global on 17 October 2025. These pathways are nomination-based and category-specific rather than automatic entitlements. The Green Residence is a five-year self-sponsored renewable permit positioned between Golden Residence and employer-sponsored work visas. It covers skilled employees in MOHRE skill levels 1 to 3 holding a bachelor degree and earning at least AED 15,000 per month, freelancers and self-employed professionals with a MOHRE freelance permit, a bachelor degree or specialised diploma, and annual freelance income of at least AED 360,000 over the previous two years. Investors and business partners may also qualify by evidencing investment or partnership in a UAE project with approvals from the relevant licensing authority, with practice varying by emirate and free zone. The five-year retirement residence is available to qualifying applicants aged 55 or above. In Dubai, the route is satisfied by AED 1,000,000 in unmortgaged UAE property, AED 1,000,000 in a three-year UAE bank fixed deposit, monthly active income of at least AED 15,000, or a combination meeting the AED 1,000,000 threshold, with mortgaged-property rules and federal income variants applying depending on the issuing authority. The two-year Taskeen visa administered by the Dubai Land Department was relaxed on 29 April 2026: the previous AED 750,000 minimum value for sole owners was removed, with eligibility now driven by ownership of a completed unit regardless of value, while co-owners must individually hold a share of at least AED 400,000. The Investor or Partner Residence Visa for owners of mainland LLCs or free zone entities is generally issued for two or three years. UAE federal law does not fix a single minimum share capital, requiring that capital be adequate for the business, with mainland practice in Dubai historically referencing share capital around AED 72,000 and free zone authorities such as DMCC issuing visas on AED 50,000 paid-up capital, depending on licence type and authority. The employer-sponsored Work Residence Visa processed through MOHRE Tasheel and ICP or GDRFA Dubai remains the most common pathway, with free zone employment visas running two or three years depending on authority. The Virtual Working Programme is a one-year self-sponsored residence for remote workers earning at least USD 3,500 per month for employees or at least USD 5,000 per month for business owners with at least one year of company ownership, with income sourced from outside the UAE, six months of bank statements documenting consistent inflows since the January 2026 update, and valid UAE-covering health insurance for the full duration of stay. The Blue Residency Visa, approved by the UAE Cabinet on 15 May 2024, was launched in a first phase at the World Government Summit in February 2025 with 20 sustainability leaders and progressively opened to general applications through ICP during 2025 and 2026. It grants ten years to foreign nationals with exceptional contributions to environmental protection, climate action, sustainability and renewable energy, covering recognised scientists and researchers, distinguished members of international environmental organisations and NGOs, recipients of major environmental awards, financial supporters of environmental initiatives, holders of advanced degrees in environmental science, and entrepreneurs and investors in qualifying sustainability projects. Applications may be self-submitted or follow nomination by relevant ministries including the Ministry of Climate Change and Environment. None of these permits opens a pathway to permanent residence or to UAE citizenship, which remains exceptional and conferred by sovereign nomination rather than time-based naturalisation. Holders of Golden Residence, Green Residence and Blue Residency are all exempt from the 180-day absence rule that automatically nullifies standard residence permits, which makes the UAE distinctive in the Gulf for long-term holders who wish to base themselves regionally while operating from outside the country.

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