_
_
_
_
_

Spain’s “golden visa” scheme brings in €2.16 billion in first three years

Government has handed out 27,301 residency permits in program designed to attract wealthy foreigners

In 2013, the Spanish government introduced legislation offering residency permits to large investors and highly qualified professionals. Three years on, 2,236 investors have benefited from the proposal, bringing in €2.16 billion, of which 72% has gone into property. The total number of people granted residency in Spain under the so-called Entrepreneur’s Law is now 27,301, including family members.

Property investors at the La Zagaleta estate in Marbella, southern Spain.
Property investors at the La Zagaleta estate in Marbella, southern Spain.Julián Rojas

Chinese and Russian millionaires make up 59.4% of total investment pumped into Spain through the scheme; 714 Chinese nationals have been granted a golden visa since September 2013 after investing €716 million in property, financial assets and business projects. Close behind come Russians, with 685 visas. This group has invested €567 million.

Issuing so-called golden visas has become widespread throughout the European Union over the last two decades, notably in Portugal, Ireland, the United Kingdom, France, and Germany.

Chinese and Russians have contributed 59.4% of all money invested via the golden visa scheme

Some 12,891 foreigners have been issued with residency permits under Spain’s Entrepreneur’s Law, and they have brought a further 14,410 family members to live in Spain. Of this total, 5,315 permits have been issued to highly qualified professionals. Among them are 665 Venezuelans, 530 Chinese, and 453 US citizens. More than 3,500 executives posted to Spain by multinational companies have also been granted residency. Finally, 1,483 visas have been issued to foreigners involved in research or training in Spain, led by Colombians, Indians, Chinese, Mexicans and Iranians.

In the case of investment, to qualify for the scheme, people are required to spend a minimum of €2 million on Spanish treasury bonds, or €1 million in stocks or deposits in Spain, or purchase property valued at more than €500,000. Business projects that generate jobs, have a wider positive impact on an area, or contribute to technological or scientific innovation are also accepted as investment.

During the first year of the scheme, only 500 or so investors applied, providing around €700 million. Given the limited uptake, in 2015, the government eased the conditions, allowing spouses, children and elderly relatives to be included on visas, as well as extending the period of residency from two to five years.

The latest figures show that the number of investors has risen fourfold since 2014, with the amount they have invested increasing three times in the same period.

Almost half of properties purchased by people benefiting from the scheme – 893 – were bought in Barcelona, followed by Malaga province at 348, Madrid with 306, and Alicante, at 151.

Spain’s second-home market sees upturn

After a decade in the doldrums, Spain’s second-residency housing market has been given a boost by overseas buyers, who in 2016 made up 13.7% of all purchases; in coastal areas like Alicante, they made up half. British buyers, who traditionally make up a significant percentage, have stepped away from the market in the wake of Brexit and the subsequent decline in the value of the pound. Areas that still have significant amounts of housing stock dating back to the boom years before 2008 and that depend on domestic buyers are still suffering. But areas where foreigners are looking to buy a second home are seeing a return to activity.

Properties for sale in Benalmádema, Malaga province.
Properties for sale in Benalmádema, Malaga province.García-Santos

The property boom of the 1990s and early 2000s was in part driven by second-home purchases, particularly on the Mediterranean. But the economic crisis of 2008 saw domestic demand fall sharply, with many foreign buyers put off by the collapse in prices, as well as concerns about legal guarantees as more and more cases of corruption in local government emerged. But foreign buyers are back, purchasing 55,512 properties in Spain last year, an increase of 18.8% on the previous year and making up 13.74% of all sales, one of the biggest percentages in many years.

“After a first phase in which property recovered first in Madrid and Barcelona, and then other regional capitals, we have seen a clear recovery in residential tourism. Last year, demand increased by 20% on the previous year and this year we foresee it growing by something like 13%,” says José Peral, the marketing director of Solvia, the property division of Banco Sabadell.

Brexit takes its toll

People from the UK make up the largest group of foreign buyers of property in Spain. In 2015, Brits bought 10,552 homes: 13.74% of purchases by foreigners, according to the Association of Land and Mercantile Registrars of Spain. That is up 6% on a year earlier, but the association warns that sales to Brits have been falling for four consecutive quarters. “The consequences of Brexit, especially in terms of its effect on the UK currency, are making themselves felt,” the association said in its most recent quarterly report.

Mark Stucklin, with Spain’s Second-Home & Resort Industry Observatory, explains that the United Kingdom’s decision to leave the European Union has been clearly noticeable.

“British demand has fallen by around 28%, above all because of the devaluation of the pound,” says Stucklin, who says that the correlation between exchange rates and sales has been established ever time. Sources in the property sector say prices have changed accordingly, with Engel & Volkers noting British sales in the Spanish property market stagnated after Brexit but are now rising again.

English version by Nick Lyne.

More information

Archived In

Recomendaciones EL PAÍS
Recomendaciones EL PAÍS
_
_