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TAXES

The big tax declaration change Spain’s self-employed need to know

If you're self-employed in Spain there are a few new changes you need to be aware of when it comes to submitting your income tax return this year.

The big tax declaration change Spain's self-employed need to know
The big changes for Spain's self employed. Photo: George Milton / Pexels

As if being self-employed in Spain wasn’t complicated enough, there are several new changes you should know about for 2024. 

The Personal Income Tax (IRPF) campaign for 2023 campaign runs from April 3rd to July 1st this year. This means you must submit your annual Declaración de Renta for the money you earned last year between these dates. 

This year is different for autónomos because you’ll be required to present your tax return whether you had losses or profits in 2023. In previous years, it was only necessary if you had profits over a certain threshold or if it was your first year filing it.

READ ALSO: Everything that changes for self-employed workers in Spain in 2024 

But this year, even if your business has not performed as expected and you actually incurred a loss, it will still be mandatory to present these to the Tax Agency. 

According to experts from the financial comparison site Banqmi, “The Tax Agency does not have complete information on the activity of each self-employed person and that is why an adequate check and verification must always be carried out”. 

The second change that’s new for this year is that the percentage of expenses you are allowed to deduct has been raised from 5 to 7 percent. 

READ ALSO – La Renta: What items can you deduct on your Spanish tax return?

Banqmi expert Antonio Gallardo, states: “It is important to note that only the self-employed who carry out professional activities who are not an actual business, and who do so through the direct estimation regime, are entitled to this right, therefore, those who do it by modules are excluded”. 

The direct estimation regime is when taxes are calculated based on the actual income and expenses of the business during the fiscal year. This means that net profit or loss is calculated by subtracting the deductible expenses of the activity.

READ ALSO: Nine mistakes to avoid when filing your Spanish tax return

The types of tax deductions those on this type of regime can apply include:

  • Monthly Social Security contributions
  • Deductions for the vehicle usage (if it applies to your business)
  • Deductions for business-related training expenses
  • Special deductions, such as research and development expenses
  • Tax relief at a regional level

When it comes to regional tax deductions, self-employed workers have access to special rates depending on the region they live and work in. For example, Madrid, Asturias and the Canary Islands offer these types of tax reliefs.

READ ALSO – Q&A: What is Spain’s flat fee for new self-employed workers?

Additionally, during the first year of being registered as self-employed, 20 percent of your profits can be deducted. If this is the case, you have the right to apply the same deductions as a company registered for Corporate Tax (25 percent of research and development expenses for example).  

One of the main obstacles for self-employed workers when filing their annual personal income tax return is that the Tax Agency does not have complete information on all transactions carried out. 

“Although they receive information about part of your expenses and income, this is incomplete, so you must always carry out adequate verification to avoid errors and the hassle of making rectifications or complementary statements,” Banqmi experts conclude. 

If you’re unsure about any of your tax returns this year, whether you have to file, and exactly what you can deduct, it’s important to contact your gestor or a tax advisor. Remember that everyone’s situation is slightly different. 

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DIGITAL NOMADS IN SPAIN

Cafés in Spain on war footing against remote workers hogging space

Bars and cafés in Valencia, Santiago and Barcelona have started to take action against lingering remote workers and digital nomads by cutting off the Wi-Fi during peak hours, with some even banning remote working on their premises.

Cafés in Spain on war footing against remote workers hogging space

Increasingly in recent years, a trend has emerged: someone arrives in a café, orders a coffee, opens his or her laptop and then spends the whole day working without buying anything else.

For many digital nomads and remote workers, it seems spending a couple of euros on a coffee is a fair price for occupying a table for an entire morning or afternoon.

Some might say they are contributing to the local economy and supporting local businesses, but clearly, for a small business owner this isn’t a profitable arrangement, and many are now fighting back.

In Valencia, posters have appeared at some cafés banning remote working during peak hours: 8.30 to 12.30.

One Valencia café owner told La Vanguardia: “Our place is small and between 10 and 11.30 in the morning it’s impossible, we need all the tables.”

Raquel Llanes, boss at the Departure Café in the Raval area of Barcelona, explained to Barcelona Secreta that the situation has gotten out of control: “We’ve had customers who have ordered an espresso and sat for eight hours, people who have asked us to turn the music down so they could have meetings, customers who took out their Tupperware to eat… At first we adapted the space with sockets and to work, but after two years we realised that the numbers weren’t working out.”

Some have opted for less friendly, but equally effective methods: turning off the Wi-Fi network of the premises during peak hours.

“The owner has got rid of the Wi-Fi to avoid precisely these situations. People sat down and didn’t leave,” one waitress told La Vanguardia.

Similar sentiments have arisen in the Galician city of Santiago, where one café owner told La Voz de Galicia: “We prefer them not to come. If someone comes in and opens a laptop we don’t tell them anything, but if they’ve been there for a long time and we need space for a group, we ask them to please move”. 

When a remote worker in Valencia posted a negative comment about a café where the owner had asked him to leave, their reply went viral, as they stated “we can’t lose regular customers so that you can work”. 

Remote working (teletrabajo in Spanish) has exploded in popularity in Spain in recent years, particularly in the post-pandemic period, and often the people taking advantage of this flexibility are foreign digital nomads and remote workers. Many of them choose to work from local bars and cafés.

It should be said that not all people working remotely in Spain are foreigners. Many Spaniards also have flexible or remote working arrangements and will no doubt occasionally work in a local bar or café. Equally, many digital nomads take advantage of the abundance of ‘co-working’ spaces popping up around Spain, which are exactly for this purpose.

There are even café owners who promote the ‘work friendly’ environment as a means of establishing a loyal customer base.

Other hospitality businesses have preferred to allocate an area for remote working while keeping the bar area and certain tables for regular customers who stop by for a quick bite or coffee. 

READ ALSO: The best co-working spaces for digital nomads in Spain

The row over remote working in traditional Spanish bars and cafés is yet another chapter in the current debate over the influence mass tourism and gentrification is having on Spaniards’ standard of living. 

In the increasingly online, post-pandemic world, the change has been stark in some parts of Spain. Take a stroll through the Raval or L’Eixample neighbourhoods of Barcelona, or the Ruzafa and El Cabanyal areas of Valencia in 2024, and you’re likely to see buildings plastered in Airbnb lockboxes and possibly even hear more fluent, non-native English than you do Spanish in certain parts.

Tourists and wealthy remote workers, the logic goes, visit or move to a trendy city they’ve seen on an international ranking, say Málaga or Valencia, which causes rents to rise because landlords in the area convert their properties into short-term tourist rental accommodation to meet the growing demand, which in turn turfs out locals or shuts down local businesses. 

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