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How golden visas helped turn Spanish cities into hubs for the super rich

Whether it be millionaire Latinos turning parts of Madrid into a new 'Miami' or Russian oligarchs buying up mansions in Marbella, Spain's golden visa scheme has sped up the gentrification process in some cities around the country.

How golden visas helped turn Spanish cities into hubs for the super rich
A man walks pass luxury cars in Marbella on March 30, 2013. AFP PHOTO / JORGE GUERRERO (Photo by Jorge Guerrero / AFP)

The Spanish government announced it was scrapping the golden visa scheme this week, putting an end to the system that allowed wealthy non-EU nationals to get residency by investing at least 500,000 on property.

You can read The Local’s full coverage of the decision and its implications here and linked below.

READ ALSO:

Many Spaniards blamed the golden visa for inflating property prices, though there’s some debate on how true that is.

But golden visas have also had another knock-on effect on Spain and the property market in certain parts of the country: speeding up the gentrification process in some neighbourhoods and even turning some of its cities into ‘new Miamis’ by attracting Latin Americans and rich foreigners from around the world.

Wealthy foreigners have long seen Spain as a desirable location, but the golden visa eased the process for many from places like Russia, China, Mexico and Venezuela. 

Though there’s no updated post-pandemic nationality data on golden visa holders in Spain, the Chinese have dominated with a total of 2,712 visas issued since 2019, according to a report on golden visas by Transparency International. Russians were the second most common recipients of golden visas, with a total of 1,159 visas. For context, UK nationals were issued just 177 golden visas in that time.

However, in the last few years it’s been Mexicans and Venezuelans that have been arriving in growing numbers, many via the golden visa scheme. The glitzy Florida city was for many years the destination Latin Americans dreamt of in search of a better life, but also those with an eye for luxury.

But the sunny Florida city now has a new rival across the Atlantic: Madrid, and wealthy foreigners from around the world have flocked to the capital and other Spanish cities.

Golden visa destinations

Data has shown exactly where golden visa holders were buying property in Spain, and it seems they were very heavily concentrated in a few cities.

Since 2013, Barcelona, Madrid and Málaga accounted for almost three-quarters (70 percent) of the ‘golden visas’ granted between them.

Most of the investments were in Barcelona, which accounted for 33 percent of the residence permits granted for property purchases. Barcelona was followed by Madrid and Málaga province, particularly in Marbella, which accounted for 19 percent and 18 percent of the total respectively.

These three provinces, together with other traditional tourist hotspots such as Alicante (10 percent), the Balearic Islands (5 percent) and Valencia (4 percent) made up 90 percent of golden visa purchases.

Yachts docked at Palma de Mallorca’s harbour. The Balearic island is one of the most sought-after places for properties among foreign millionaires. (Photo by JAIME REINA / AFP)

Madrid, the ‘Miami of Europe’

Madrid has really taken the crown in terms of earning comparisons to Miami as a destination for the super rich from Latin America, a safe haven away from political and economic instability back home.

A recent BBC article described Madrid as the ‘Miami of Europe’ and the golden visa has played role in that. South Americans, particularly Venezuelans and Mexicans, are increasingly the largest groups among the super wealthy in Madrid and golden visa rules allow wealthy Latinos to speed up the gentrification process.

South Americans have bought up 60 percent of the luxury properties for sale in the Madrid market in recent years, ahead of the British, French and Americans. Many of these purchases will have been through the visa scheme.

In the traditionally well-to-do Salamanca area, already a long-established luxury neighbourhood in the city, entire buildings have been bought by Mexican and Venezuelan buyers and become known as ‘Little Caracas’ after the Venezuelan capital.

According to figures cited by the BBC, Mexicans alone have invested more than €700 million in the Spanish real estate market since 2020, the vast majority of that in the capital.

Marbella

Málaga, more specifically the smaller city of Marbella a little further down the coast, has long been known as a luxury destination popular with footballers, social media stars and millionaires looking for the high life.

Whereas Latinos seem to favour Madrid, the Costa del Sol area more generally has long been particular with wealthy Russians and some oligarchs. Marbella’s football team even had a Russian millionaire as club president at a time. 

In 2022, there were reportedly 3,000 Russians in Marbella with properties valued at €1 million or higher

“You see them every day on the Old Course at La Zagaleta,” Marbella luxury real estate agent Natasha Harrison told Spanish daily El Periódico de España.

“They began as the exclusive guests of many Britons and little by little they took over when it came to organising charity and philanthropic parties; the average budget for these parties can be more than €100,000”.

It has even been rumoured in the Spanish press that Vladimir Putin himself has (or had) a luxury mansion in the La Zagaleta area of Benahavís, a village close to Marbella popular with oligarchs, though the most likely explanation seems to be a mix up with initials.

With an increase in direct flights from Málaga to other high-flying destinations such as New York and Doha, there’s been an uptick in the pre-existing luxury property market in the area in recent years — exactly the types of places that wealthy golden visa holders would buy property.

In 2023, 7.1 percent of property purchases in Marbella were linked to golden visa applications.

When Putin invaded Ukraine in February 2022, the Spanish government reportedly stopped issuing golden visas to Russian citizens.

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When will Spain’s golden visa scheme officially end?

Last April, Spain's PM said he would axe the golden visa through real estate investment, but no law has come into force yet. The government's coalition partner has now called for it to happen "immediately", so when will the scheme actually end?

When will Spain's golden visa scheme officially end?

On April 8th 2024, Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez announced his plans to get rid of the golden visa scheme which grants non-EU nationals residency in Spain when they buy real estate worth €500,000. 

“We are going to begin the procedure to eliminate the granting of the so-called golden visa, which allows access to Spanish residency when more than half a million euros are invested in real estate,” Sánchez told journalists in Seville.

READ ALSO: What the end of Spain’s golden visa means for foreigners

The golden visa is also available to those who invested €1 million in shares in Spanish companies, or €2 million in government bonds, or transferred €1 million to a Spanish bank account. These golden visa options will be kept in place.

It is thought that the government has made this decision regarding the golden visa through real estate as a response to increasing pressure due to the current housing crisis in Spain, and due to a spike in applications in the last two years. But some experts argue that it’s simply a political move. 

ANALYSIS: Is Spain’s decision to axe golden visa about housing or politics?

So when will the golden visas officially be axed and can you still apply for them in the meantime?

The truth is that no one knows exactly when the scheme will end because the government has not announced a date and the legislative change has not been published in the BOE state bulletin, and therefore is not yet in force.

Despite the big announcement by Sánchez and the international attention the news garnered, so far the Spanish Cabinet has only analysed a report studying the modification of the law that gives wealthy foreigners the chance to obtain residency without the commitments of residency (time spent in Spain, tax etc).

However, on Tuesday May 14th the government’s junior coalition partner, hard-left party Sumar, announced that they wanted to speed the process up and get the modification of the golden visa conditions as soon as possible through Spain’s different legislative branches.

Sumar spokesperson Íñigo Errejón told journalists his party has now registered an official bill proposal to eliminate the golden visa.

“The PSOE announced a study into the golden visa. Presenting a study is good, but presenting a law is better,” Errejón argued.

These visas are a privilege that must be scrapped “immediately” because they have an inflationary effect on the housing market, he stated, adding that other countries such as Ireland, Portugal and Greece have already taken similar measures in order to not become “tourist colonies” or “money laundering” locations.

On average, draft bills take an average of five months to make their way through from the Spanish Cabinet to the Parliament, Senate, Parliament again and their eventual approval after publication in the state bulletin. 

Jesús Ruiz Ballesteros, economist and managing partner of Ruiz Ballesteros Abogados, a firm specialising in Spanish visas, has said that the news of the elimination of the golden visa has generated legal uncertainty for both investors and professionals, leading to a flood of enquiries.

“People ask why it hasn’t been withdrawn yet and they want to know if they still have time to apply for it,” he explained.

The cancellation of the residence permit has not yet been approved nor has it been published in the Official State Gazette, “therefore it is still valid”. 

The lawyer has criticised the government for not being clear and announcing an end date, a similar sentiment echoed by lawyer Miguel Manzanares, CEO of Manzanares Lawyers in Marbella, in conversation with Join Sean Woolley, Managing Director of Cloud Nine Spain.

“We know very little right now, it was really a very brief announcement by the Prime Minister and the Spanish Cabinet. 

“We don’t know what’s going to happen with the other golden visa avenues or how the law is going to be regulated…the small print, the conditions”.

“It will happen, it’s been decided by the Council of Ministers,” Manzanares argued when asked if there was any way the Spanish government could backtrack, but stressed that “we don’t have the answers” with regards to whether people can still apply for the golden visa or if those who already have it can renew. 

INTERVIEW: ‘There are three main alternatives to Spain’s golden visa’

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