Government defends regularisation and unveils €500 million Integration and Citizenship Plan
Over one million migrants file for Spain’s extraordinary regularisation as deadline closes
Spain’s Supreme Court questions extraordinary migrant regularisation on final day of applications
Latest News
Spain’s Extraordinary Regularisation Window Closes After More Than One Million Applications
Spain’s extraordinary regularisation programme closed on 30 June 2026 after receiving more than one million applications—twice the number the government expected. Successful applicants will obtain a renewable one-year residence-and-work permit, giving employers access to a much-needed legal workforce and expanding the country’s tax base. Companies should anticipate faster onboarding of previously undocumented staff but brace for possible processing delays.
Spain’s Mass Regularisation Window Closes After 1 Million Undocumented Migrants Apply
Spain’s six-week regularisation drive ended on 30 June with more than one million undocumented migrants applying for one-year residence and work permits—twice the government’s forecast. The influx will help fill labour gaps but adds to appointment bottlenecks and leaves employers with a tight renewal timetable for 2027.
PM Sánchez confirms more than one million applications as Spain’s migrant amnesty window closes
With the filing period closed, Spain has logged more than one million requests for legal status under its 2026 migrant regularisation, double initial forecasts. The flood of applicants underscores the scale of Spain’s informal workforce and offers employers a large new talent pool, but processing backlogs and possible refusals mean HR teams must track cases closely.
Supreme Court may ask EU judges to rule on Spain’s migrant amnesty
Spain’s Supreme Court has asked parties to a legal challenge whether it should seek guidance from the CJEU on the legality of the April 2026 migrant regularisation decree. Judges question whether blanket one-year residence permits violate EU return and asylum directives, but say processing will continue while the issue is decided. The potential EU referral lengthens legal uncertainty for employers and migrants alike.
Spanish Supreme Court Signals Potential EU Challenge to Mass Regularisation
Spain’s Supreme Court has asked whether the extraordinary regularisation scheme breaches EU law and may seek guidance from the CJEU. Although any referral would not affect the immediate validity of the new permits, employers should track the proceedings because an adverse ruling could alter renewal rules or worker entitlements.
Government Launches €500 Million Integration & Citizenship Plan to Support Newly Regularised Migrants
Madrid has earmarked €500 million to help integrate migrants who applied under the 2026 regularisation scheme, including a new Human Mobility Agency and employer fast-track services. The funding should accelerate TIE issuance and expand language and training programmes, easing employers’ ability to hire and retain talent.
Summer ‘Operación Salida’ Boosts Transport Capacity as Spain Braces for Record Holiday Travel
Spain’s big summer getaway began on 30 June with airlines, rail and coach operators adding capacity to meet what is expected to be record leisure demand. While extra seats will help, business travellers face higher prices and limited availability on peak-hour departures, making early reservation and schedule flexibility essential.
Renfe strike: low impact on 29 June but bigger test looms on 15 July
A nationwide Renfe strike on 29 June caused limited disruption, but the same union has confirmed a second 24-hour walk-out for 15 July—right in peak holiday season. Minimum-service rules will keep many trains running, yet capacity cuts and crowding could hit long-distance and business-critical journeys. Companies should re-check bookings, allow extra margin for flight connections and brief travellers on refund rights.
Government Insists Regularisation Respects EU Law, Urges Applicants to Stay Calm
The Spanish government has defended the legality of its mass regularisation, assuring applicants and employers that the programme was pre-cleared by EU institutions and will proceed as planned. Extra staffing and funding have been earmarked to keep permit processing within six months, tempering business concerns over judicial uncertainty.
Spain’s Mass Regularisation Ends with 1.2 Million Applications — Double Initial Forecasts
Spain closed its migrant-regularisation window on 30 June with about 1.2 million applications, roughly double the target range. Successful applicants receive a one-year residence and work permit, immediately widening Spain’s available labour pool and offering employers a legal avenue to hire staff already in-country. Processing backlogs and future political push-back remain risks, but in the short term the policy represents a major shift for companies managing Spanish headcount.
‘Operación Verano 2026’ Mobilises to Manage 104 Million Road Trips and 3.5 Million Cross-Border Travellers
Spain’s summer traffic plan anticipates unprecedented volumes, including millions of drivers transiting the country to Morocco and Portugal. New V-16 beacon rules, multilingual information systems and eclipse-related diversions mean corporate mobility teams must refresh driver safety kits and adjust travel schedules.
Spain Hikes EU Blue Card Salary Floor to €48,000 as Europe-Wide Thresholds Rise
Spain’s EU Blue Card minimum salary now stands at €48,000 per year, part of a broader 2026 wave of threshold hikes across the EU. Employers must adjust compensation for new and renewing Blue-Card holders or consider alternative permit categories.
Spain Boosts Air, Rail and Ferry Capacity for Summer ‘Operación Salida’
Airlines, rail firms and ferry operators have increased capacity ahead of Spain’s 2026 summer exodus. Between 26 June and 5 July, Aena airports will handle over 73,000 flights, while Renfe and Baleària add seats for domestic and North-African routes—good news for mobility planners but with strike and staffing caveats.
Technical Glitches in EU Entry/Exit System Cause Long Queues at Spanish Airports
Biometric faults in the EU’s new EES generated hour-and-a-half queues at Madrid and Barcelona airports on 30 June, prompting authorities to revert temporarily to manual passport stamping. While stability was restored by midday, non-EU travellers—particularly business visitors—should build longer connection buffers as Spain heads into its busiest travel weekend.
Spain’s Extraordinary Immigration Regularization Nears One Million Applications as Deadline Expires
Spain’s one-off regularization window closed on 29 June with more than 900,000 – and possibly 1.3 million – applications, far above the half-million the government expected. Successful applicants receive provisional work and residence rights, giving businesses a new source of legal labour but also creating processing and onboarding challenges. The Ministry now has 90 days to decide each case.
Union CCOO Warns of Fingerprint Bottlenecks After Handling 7,500 Regularization Files
Trade-union CCOO says it has supported over 7,500 regularization files but warns of ‘serious’ fingerprint backlogs at police stations that could delay the issuance of foreigners’ ID cards. The union is asking the government to boost staffing and standardise procedures so newly regularized migrants can enter the formal labour market without further hurdles.
Interior Ministry Declares Emergency Procurement to Cope with Migrant Arrivals in the Canary Islands
A BOE notice dated 29 June declares an emergency framework for rapid procurement to handle the sharp rise in irregular sea arrivals to Fuerteventura and El Hierro. The move fast-tracks spending on reception facilities and surveillance, signalling heightened border-control activity that could affect travel and logistics in the Canary Islands.
Renfe Strike Cancels 320 Trains, Disrupting Summer Business Travel Across Spain
A 24-hour strike by Spain’s main rail union forced Renfe to cancel 320 trains on 29 June, affecting high-speed, regional and commuter services at the start of the summer peak. The action, linked to plans for a joint venture in Renfe’s freight business, could intensify with another walk-out on 15 July, posing ongoing disruption for business travellers and shippers.