American Expat's Money Guide: Spain
Transfers, banking, and US + local taxes for Americans in Spain. Currency: EUR.
The quick answer
- US tax treaty
- Yes
- Totalization (SS) agreement
- Yes
- Special expat tax regime
- Beckham Law
- Bank account as a US citizen
- Yes
Local top marginal income-tax rate (headline): 47%. Effective rates depend on income, residency status, and any special regime. Figures here are general and can change — verify against current law before relying on them.
Informational only — not financial, tax, or legal advice. Cross-border tax is fact-specific; confirm with a qualified cross-border CPA or adviser before acting. Some links are affiliate links — we may earn a commission at no extra cost to you. Full disclaimer.
Cost of living vs. New York City
Spain is about 48% cheaper overall
Typical 1-bed city-centre rent: $1,508/mo. Compare cost of living →
Approximate — Numbeo, NYC = 100, as of 2026-06.
1 Moving your money (USD → EUR)
USD→EUR. Same dynamic as Portugal — bank FX spreads dwarf the headline 'no fee' on large relocation transfers.
See exactly what your amount costs across the mid-market rate, a typical bank, and a specialist — then send with the cheapest.
2 Banking as an American in Spain
Non-resident accounts are available with a passport and a non-resident certificate; once you have an NIE/residency it becomes a standard resident account.
Local banks generally accept US persons under the FATCA agreement, though some are cautious about the extra reporting.
3 Taxes — the part everyone gets wrong
The US side (you still file)
- You file a US return on worldwide income. FEIE or the Foreign Tax Credit usually prevents true double taxation — which one wins depends on your income and local rates.
- FBAR (FinCEN 114) if your foreign accounts top $10,000 combined at any point in the year.
- FATCA (Form 8938) may also apply above higher thresholds.
The Spain side
Spain offers a special regime — Beckham Law. The 'Beckham Law' special regime can let qualifying new arrivals be taxed as non-residents (flat rate on Spanish-source income) for several years. Note that electing it generally means giving up US–Spain tax-treaty benefits, so it doesn't suit everyone. Eligibility rules are specific — verify against current Spanish law.
Where this gets people
- Beckham Law can backfire: electing it generally forfeits your US–Spain tax-treaty benefits, so it doesn't suit everyone.
- Spain ended its Golden Visa in April 2025 — the Non-Lucrative and Digital Nomad visas are the live routes now.
- A "special regime" headline rate is not your effective rate — eligibility and exclusions matter a lot.
- State taxes can follow you abroad depending on the US state you left — don't assume you're done with them.
Cross-border tax is fact-specific and the penalties are real. A US-expat tax specialist handles FEIE/FTC, FBAR, and FATCA correctly.
Get expat taxes done with Bright!Tax →4 Investing & brokerage
US brokers sometimes drop customers with a non-US address. A broker that explicitly supports non-resident Americans is the standard fallback. Beware buying local (non-US) funds — PFIC (Passive Foreign Investment Company) rules make them a US tax nightmare.
Open an account with Interactive Brokers →5 Healthcare & insurance
Legal residents generally gain access to Spain's public health system, but there's usually a gap before residency and coverage kick in. Many new arrivals and nomads bridge the gap with international coverage.
See SafetyWing coverage →6 Common residency routes
Your residency route determines your tax residency and bank access — they're connected.
Frequently asked questions
Do Americans living in Spain still have to file US taxes?
Yes. US citizens file with the IRS on worldwide income no matter where they live. The US–Spain tax treaty and tools like the Foreign Earned Income Exclusion (FEIE) or the Foreign Tax Credit usually prevent true double taxation, but you still must file. This is general information, not tax advice.
Do I need to file an FBAR if I move to Spain?
If your foreign financial accounts add up to more than $10,000 at any point in the year, you generally must file an FBAR (FinCEN Form 114). Many expats also have FATCA (Form 8938) obligations. Penalties for missing these are steep — confirm your situation with a cross-border professional.
What's the cheapest way to move money to Spain?
For a relocation lump sum, the cost is almost entirely the exchange-rate spread, not the visible fee. Banks commonly bury 1–3% in the rate. Compare your specific amount with the transfer cost tool before sending.
Can I keep my US brokerage account after moving to Spain?
Some US brokers restrict or close accounts once you have a non-US address. A broker that explicitly supports non-resident Americans is the common fallback. Don't change your address until you've confirmed your broker's policy.
Data last verified 2026-06-03. Primary source: official reference.
Informational only — not financial, tax, or legal advice. Cross-border tax is fact-specific; confirm with a qualified cross-border CPA or adviser before acting. Some links are affiliate links — we may earn a commission at no extra cost to you. Full disclaimer.