logo
Why waiting times at Spain's immigration offices could get even longer

Why waiting times at Spain's immigration offices could get even longer

Local Spain16-05-2025
Processing visas and residency permits could take even longer now due to the fact that extranjería offices are reportedly already "overwhelmed", before new immigration regulations that could worsen the situation considerably.
Back in November 2024, Spain announced it was going to make it easier for foreigners to get residency and work permits by approving a series of new immigration reforms, legislation which although good on paper has been met with some doubts by litigators as it could leave some asylum seekers in an increased state of vulnerability.
These changes are due to finally come into force this month on May 20th.
The new rules are designed to supposedly simplify the regularisation process for migrants living in Spain illegally, as well as making it easy for people to change to different residency options. For example, it will allow foreigners who have studied in Spain to move more easily from a study visa to a residence and work permit.
At the same time, however, all this extra paperwork will also greatly increase the workload of administrators.
Spanish trade union Comisiones Obreras has even called for a strike due to a "lack of resources" to implement these new regulations, as well as a steep increase in the workload.
'We denounce the unsustainable workload, the precarious working conditions of public employees, and the disastrous management, which is leaving thousands of citizens trapped in a bureaucratic labyrinth with no way out," the union said in a recent statement.
The strikes will take place from 12:30 to 2:30pm at all immigration offices in Spain next Tuesday May 19th, one day before the regulations come into effect.
In essence, understaffed, overworked and underpaid extranjería staff are fearful of the sheer volume of residency processes immigration officers they are going to have to carry out.
Catalan authorities alone say they are looking at regularising the residency and work papers of 200,000 migrants in two years.
To make matters worse, just days before the reform of the Immigration Regulations comes into effect, Spain's Ministry of Inclusion has made several amendments to the rules. While these aim to clarify the interpretation of the new regulations, it is also causing more confusion among extranjería workers.
Even before the new reforms come into force, long waiting times, trouble getting appointments (citas previas) and phones that are never answered have been chronic issues at many of Spain's extranjería offices.
This was recently brought to light by an article in Cadena Ser, where they reported how in order to process an appointment to obtain protected status at Valencia's foreigner office, you have to call on only one particular day of the week at a specific time.
Obstacles such as these leave many foreigners in limbo and vulnerable.
Appointments are so hard to come by due to the fact that 'mafia' gangs are blocking them all with the help of computer bots and then selling them to desperate foreigners, when in reality appointments should be completely free. For years, Spanish authorities have been unable to stamp out this scam.
As Spain's population continues to increase largely due to the arrival of more documented and undocumented foreigners, an already overstretched and trouble-ridden immigration department will have to deal with a sizable increase in its workload, something that is certain to reflect in waiting times for foreigners.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Why are fewer American tourists visiting Spain this summer?
Why are fewer American tourists visiting Spain this summer?

Local Spain

time8 hours ago

  • Local Spain

Why are fewer American tourists visiting Spain this summer?

American tourism in Spain is slowing down after a strong post-pandemic period, causing experts to worry that the shortfall may negatively impact the Spanish economy in 2025. According to a recent tourism sector report by CaixaBank Research, titled Uncertainty and American Tourism, it is estimated that the downturn could hit Spain's tourism GDP growth by as much up to one percentage point this year. In a context in which the travel industry is slowing overall, going from 6 percent in 2024 to 2.7 percent, in 2025, the slowdown in the American market stands out as a 'relevant' factor to take into account in terms of the Spanish market, according to the bank's findings. The report points to several possible explanations, including a weaker dollar and global economic instability caused by President Donald Trump's trade policy as possible reasons causing Americans to stay home. 'The appreciation of the euro against the dollar, the slowdown of the U.S. economy, and an increase in political and economic uncertainty appear to be behind this change in trend,' the report states, pointing to November 2024, when Donald Trump returned to the White House for a second term, as a turning point in the longer-term trends. However, it should be noted that the 'slowdown' refers to tourism growth among Americans going from exceptionally fast to slower but still growing overall. 'Passenger arrivals from the US slowed abruptly, going from 17.5 percent year-on-year growth in the first 10 months of 2024 to just 2.3 percent between November 2024 and May 2025,' the report says. American tourists in Spain spend well above average for foreign tourists in the country. Last year, they accounted for 4 percent of the nearly 94 million foreign tourists but 7.1 percent of overall spending. In cities such as Barcelona, they already represent a large group of foreign travellers, although their prominence has been growing across the country in recent years: since 2019, arrivals of Americans travellers increased by 28.3 percent, compared to 12.3 percent of total international arrivals. However, CaixaBank points out that spending with US bank cards in Spain has gone from growing by 17 percent year-on-year between January and October 2024 to falling by 2.2 percent between November of that year and May 2025. In contrast, total spending with foreign cards slowed more moderately, with an increase of 11.1 percent between January and October 2024 to 8.5 percent between November and May. The research also identifies the areas of Spain most affected by a drop in American visitors, pointing to an urban preference among tourists coming from the States: 'If we breakdown Spanish municipalities into urban (more than 30,000 inhabitants) and rural, and between coastal and non-coastal, we observe that the influence of American tourism is particularly significant in non-coastal urban municipalities (14.7 percent), around Barcelona and Madrid, according to the latest analysis by Turespaña. In rural municipalities, both coastal and non-coastal, the influence of American tourism is slightly above 4 percent.' Nevertheless, David César Heymann, economist at CaixaBank Research and author of the report, points out that the number of American travellers to Spain grew much more in 2024 than in Europe as a whole (22.3 percent compared to 7.3 percent), which is why the slowdown is now more pronounced. From January to April this year, Spain received 25.6 million international tourists, 7.1 percent more than in the same period in 2024. Year-on-year growth at that time was much higher, at around 18 percent. Average spending per tourist, an indicator used to measure the value of visitors, has barely increased by 2 percent in the first four months of the year, well below the 7.1 percent increase experienced last year.

Vox calls for mass deportations and Spanish citizenship audit for foreigners
Vox calls for mass deportations and Spanish citizenship audit for foreigners

Local Spain

time2 days ago

  • Local Spain

Vox calls for mass deportations and Spanish citizenship audit for foreigners

'By 2045, we Spaniards will be a minority in our own country". This unreferenced statement by Vox MP Carlos Hernández Quero encapsulates the fears and driving force of the new policies of Spain's far-right party as it presented its new proposal for its housing and economic programme at a public event on Sunday June 29th. Even though most would argue that nationality, race and ethnicity are not central to the country's property crisis and economic issues, Hernández Quero argued that "immigrants do not contribute to the welfare state" and that their presence is "altering the national identity". Based on these opinions, the new manifesto for the party headed by Santiago Abascal calls for all once-undocumented migrants who have been given residency by both the right-wing Popular Party and the Socialist Party while they were in power to be "deported en masse" from Spain. In their words, "reverse all the regularisations of illegal immigrants carried out by the two-party system". This would be done without due process, as is happening in the United Stated under the presidency of Donald Trump. Such an act, prohibited by Spanish and international law, would force more than 1 million people to have to leave the country. Furthermore, Vox's updated programme has called for "auditing the granting of Spanish nationality to see how many should be withdrawn". Despite the fact that Spanish law only allows citizenship to be revoked in specific cases, Vox's argument is that in recent years Spanish citizenship was just been "given away" in many cases. The report states that in 1996 the foreign population in Spain was 1 percent of the total, but today it exceeds 20 percent. This is incorrect as the latest data from the National Statistics Institute (INE), corresponding to the first quarter of this year, indicates that there are 6.9 million foreigners in Spain, equivalent to only 14.1 percent of the population, not 20 percent. However, Spain does have 9.4 million inhabitants who born outside of Spain, representing 19.3 percent of the population, but this includes almost 3 million Spaniards born abroad, which is potentially what Vox is referring to. Clearly, in their eyes, these naturalised citizens aren't truly Spanish, no matter how long they've lived in the country or how integrated they are. "Some of those who are so concerned about the end of the world, about climate change, should be more concerned about the end of Spain due to demographic replacement," Hernández Quero stated during the public presentation. The Vox representative also blamed immigrants for the low wages and precarious jobs in the Spanish labour market and for "having a direct and harmful impact in the form of insecurity in neighbourhoods". He even pointed the finger at foreigners for rising rents and the lack of housing in the country. "They don't pay our pensions or save our welfare state," he said, adding that migrants allegedly cost the Spanish State "more than €30 billion a year", without giving his sources. This comes at a time when migrants have been lauded internationally as the fuel powering Spain's thriving economy, with almost all new self-employed workers being foreign. This isn't the first time Vox have proposed tougher citizenship rules for foreigners, having previously said the wait for citizenship via residency should be lengthened from ten to fifteen years, it's called for nationality applications from those with criminal records to be banned and wants dual nationality to be banned for all foreigners, including Latin Americans. Vox is not the only European party to have suggested taking away the legal status of immigrants and revoking citizenship. In early 2025, the Swedish government planned to make it possible to revoke citizenship, but only for gang members. The first Global State of Citizenship report, by the Global Citizenship Observatory (GLOBALCIT) at the European University Institute (EUI) in Florence, which analysed citizenship laws in 191 countries found that the process of naturalisation is becoming 'increasingly fragile' Researchers found that "with the growing number of armed conflicts and incidence of terrorism worldwide, many countries have introduced provisions for withdrawing the citizenship of a person on the basis of national security grounds'. Over a third of countries, including many European ones, 'can now strip a person of their citizenship when their actions are seen as disloyal or threatening to state security,' the report says, and the trend has been expanding. According to Vox's own policy agenda, the number one priority in its immigration agenda is the deportation of all illegal immigrants.

Spain court shelves Ryanair's €107 million fine for 'abusive practices'
Spain court shelves Ryanair's €107 million fine for 'abusive practices'

Local Spain

time6 days ago

  • Local Spain

Spain court shelves Ryanair's €107 million fine for 'abusive practices'

The Madrid court said it accepted their appeals against the respective fines of €107 million ($125 million) and €1.6 million while the basis of the case was still being resolved. The court also justified its decision by the costliness of the fines which would "cause a mismatch and difficulties for the treasury" of the companies. The airlines will meanwhile have to pay guarantees collectively totalling almost €112 million. The consumer ministry announced fines against five companies in November for what it identified as "abusive practices", including charging for hand luggage, providing misleading information and a lack of price transparency. Irish no-frills carrier Ryanair was specifically fined for charging passengers a "disproportionate amount" for printing their boarding passes at terminals when they did not have them. EasyJet and Spanish airlines Volotea and Vueling were also among the punished firms. Ryanair boss Michael O'Leary slammed the "political" fines at the time as "illegal and baseless". Far-left consumer rights minister Pablo Bustinduy, who has become embroiled in a spat with Ryanair over his policies, conceded the practices would continue until the courts decided the affair. The successful appeals were "normal and predictable under the rule of law", but "charging for hand luggage is illegal", he insisted on social network Bluesky. The European Parliament's transport commission has proposed allowing passengers to bring a personal object such as a handbag or backpack on board, as well as another piece of luggage weighing seven kilograms at most. But the sector association Airlines for Europe says the move would increase the cost of tickets for passengers who choose to travel light.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store