Beckham Law and Employer of Record in Spain in 2026: What You Need to Know
You've found the perfect candidate for your Spain expansion. They're relocating from the UK, salary expectations are reasonable, and they're ready to start in six weeks. Then your CFO asks the question that stops the conversation cold: "Can we get them on the Beckham Law through our EOR?"
The answer isn't straightforward. And getting it wrong can cost your new hire thousands of euros in unexpected taxes while creating compliance headaches that follow your company for years.
Teamed is the unified global employment partner for mid-market companies managing international teams across multiple platforms, vendors, and employment models. We've guided hundreds of companies through exactly this scenario, and the intersection of Spain's Beckham Law with EOR employment is one of the most misunderstood areas in European hiring. Here's what you actually need to know to get this right in 2026.
Quick Facts: Beckham Law and EOR in Spain
Spain's Beckham Law applies a 24% flat tax rate to qualifying employment income up to €600,000 per year, with income above €600,000 taxed at 47%.
The Beckham Law eligibility window spans 6 tax years: the year of arrival plus the following 5 tax years.
Spanish tax residency is typically assessed using the 183-days presence test within a calendar year.
EOR employees in Spain can qualify for Beckham Law treatment if the EOR provider has a genuine Spanish entity and the employee meets all eligibility criteria.
Teamed's EOR readiness checklist assumes a minimum lead time of 4-8 weeks to complete Spain onboarding steps when all worker documents are provided on day one.
A missed Beckham Law application deadline can shift an employee from flat-rate taxation to progressive resident rates, materially changing net pay and requiring re-gross-up decisions.
The Beckham Law application must be submitted within 6 months of the employee's Spanish social security registration date.
What Is the Beckham Law and Why Does It Matter for International Hiring?
The Beckham Law (formally régimen fiscal aplicable a los trabajadores desplazados a territorio español) is a special Spanish tax regime that allows eligible inbound workers to be taxed as non-residents for a limited period. Instead of progressive resident tax brackets applied to worldwide income, qualifying employees pay a flat rate on Spanish-source employment income.
The practical impact is significant. A senior hire earning €200,000 annually would face marginal rates up to 47% under standard Spanish resident taxation. Under the Beckham Law, that same income is taxed at a flat 24%. For your employee, that's a difference of tens of thousands of euros in take-home pay each year.
Named after footballer David Beckham (who benefited from an earlier version when he joined Real Madrid), the regime was designed to attract international talent to Spain. Recent reforms have expanded eligibility to include remote workers, entrepreneurs, and digital nomads, making it increasingly relevant for mid-market companies building distributed teams across Europe.
Can EOR Employees in Spain Qualify for Beckham Law Treatment?
Yes, EOR employees can qualify for Beckham Law treatment, but eligibility depends on specific conditions that many providers gloss over. The critical requirement is that the EOR must have a genuine Spanish legal entity that becomes the worker's formal employer. An EOR operating through a partner network or without proper Spanish establishment cannot support Beckham Law applications.
The employee must also meet the standard Beckham Law eligibility criteria. They cannot have been Spanish tax resident in the 5 years preceding their move to Spain. Their relocation must be connected to employment with a Spanish employer (the EOR entity in this case). And they must apply within the strict 6-month window following their Spanish social security registration.
Reddit discussions among expats frequently flag this exact issue. As one user noted, "As long as you have an employment contract in Spain and you meet the other criteria for Beckham, you should normally be able to qualify." The key phrase is "employment contract in Spain." Your EOR must provide a genuine Spanish employment contract, not a service agreement or contractor arrangement.
What Are the Eligibility Requirements for Beckham Law in 2026?
The eligibility criteria for Beckham Law are specific and non-negotiable. Missing any single requirement disqualifies the employee from the regime entirely.
First, the employee must not have been a Spanish tax resident during the 5 tax years immediately preceding their move to Spain. This is assessed using the 183-days presence test and centre of economic interests criteria. Someone who spent significant time in Spain as a contractor or on extended business trips may have inadvertently triggered residency and lost eligibility.
Second, the relocation must result from an employment contract with a Spanish employer or, under recent reforms, from acquiring director status in a Spanish company, performing entrepreneurial activity, or working remotely for a foreign employer while residing in Spain. For EOR arrangements, the employment contract with the Spanish EOR entity satisfies this requirement.
Third, the work must be performed in Spain. While some remote work for foreign clients is permitted under recent reforms, the employee's primary work location must be Spanish territory.
Fourth, income from the employment cannot derive from a permanent establishment in Spain. This creates complexity for senior commercial roles where the employee might have authority to negotiate or sign contracts on behalf of the client company.
How Does the Beckham Law Affect Tax Obligations for Foreign Employees?
Under standard Spanish resident taxation, individuals pay progressive rates on their worldwide income. The marginal rate reaches 47% on income above approximately €300,000, with regional variations adding additional complexity. Resident taxpayers must also declare and pay tax on foreign assets, investment income, and capital gains regardless of source.
The Beckham Law changes this calculation fundamentally. Qualifying employment income up to €600,000 is taxed at a flat 24%. Income above €600,000 is taxed at 47%. Non-employment income from Spanish sources (dividends, capital gains, rental income) is taxed at non-resident rates, which are often more favourable than resident rates.
Perhaps most significantly, Beckham Law beneficiaries are only taxed on Spanish-source income. Foreign investment income, rental income from properties outside Spain, and capital gains on non-Spanish assets are generally not subject to Spanish taxation during the regime period. For employees with significant investment portfolios or property holdings abroad, this exclusion can be more valuable than the employment income rate reduction.
Teamed's Spain compensation modelling notes highlight that CFO teams frequently use the €600,000 income breakpoint as a compensation-structure threshold because income above the cap is modelled at a materially higher marginal rate than income below it.
Step 1: Verify Employee Eligibility Before Making Offers
Before extending an offer contingent on Beckham Law benefits, verify that your candidate actually qualifies. Request documentation of their tax residency history for the preceding 5 years. Ask directly whether they've spent more than 183 days in Spain in any recent calendar year.
The expected result from this step is a clear yes or no on baseline eligibility. If the candidate has any Spanish tax history, engage specialist Spanish tax counsel before proceeding. The cost of a pre-hire assessment is trivial compared to the compensation adjustment required if Beckham Law proves unavailable.
For candidates with equity compensation, carried interest, or significant foreign investment income, this verification step becomes even more critical. Non-employment income streams can change both the effective benefit and the compliance steps required under the Beckham Law framework.
Step 2: Confirm Your EOR Provider Has a Spanish Legal Entity
Not all EOR providers operate the same way in Spain. Some maintain their own Spanish Sociedad Limitada (SL) or Sociedad Anónima (SA). Others work through partner networks or professional employer organisations that may not support Beckham Law applications.
Ask your EOR provider directly: "Do you have your own Spanish legal entity that will be the formal employer on the Spanish employment contract?" Request the company name, CIF (tax identification number), and confirmation that they can support Beckham Law applications.
The expected result is documentation confirming the Spanish entity details and explicit confirmation of Beckham Law support capability. If your provider hesitates or offers vague responses, treat this as a red flag. Teamed's analysis of EOR vendor consolidation projects in Europe shows that 4+ systems involved in global employment is a practical indicator of vendor sprawl risk, and unclear Beckham Law support is often a symptom of fragmented provider relationships.
Step 3: Coordinate Arrival Date and Employment Start Date
Timing is everything with Beckham Law applications. The 6-month application window begins from the date of Spanish social security registration, not the employment contract signature date or the employee's physical arrival in Spain.
Work backwards from your target start date. The employee should arrive in Spain and establish residency before their employment start date. Social security registration happens as part of the onboarding process, typically within the first few days of employment. The Beckham Law application must then be submitted within 6 months of that registration date.
The expected result is a coordinated timeline where the employee's arrival, employment start, social security registration, and Beckham Law application all align properly. Teamed's internal control guidance treats the first 30 days of employment as the critical window to complete identity, right-to-work, and payroll data validation to avoid delayed registrations and corrective filings.
Step 4: Gather Required Documentation for the Application
The Beckham Law application requires specific documentation that the employee must provide and the employer must support. The employee needs their NIE (foreigner identification number), proof of prior non-residency in Spain, their employment contract, and evidence of their relocation to Spanish territory.
The employer (your EOR provider) must provide documentation confirming the employment relationship, the Spanish entity details, and the employee's social security registration. Some EOR providers handle this documentation as part of their standard service. Others require additional fees or don't offer support at all.
The expected result is a complete documentation package ready for submission well before the 6-month deadline. Don't wait until month five to start gathering documents. Build a buffer for delays, missing paperwork, and administrative backlogs at the Spanish Tax Agency (Agencia Tributaria).
Step 5: Submit the Application and Monitor Status
The Beckham Law application (Form 149) is submitted to the Agencia Tributaria. The employee or their representative files the application, not the employer, though the employer's documentation is essential to the submission.
After submission, the tax authority reviews the application and issues a resolution. This process can take several weeks to several months depending on workload and complexity. During this period, the employer should apply Beckham Law withholding rates to payroll, but must be prepared to adjust if the application is denied.
The expected result is a positive resolution confirming Beckham Law status. If the application is denied, the employer must recalculate withholdings retroactively and may need to gross up the employee's compensation to maintain the promised net pay.
How Should Employers Handle Payroll While the Application Is Pending?
This is where many companies get caught out. Spanish payroll withholding (retenciones) must begin from the first salary payment. But which rate should the employer apply before the Beckham Law application is resolved?
Most EOR providers apply Beckham Law withholding rates from day one if the employee appears eligible and has submitted their application. This approach assumes approval and avoids over-withholding that would need to be refunded later. However, if the application is ultimately denied, the employer faces a shortfall that must be recovered from subsequent paychecks or absorbed as a cost.
The alternative is applying standard resident withholding rates until approval is confirmed, then adjusting subsequent paychecks. This approach is more conservative but creates cash flow timing issues for the employee and administrative complexity for payroll.
Teamed advises aligning EOR payroll data cutoffs to the calendar-year tax cycle to reduce year-end reconciliation issues. Whichever approach you choose, document the decision and communicate clearly with the employee about potential adjustments.
What Happens If the Beckham Law Application Is Denied?
Application denial triggers immediate consequences. The employee becomes subject to standard Spanish resident taxation from their first day of employment. All prior withholdings were insufficient, creating a tax debt that must be settled.
The employer has two options. First, recover the shortfall from the employee through reduced net pay in subsequent periods. This is legally permissible but damages the employment relationship and may violate the compensation terms you agreed. Second, gross up the employee's compensation to cover the additional tax burden. This maintains the promised net pay but increases your employment costs significantly.
Teamed's budgeting templates for Spain EOR hiring assume that a missed Beckham Law application deadline can shift the employee from a flat-rate model to progressive resident rates for the relevant tax year, materially changing net pay and requiring a re-gross-up decision. Build this contingency into your compensation planning from the start.
Common Pitfalls and How to Avoid Them
The most common failure is missing the 6-month application deadline. This happens when onboarding is delayed, documentation is incomplete, or nobody tracks the deadline proactively. Build calendar reminders at 30, 60, and 90 days post-registration.
The second pitfall is misaligned start dates. If the employee arrives in Spain and triggers tax residency before their employment contract begins, the timeline becomes complicated. Coordinate arrival and employment start dates carefully.
The third pitfall is assuming all EOR providers can support Beckham Law. They can't. Verify capability before signing any agreement, and get confirmation in writing.
The fourth pitfall is ignoring equity compensation complexity. Stock options, RSUs, and other equity instruments have specific tax treatment under Beckham Law that differs from standard employment income. Engage specialist counsel before making equity grants to Beckham Law beneficiaries.
The fifth pitfall is creating permanent establishment risk. Even when using an EOR, your company can trigger PE exposure if the Spanish employee has authority to negotiate or sign contracts on behalf of the client company.
How Do You Verify Everything Is Set Up Correctly?
After the Beckham Law application is approved and payroll is running, verify the setup is correct. Request a copy of the Agencia Tributaria resolution confirming Beckham Law status. Review the first Spanish payslip to confirm withholding rates match Beckham Law treatment (24% on employment income up to €600,000).
Confirm social security contributions are being calculated and paid correctly. Spanish social security is separate from income tax and applies regardless of Beckham Law status. The employer contribution is approximately 30% of gross salary, and the employee contribution is approximately 6.35%.
Verify that the employment contract reflects Spanish employment law requirements including probation periods, notice periods, and statutory benefits. Spain has strong employee protections, and the contract must comply regardless of the employee's tax treatment.
When Does Establishing Your Own Spanish Entity Make More Sense?
EOR is the right choice when you're hiring your first few employees in Spain, testing the market, or need to move quickly. But as your Spanish headcount grows, the economics shift.
Teamed's Country Concentration Framework classifies Spain as a Tier 2 (moderate complexity) country with an entity transition threshold of 15-20 employees for native Spanish speakers or 20-30 employees for non-native language operations. Spain's rigid labour laws, expensive terminations (33 days salary per year of service for objective dismissal), and mandatory collective bargaining through convenios colectivos add complexity that justifies staying on EOR longer than in simpler jurisdictions.
The graduation model that Teamed uses helps companies navigate this transition through a single advisory relationship. Rather than switching from one EOR vendor to a separate entity formation specialist to a different payroll provider, unified global employment operations maintain continuity across every transition. This matters particularly for Beckham Law beneficiaries, where employment continuity affects ongoing eligibility.
What Should You Do Next?
If you're planning to hire in Spain and want to offer Beckham Law benefits, start the eligibility verification process now. Don't wait until you've extended an offer to discover your candidate doesn't qualify or your EOR provider can't support the application.
For mid-market companies managing global teams across multiple platforms, the complexity of Spain hiring is just one piece of a larger puzzle. You're probably also dealing with contractors in one system, EOR employees in another, and owned entities somewhere else. The Beckham Law question is a symptom of a broader challenge: making critical employment decisions without unified visibility or strategic guidance.
Talk to the experts at Teamed to understand how unified global employment operations can simplify your Spain expansion while ensuring Beckham Law benefits are properly structured from day one.



