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Spanish nationality by residence: the 2-year LATAM route to EU citizenship — Civil Code art. 22

Spanish nationality by residence: Civil Code art. 22 — general 10-year requirement, 2-year reduced period for Ibero-American nationals and other privileged states, 1-year special cases. DELE A2 + CCSE exams, dual nationality retained. The fastest path to EU citizenship for LATAM families.

Why a Spanish nationality application demands rigorous planning and documentation — and why the 2-year LATAM route is the key commercial instrument

2 years
Reduced residence period for Ibero-American nationals of origin — the fastest path to EU citizenship (CC art. 22.1)
10 years
General residence period — also applies to non-qualifying nationals and those who acquired nationality by residence (CC art. 22)
12 months
Statutory resolution period — administrative silence deemed rejection if deadline missed
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Our approach

How we manage Spanish nationality applications at BMC

01

Eligibility assessment and route determination

We assess the applicant's profile and determine the applicable residence period: 10 years (general); 2 years for nationals of origin of Ibero-American countries, Andorra, the Philippines, Equatorial Guinea, Portugal, and Sephardic Jews; 1 year for specific cases listed in Civil Code art. 22.2. We verify the continuity and legality of the residence period and the overall viability of the application before any resources are committed. For LATAM clients, we verify the "of origin" requirement — a person who acquired Ibero-American nationality by residence (not by birth or descent) falls under the 10-year general rule.

02

Residence period audit and documentation

We compile the documentation evidencing the applicant's continuous legal residence during the required period — residence authorisations, TIE cards, continuous municipal registration (empadronamiento histórico) — and verify the absence of any gaps in legal status. We advise on the treatment of periods of absence from Spain within the residence count and flag any period that may require supplementary evidence.

03

DELE and CCSE examination coordination

We guide the applicant on the Instituto Cervantes examinations — DELE A2 (exemption available for nationals of Spanish-speaking countries with documentary evidence of Spanish as first language) and the CCSE (required of all applicants, including those exempt from DELE). We coordinate examination scheduling to align certificates with the planned application date and advise on preparation resources.

04

Complete file preparation and Civil Registry submission

We prepare the full application dossier — passport and all previous passports, residence authorisations, empadronamiento histórico, apostilled birth certificate, apostilled criminal record certificate (not older than 3 months at submission), DELE and CCSE certificates, and case-specific additional documents — and submit to the competent Civil Registry. We actively track the file and respond to requests for supplementary documentation within 48 hours.

The challenge

For LATAM families and long-term residents, Spanish nationality is the culmination of a residence strategy that begins with the first authorisation. The 2-year Ibero-American route under Civil Code art. 22 is the most commercially significant immigration instrument in Spain: it unlocks EU citizenship, a Spanish passport, Schengen free movement, and — crucially — dual nationality with every Ibero-American country. But the path demands rigorous planning: legal, continuous, and uninterrupted residence throughout; DELE A2 and CCSE examination certificates obtained on schedule; a complete documentary package submitted without gaps. Administrative silence — if the 12-month deadline passes without resolution — is deemed a rejection, triggering a recurso de alzada before the Ministry of Justice. Document requests suspend the clock. Filing a correct, complete application from the outset is the determinant factor between a straightforward naturalisation and a process that extends for years.

Our solution

We assess the most appropriate route to nationality for the applicant's profile — general residence (10 years), reduced residence for Ibero-American nationals and other privileged states (2 years), or one-year residence for specific cases under CC art. 22.2 — and manage the nationality application end to end, from residency period audit and examination coordination through to Civil Registry submission and follow-up.

Spanish Nationality by Residence: governed by Article 22 of the Civil Code. General requirement: 10 years of legal, continuous and uninterrupted residence immediately preceding the application. Reduced to 2 years for nationals of origin of Ibero-American countries (Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, Cuba, Ecuador, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, Mexico, Nicaragua, Panama, Paraguay, Peru, the Dominican Republic, Uruguay, and Venezuela), Andorra, the Philippines, Equatorial Guinea, Portugal, and Sephardic Jews (CC art. 22.1). A further reduction to 1 year applies for spouses of Spanish nationals (lawful marriage for 1 year), those born in Spanish territory, and others (CC art. 22.2). The process requires passing the DELE A2 and CCSE examinations (Instituto Cervantes); a complete documentary dossier filed at the Civil Registry; and waiting up to 12 months for resolution (administrative silence = deemed rejection under CC art. 22.4). For LATAM nationals with bilateral dual-nationality conventions, acquiring Spanish nationality does not require renouncing the original nationality — making this the most powerful EU citizenship pathway for Ibero-American families. Years of lawful residence under family reunification, long-term residence, and all other lawful authorisation types count toward the residence period. See also the immigration practice overview.

This service is part of our immigration and international mobility practice.

Spanish nationality by residence is governed by Article 22 of the Civil Code (Código Civil). The article establishes the general requirement of 10 years of legal, continuous and uninterrupted residence immediately preceding the application, while providing reduced periods of significant commercial importance in BMC’s immigration practice.

The residence must be habitual — not merely formal — and the applicant must demonstrate civic conduct and a sufficient degree of integration in Spanish society. Integration is assessed primarily through the Instituto Cervantes examinations (DELE A2 and CCSE) and, in some cases, through an interview before the Civil Registry.

The 3 routes side by side — 10 years, 2 years, and 1 year

RouteApplicable toKey condition
General — 10 yearsAll non-EU nationals not covered by a reduced period10 years legal, continuous, habitual and uninterrupted residence immediately prior to application
Reduced — 2 yearsNationals of origin of Ibero-American countries, Andorra, Philippines, Equatorial Guinea, Portugal; Sephardic JewsNationality must be by birth or descent — not acquired by subsequent naturalisation in that country
Special — 1 yearBorn in Spanish territory; lawfully married to a Spanish national for 1 year; widow/widower of a Spanish national; 2 consecutive years under legal guardianship/care of a Spanish national or institutionApplies from the date of the qualifying event (marriage, birth, etc.)

The “of origin” condition in the 2-year route is the most frequently misunderstood eligibility requirement. We verify it as the first step of every LATAM nationality assessment.

The 2-year route — the most commercially relevant path for LATAM families

For BMC’s client base — which includes a significant proportion of business owners, executives and families of Latin American origin with residence in Spain — the 2-year route under Civil Code art. 22.1 is the most frequent and strategically significant. It allows Spanish nationality to be achieved within a short horizon, unlocking:

  • EU citizenship and the full bundle of rights it confers: free movement, residence and work across 27 EU Member States, consular protection
  • A Spanish passport — ranked among the most powerful globally (Henley Passport Index)
  • Schengen free movement across 27 European countries
  • Dual nationality with the country of origin, under Spain’s bilateral conventions with Ibero-American countries — no renunciation required
  • Long-term estate and fiscal planning stability: Spanish tax residency, EU legal framework, asset protection within the European legal space

Critical point — the “of origin” condition. The 2-year period applies only to persons who are nationals of origin — by birth or descent — of the qualifying countries. A Colombian, Mexican, or Argentine national who acquired that nationality by residence in that country (not by birth or descent) falls under the general 10-year period. This distinction is verified in the initial eligibility assessment.

The 1-year route — specific cases

Civil Code art. 22.2 provides a 1-year residence period for:

  • Those born in Spanish territory.
  • Those who have not exercised their right to opt for Spanish nationality in a timely manner.
  • Those who have been subject to the legal guardianship, care or fostering of a Spanish citizen or institution for two consecutive years, including those still in that situation.
  • Those who are or have been lawfully married to a Spanish national and have been married for one year, or widows/widowers of a Spanish national.

Dual nationality — the norm for Ibero-American clients

Spain’s general prohibition on dual nationality is subject to significant exceptions under bilateral dual nationality conventions and on account of historical ties — covering precisely the Ibero-American countries.

In practice, a Colombian, Mexican, Argentine or Peruvian national who acquires Spanish nationality retains their country-of-origin nationality. For HNWI clients with ongoing business, property and family ties in their home country, this means that Spanish nationality adds EU citizenship, a Spanish passport and full Schengen free movement without any sacrifice of civil rights or legal identity in the country of origin.

This combination is one of the most powerful tools in international mobility and long-term estate planning for Latin American families with a European footprint: they access the EU legal and financial framework while maintaining business continuity, banking relationships, and property rights in their country of origin.

DELE and CCSE examinations — requirements, exemptions, and timing

Naturalisation requires passing two examinations administered by the Instituto Cervantes:

DELE A2 (minimum level): certifies spoken and written Spanish at the basic user level. Nationals of Spanish-speaking countries may be exempt from the DELE A2 if they provide documentary evidence — birth certificate, passport or school certificate — confirming Spanish as their first language. This exemption applies to the vast majority of LATAM clients.

CCSE (Conocimientos Constitucionales y Socioculturales de España): evaluates knowledge of the Spanish Constitution, the political system, fundamental rights and freedoms, and Spanish culture and geography. This examination is required of all applicants, including those exempt from the DELE A2.

Both examinations are exempt for applicants under 18 and for persons with disabilities that prevent them from sitting the tests. DELE and CCSE certificates have no expiry date once obtained.

Timing matters. The CCSE in particular can have a waiting list of 2–4 months at peak times. We coordinate examination scheduling as part of the overall nationality timeline to ensure certificates are ready before the application is filed.

Democratic Memory Law — window closed October 2025

Law 20/2022 on Democratic Memory (Ley de Memoria Democrática) created a special nationality route for grandchildren of Spaniards exiled or persecuted during the Civil War and the Franco regime, without any residence requirement. The initial two-year window ran until October 2024; the Government extended it by one year until 22 October 2025.

As of May 2026, the application window has closed. No further extensions have been announced. Applications filed before 22 October 2025 remain in process and will be resolved during 2026 and beyond. Those who did not file within the deadline cannot access this route; we advise those with Spanish ancestry on whether alternative routes — nationality by option (CC art. 20), by descent, or other special provisions — may be available.

Why nationality applications fail — common refusal grounds

1. Gaps in legal residence. The most frequent substantive ground for refusal. Any period of expired authorisation, irregular status, or failure to renew before the authorisation lapsed breaks the continuity of the residence period and must either be excluded from the count or, in some cases, addressed through regularisation before the nationality application is filed.

2. Incomplete or missing empadronamiento histórico. The certificado de empadronamiento histórico must cover every year of the claimed residence period, issued by every municipality where the applicant has been registered. Moving between municipalities requires obtaining certificates from each. Gaps in empadronamiento are interpreted as gaps in habitual residence.

3. Outdated criminal record certificate. The apostilled criminal record certificate from the country of origin must be dated within 3 months of the application submission. Obtaining and apostilling a foreign criminal record certificate typically takes 4–8 weeks from LATAM countries. We initiate this process well in advance.

4. Document deficiencies — apostilles and translations. Birth certificates, criminal records, and other public documents from non-EU countries must be apostilled in the issuing country and translated by a sworn Spanish translator. Certificates from some LATAM countries have specific format requirements for the Civil Registry.

5. Administrative silence. If a supplementary document request is issued during the 12-month resolution period and not responded to adequately, or if the file was incomplete at submission, the application lapses by administrative silence (deemed rejection under CC art. 22.4). A recurso de alzada before the Ministry of Justice is the first step of the appeal, followed by a contencioso-administrativo before the Audiencia Nacional if the administrative appeal is unsuccessful.

Illustrative scenario — Colombian family, 2-year route

Illustrative scenario — no real client, no outcome stated as guaranteed

A Colombian couple, both nationals of origin, have been legally resident in Spain for two years under work authorisations (one as an EU Blue Card holder since month 0; the other under a family reunification authorisation since month 6). Both are continuously empadronados. Neither has criminal convictions in Spain or Colombia. Both are native Spanish speakers and are exempt from the DELE A2.

Nationality file preparation: The CCSE examination was sat and passed by both applicants in month 20. Apostilled Colombian birth certificates (both) and apostilled Colombian criminal record certificates (issued within 3 months of the planned application date) were coordinated through a Colombian notaría in month 22. The empadronamiento histórico covering the full 2-year residence period in Madrid was obtained from the ayuntamiento in month 23. The complete nationality dossiers for both applicants were submitted to the competent Civil Registry in month 24 from the date of each applicant’s first residence authorisation.

Dual nationality: Neither applicant is required to renounce Colombian nationality. Spain’s 1979 bilateral dual-nationality convention with Colombia means both will hold Spanish and Colombian nationality simultaneously upon naturalisation. Both children (born in Spain) are processed under the 1-year route and their files are submitted simultaneously with their parents’.

This is a simplified illustrative scenario. Actual timelines and outcomes depend on the specific facts of each case.

Integration with family reunification and long-term residence

Spanish nationality is the culmination of a residence strategy that should be planned from the first immigration authorisation. We advise on the interaction between the nationality path and:

  • Family reunification: reunified spouses and dependants begin their own residence clocks from the date of their reunification authorisation. For LATAM families, coordinating the sponsor’s and reunified family members’ nationality applications means the whole family can naturalise in a coordinated process.
  • Long-term residence: the 5-year long-duration residence authorisation is an intermediate milestone in the 10-year general path; for LATAM families on the 2-year route, it is not a mandatory step but is useful as a bridge permit of indefinite duration.
  • Absence periods: the Civil Code requires that the residence be “immediately preceding” the application. Extended absences in the years just before filing must be planned carefully to avoid breaking continuity.

The 2-year Ibero-American route to Spanish nationality, combined with the dual-nationality conventions and the EU citizenship bundle, represents one of the most powerful legal instruments available to LATAM families with a long-term European horizon. Proper planning from the first residence authorisation is the key to realising it.

Concrete deliverables

Eligibility assessment — route, residence period, and LATAM dual-nationality confirmation

Determination of the applicable residence route (10 years / 2 years / 1 year), verification of the "of origin" requirement for LATAM clients, and confirmation of dual-nationality retention under applicable bilateral conventions.

Residence period audit and documentation

Compilation of all residence authorisations, TIE cards, and empadronamiento histórico; identification of any gaps or absences that need to be addressed before filing.

DELE A2 and CCSE examination coordination

Guidance on examination requirements, exemption grounds, preparation resources, and scheduling of certification to align with the planned application date.

Complete file preparation and Civil Registry submission

Compilation and review of the full dossier; apostille and sworn translation coordination; submission to the competent Civil Registry with active follow-up.

Post-submission follow-up and oath coordination

Active tracking, response to Civil Registry requests within 48 hours, guidance on administrative appeal if silence occurs, and coordination of the oath or affirmation ceremony and subsequent DNI and Spanish passport application.

Service Lead

Javier Moreno Aguirre

Senior Associate - Legal Division

Master in International Law, Universidad Carlos III de Madrid Law Degree, UPV/EHU
FAQ

Frequently asked questions

Civil Code art. 22 sets the general requirement at 10 years of legal, continuous and uninterrupted residence immediately prior to the application. Reduced periods apply: 2 years for nationals of origin of Ibero-American countries (Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, Cuba, Ecuador, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, Mexico, Nicaragua, Panama, Paraguay, Peru, the Dominican Republic, Uruguay and Venezuela), as well as for nationals of Andorra, the Philippines, Equatorial Guinea, Portugal, and Sephardic Jews. The period is 1 year for those born in Spanish territory, those who are or have been lawfully married to a Spanish national for one year, widows/widowers of a Spanish national, or those who have been under the guardianship or care of a Spanish citizen for two consecutive years. The residence must be legal, continuous and immediately preceding the application.
The 2-year reduced period under CC art. 22.1 applies only to persons who are nationals "of origin" of the qualifying countries — that is, those who acquired their nationality by birth or descent, not by subsequent naturalisation. A person who acquired Colombian, Mexican, or Argentine nationality by residence in that country (rather than by birth or by descent from a national) is subject to the general 10-year period, not the 2-year reduction. This is verified as the first step of our eligibility assessment for LATAM clients. The distinction does not affect the vast majority of our clients, who are nationals by birth or descent, but it is a common source of confusion when clients have complex nationality histories.
The DELE (Diploma de Español como Lengua Extranjera — Spanish Language Diploma, minimum level A2) is issued by the Instituto Cervantes and certifies Spanish language knowledge at the basic user level. Nationals of Spanish-speaking countries may be exempt from the DELE A2 on presentation of documentary evidence (birth certificate, passport or school certificate) confirming Spanish as their first language. The CCSE (Conocimientos Constitucionales y Socioculturales de España — Constitutional and Sociocultural Knowledge of Spain) evaluates knowledge of the Spanish Constitution, the political system, fundamental rights and freedoms, and Spanish culture and geography. The CCSE is required of all applicants, including those exempt from DELE A2. Both certificates have unlimited validity once obtained.
Yes — dual nationality is the norm for BMC's LATAM client base, not the exception. Spain has bilateral dual nationality conventions with all Ibero-American countries, Andorra, the Philippines, Equatorial Guinea, and Portugal. In practical terms, a Colombian, Mexican, Argentine, Peruvian or Brazilian national who acquires Spanish nationality retains their country-of-origin nationality. For HNWI clients with ongoing business, property and family interests in their home country, this means Spanish nationality adds EU citizenship, a Spanish passport and full Schengen free movement — without surrendering civil rights or legal identity in the country of origin. This combination is one of the most powerful tools in international mobility and long-term estate planning for Latin American families with a European footprint.
The statutory resolution period is 12 months from submission of a complete application. If no express resolution is issued within that period, the application is deemed rejected by negative administrative silence (CC art. 22.4). The applicant may then file a recurso de alzada with the Ministry of Justice or — if unsuccessful — proceedings before the Audiencia Nacional. Administrative silence does not permanently foreclose the process: challenges to silent rejections have succeeded in many cases where documentation was correct but the file had not been reviewed due to administrative backlog. A well-documented application from the outset is the strongest basis for a successful appeal if silence occurs.
The Ley de Memoria Democrática (Law 20/2022) created a special nationality route for grandchildren of Spaniards exiled or persecuted during the Civil War and the Franco regime, without any residence requirement in Spain. The application window ran initially until October 2024 and was extended by the Government until 22 October 2025. The deadline expired on 22 October 2025 and no further extension has been approved. Applications filed before that date remain in process. Those who did not file within the deadline cannot access this route. We advise on whether alternative routes — nationality by option (CC art. 20), by descent, or other special provisions — may be available.
Yes. Any period of legal residence in Spain — under a non-lucrative, digital nomad, work, family reunification, long-duration, or any other lawful authorisation — counts toward the CC art. 22 residence period, provided the residence was legal, habitual and continuous. Temporary absences from Spain are compatible with the count within certain limits; we advise on the treatment of each absence period on a case-by-case basis.
A complete nationality by residence application requires: (1) valid passport and all previous passports (to evidence the full residence period); (2) all residence authorisations and TIE cards covering the entire residence period; (3) empadronamiento histórico certificate covering the full period of residence in Spain; (4) apostilled birth certificate from the country of origin, with a sworn Spanish translation; (5) apostilled criminal record certificate from the country of origin (not older than 3 months at submission), with a sworn Spanish translation; (6) DELE A2 certificate (unless exempt); (7) CCSE certificate; and (8) any case-specific additional documentation (marriage certificate, guardianship order, etc.). BMC reviews the completeness of the file before submission to avoid supplementary document requests that suspend the statutory clock.
The most frequent grounds for refusal or significant delay in nationality applications are: (1) gaps in legal residence — periods of expired authorisations or irregular status that break the continuity requirement; (2) missing or incomplete empadronamiento histórico — the continuous municipal registration certificate must cover every year of the claimed residence period; (3) outdated criminal record certificate — the certificate must be issued within 3 months of the application date; (4) document deficiencies — apostilles missing or certificates in a format not accepted by the Civil Registry; (5) administrative silence due to supplementary document requests — any deficiency notice suspends the 12-month clock and, if not resolved adequately, leads to a silent rejection requiring appeal before the Ministry of Justice.
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You are a national of origin of an Ibero-American country with 2+ years of legal residence in Spain — you want to understand if your file is ready and what the path to EU citizenship looks like for your whole family.

You want to know whether your residence history (authorisation type, absences, renewals) satisfies the continuous residence requirement under Civil Code art. 22.

You received a rejection or administrative silence on a previous nationality application and need to understand the options.

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You or your family members have DELE and CCSE certificates — you want to know whether the rest of the file is ready to submit.

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