Spain’s amnesty drive brings 600,000 migrants into formal economy during application review

Migrants queue at a public service office to obtain paperwork needed to apply for Spain's immigration amnesty, in L'Hospitalet de Llobregat near Barcelona, on Apr. 21, 2026. (AP/File)
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Updated 02 July 2026
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Spain’s amnesty drive brings 600,000 migrants into formal economy during application review

  • ‌The total number of applications was more ‌than double the government’s initial estimate of ‌500,000
  • Applicants are granted a temporary work permit while their applications are being processed

MADRID: Some 609,737 ‌of the 1.17 million migrants in Spain who applied for legal status in its recent amnesty drive have obtained temporary work permits, government officials said on Thursday, enabling them to start work in the formal economy while their applications are under review.
The drive, which grants a one-year renewable residence permit to undocumented migrants ‌who have ‌lived in Spain for at least ‌five ⁠months before the ⁠end of 2025 and have no criminal record, was open for applications from April 16 to June 30.
Further details, provided on Thursday by Secretary of State for Migration Pilar Cancela and ⁠Secretary of State for Social Security ‌Borja Suárez, included:
‌The total number of applications was more ‌than double the government’s initial estimate of ‌500,000, with most stemming from Latin American countries.
Applicants are granted a temporary work permit while their applications are being processed.
Of ‌the 609,737 people granted temporary work permits so far, about 160,000 ⁠had ⁠secured formal employment by June 30, the officials said.
11,000 people have so far been granted their one-year residence permit.
The government is partnering with businesses in construction, tourism, transport and care sectors to help match migrants with jobs.
Around 81 percent of undocumented migrants who applied for legal status are under the age of 45, and 57 percent of applicants are men.