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Spain Regularizes 300,000 Latin American Immigrants

Spain approved an extraordinary regularization plan for 300,000 irregular migrants, mostly Latin Americans from Colombia, Venezuela, Ecuador, and Honduras.
Latin American immigrants at an immigration office in Madrid, Spain

Latin American immigrants at an immigration office in Madrid, Spain

Roberto Fuentes Mora | San José, Costa Rica
2 min read | Last Updated: Feb 18 2026 | 9:00 AM IST
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Madrid: The Spanish government approved in February 2026 an extraordinary regularization plan that will benefit approximately 300,000 people in irregular status in the country, most from Latin America. The measure, announced by the Ministry of Inclusion, Social Security, and Migration, is the broadest of its kind since the 2005 regularization process under the Zapatero government.

Those who can benefit from the plan are people who have been in irregular status in Spain for at least three years, can demonstrate work or educational activity, and have no criminal record. Beneficiaries will receive a two-year renewable residence and work permit. The countries with the highest number of potential beneficiaries are Colombia, Venezuela, Ecuador, Honduras, and Bolivia.

Demographic Context

The regularization responds to a structural need of the Spanish labor market. Spain is aging rapidly, with a fertility rate of 1.2 children per woman, the second lowest in the European Union. The country needs workers to sustain its hospitality, construction, agriculture, and elderly care sectors, where immigrant labor is indispensable.

The government argues that regularization increases Social Security contributions, reduces the underground economy, and improves the working conditions of workers who begin paying legal contributions. Studies from the Bank of Spain have shown that the 2005 regularization had a net positive fiscal impact for public finances.

Political Reactions

The measure generated strong political controversy. The People's Party and Vox opposed it, arguing that the plan would send a pull factor message to new irregular migrants. The government responded that regularization is a necessary integration measure for people already in Spain, working and contributing to society, and does not alter external border control policies.

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