Spain Welcomes Migrants to Overcome
Labour Shortage
The measure, unexpectedly approved,
comes as other countries are cracking down on immigration.
Spain’s Decree on Undocumented Migrants (Feb 2026)
Key Highlights
·
Royal
decree approved
on 18 Feb 2026 by Spain’s Council of Ministers.
·
Provides
a legal pathway to temporary residency for undocumented migrants.
·
Spain
diverges from global trend of stricter immigration policies.
Policy Details
·
Eligibility:
Migrants who arrived before Dec 2025 and lived in Spain for at least 5
months.
·
Exclusions:
Individuals with criminal records.
·
Application
window: April–June 2026.
Government Rationale
·
Prime
Minister Pedro Sánchez’s government calls it crucial for social cohesion,
well-being, and economy.
·
Migrant
labor vital in agriculture, tourism, and other
sectors.
·
Builds
on Spain’s image as a beacon for immigrants, despite outsourcing border
control to Morocco and Mauritania.
Political Context
·
Measure
passed after last-minute deal with Unidas Podemos for parliamentary
support.
·
Similar
proposal stalled since April 2024.
·
Opposition
parties, especially far-right, vow to challenge in court.
International Contrast
·
United
States:
aggressive deportation campaigns.
·
Britain: stricter refugee rules.
·
Greece: prison terms for rejected asylum
seekers.
·
Italy: offshore asylum processing in Albania.
Social & Economic Impact
·
Estimated
undocumented migrants: 0.5–1 million (Spain’s population ~50 million).
·
Migrants
eased labor shortages and supported
growth during COVID-19 lockdowns.
·
ECB
study: foreign workers boosted Spain’s economy.
·
Experts
suggest limited impact on housing/labor markets since
policy applies only to existing residents.
Voices from Migrants
·
Example:
Sady Traoré, worker from Mali, sees decree as a chance to live in peace
and work with dignity.
Conclusion
·
Spain’s
decision represents a counterweight to rising anti-migration discourse
globally, reinforcing its role as a more open destination for migrants.
[ABS
News Service/19.02.2026]
The
Spanish government on Tuesday unexpectedly issued a decree that gives hundreds
of thousands of undocumented migrants a path out of legal limbo, putting Spain
at odds with many countries around the world that have grown increasingly tough
on illegal immigration.
The
measure will allow undocumented people already living in Spain to apply for
temporary residency permits. The Socialist-led government of Prime Minister
Pedro Sánchez described it as crucial for Spain, where migrant labor plays a key role in agriculture, tourism and more.
Elma
Saiz Delgado, Spain’s minister for migration, said at a news conference on
Tuesday that the measure would have an impact “on our social cohesion,
well-being, and also on the economy.”
Opposition
parties immediately criticized the measure, with one far-right party promising
to challenge it in court.
The
measure announced on Tuesday is bucking a trend, as many Western governments,
often under pressure from far-right, populist parties, have cracked down on
illegal immigration in recent years.
In
the United States, the Trump administration is carrying out a sweeping,
aggressive campaign to arrest and deport millions of people. Britain has rolled
out stricter rules for refugees; Greece now imposes prison terms for migrants
who remain in the country after their asylum claims are rejected; and Italy
wants to hold asylum seekers in Albania while their cases are being processed,
despite stiff legal opposition.
Spain,
in contrast, has embraced immigrants, especially Latin Americans who speak
Spain’s language, share its religion and understand its culture, although
activists say that warm welcome has not always extended to many Africans.
And
the Spanish government has outsourced migration control, providing police
equipment, technology and training to countries like Morocco and Mauritania to
turn back migrants from Africa.
Still,
the decree builds on Spain’s attempts to present itself as a beacon for
immigrants.
“In
the current international context, marked by the rise of anti-migration
discourse, Spain’s decision represents a counterweight,” said Cecilia Estrada
Villaseñor, a researcher at the Institute for Migration Studies at Pontifical
University of Comillas in Madrid.
Spain
does not publish official figures on the number of undocumented migrants living
in the country, but estimates from institutions like Funcas,
an economic think tank, suggest the number could be between half a million and
a million. Spain’s total population is almost 50 million.
The
legalization measure was in part spurred by domestic politics.
The
Council of Ministers, the executive branch of the government, approved it
through a royal decree, after Mr. Sánchez’s government struck a last-minute
deal on Monday with a smaller left-wing party, Unidas Podemos, in exchange for
its parliamentary support. A similar measure had been stuck in Parliament since
April 2024.
Under
the decree, undocumented migrants will be eligible for temporary residence
permits if they can prove that they arrived in Spain before December 2025 and
that they have lived in the country for at least five months. People with
criminal records will be excluded; applications will be accepted only between
April and June. The residency permits, which allow people to work in Spain,
will last one year and will be renewable.
“It
brings me closer to my dream, and the dream of many others like me: to live in
peace and work with dignity to support our families,” said Sady Traoré, 28, who
works in citrus groves in Alzira, in eastern Spain. Mr. Traoré, a musician who
said he fled his native Mali after a military coup in 2022, arrived in Spain’s
Canary Islands in 2024, but has since been unable to secure an appointment to
apply for asylum.
The
push to give undocumented migrants a pathway to residency gained momentum
during the Covid-19 pandemic, when many migrants continued to work in
precarious conditions during Spain’s lockdowns.
Foreign
workers have eased Spain’s labor shortage and helped
boost economic growth, according to a study by economists at the European
Central Bank.
Ismael
Gálvez, a professor of economics at the University of the Balearic Islands who
has studied the impact of migration on Spain’s economy, said that it was hard
to predict how the government’s measure would play out, except that it was not
likely to put a lot of pressure on the housing or labor
market for native-born Spaniards because it applies only to migrants already
living in the country.