Autónomo tax in Spain 2026: how much freelancers really pay

9 min read · Updated June 2026

If you are a foreigner freelancing in Spain — or thinking about it — the big question is simple: how much will you actually keep? Being autónomo (self-employed) in Spain means paying two separate things every month and quarter: a Social Security quota and IRPF income tax. This guide breaks down exactly what an autónomo pays in 2026, with the brackets, a real example and the deductions that lower your bill.

First, the basics for foreigners

To register as autónomo you need a NIE (foreigner identification number) and, if you are non-EU, the right residence/work authorisation. Registration is two steps: alta with Hacienda (the tax office, via Modelo 036 or 037) declaring your activity, and alta in the RETA self-employed Social Security regime. Most newcomers use a gestor (a local admin/accounting agent) to handle this — budget €40–€80/month for one.

The real-income contribution system (2023 onwards)

Since January 2023, Spain's Social Security quota for the self-employed is based on your actual net income, not a base you pick yourself. The system uses 15 income brackets, and Social Security reconciles your provisional payments against your declared income once a year. Low earners pay less than under the old system; high earners who used to choose the minimum base now pay more.

Autónomo quota brackets 2026

Net income/monthMonthly quota 2026
Under €670€230
€670 – €900€260
€900 – €1,166€275
€1,166 – €1,300€291
€1,300 – €1,700€294
€1,700 – €1,850€310
€1,850 – €2,030€315
€2,030 – €2,330€320
€2,330 – €2,760€325
€2,760 – €3,190€330
€3,190 – €3,620€357
€3,620 – €4,050€377
€4,050 – €6,000€437
Over €6,000€500

* Indicative 2026 quotas based on the bracket system in force. Check the TGSS (Social Security treasury) for the exact current figure.

IRPF: the freelancer's income tax

As an autónomo you pay IRPF on your net profit (income minus deductible expenses), at progressive rates from 19% to 47%. You pay it quarterly via Modelo 130. If you invoice Spanish business clients, they apply a 15% withholding (retención) on your invoices and pay it to the tax agency on your behalf — so your quarterly top-up is reduced. In your first three years the withholding rate is just 7%. The annual return (declaración de la renta) in April–June of the following year settles the final amount.

What you can deduct

Deductions are the main lever to cut your tax bill. Common deductible expenses include: professional services (accountant/gestor, lawyer), office rent or a home-office proportion, equipment and supplies, the professional share of phone and internet, business travel, training, professional liability insurance, and your own Social Security quota (fully deductible). Always keep valid invoices in your name.

Real example: €2,500/month in invoices

Monthly invoicing€2,500
Deductible expenses (approx.)−€400
Social Security quota (bracket)−€325
IRPF (approx., after deductions)−€300
Estimated net in your pocket≈ €1,475

Illustrative only — your real figure depends on expenses, region and personal circumstances. Use the calculator below for your own numbers.

Flat rate (tarifa plana) for new autónomos

First-time registrants (or those returning after at least two years) qualify for the tarifa plana: a reduced quota of €80/month for the first 12 months, regardless of income. Some regions extend the reduction further. It makes the first year much cheaper and gives you time to build a client base before paying the full quota.

When does an SL company make sense?

Operating as autónomo means unlimited personal liability and progressive IRPF. A Sociedad Limitada (SL) is a separate legal entity that limits your liability and pays a flat 25% corporate tax. It usually becomes tax-efficient once net profit passes roughly €50,000–60,000/year — but it adds accounting and admin costs, so it is not worth it for most newcomers in year one.

Estimate your exact quota, IRPF and net income as an autónomo in Spain. Free, no sign-up.

Self-Employed Calculator →

Frequently asked questions

How much does an autónomo pay per month in 2026?

The Social Security quota ranges from ~€230 to €500/month by income bracket, plus IRPF. New autónomos pay a flat €80/month for the first year.

What is the real-income contribution system?

Since 2023 your quota is based on your actual net income across 15 brackets, reconciled once a year — not on a base you choose.

How much IRPF does a freelancer pay?

Progressive 19%–47% on net profit, paid quarterly via Modelo 130 or through 15% client withholdings (7% in your first three years).

Do I need an NIE to register?

Yes — a NIE and, if non-EU, the right residence/work authorisation. Then you do alta with Hacienda and in the RETA regime.

What can I deduct?

Gestor/accountant, office or home-office share, equipment, professional phone/internet, business travel, training, insurance and your own Social Security quota — with valid invoices.

When is an SL worth it?

Usually once net profit passes ~€50,000–60,000/year, thanks to the flat 25% corporate tax versus higher IRPF brackets.

Official sources