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Oct 22, 2025

Last Chance for ‘Grandchildren’s Law’: Spain Closes Democratic Memory Citizenship Window

Last Chance for ‘Grandchildren’s Law’: Spain Closes Democratic Memory Citizenship Window
Spain’s two-year experiment with the so-called “Grandchildren’s Law” formally ended at 23:59 on 22 October 2025, closing the door—at least for now—on a once-in-a-generation path to Spanish nationality for descendants of exiles from the Civil War and Franco era.

Law 20/2022, better known as the Democratic Memory Law (Ley de Memoria Democrática, LMD), allowed grandchildren (and, in some cases, great-grandchildren) of Spaniards forced to leave the country between 1936 and 1975 to reclaim citizenship without the usual residency requirement. Embassies and consulates worldwide have been overwhelmed since the law took effect in October 2022; the foreign ministry estimates that more than 312,000 applications were formally registered—60 percent of them in Latin America.

Consular portals stopped accepting new files at midnight. Applicants who secured an appointment confirmation with a Secure Verification Code (CSV) before the deadline may still file supporting documents over the coming months, but no new cases can be opened. Law firms say appointment slots in Havana, Buenos Aires and Mexico City had been fully booked since August, creating an underground market for coveted CSV receipts.

The end of the window has reignited debate in Madrid about introducing a permanent ancestry route. The Council of Citizenship Abroad (CGCEE) and several governing-coalition MPs have floated a successor bill that would eliminate deadlines and simplify evidentiary rules, arguing that Spain’s ageing population needs the demographic boost. The opposition Partido Popular counters that an open-ended right would create “a back-door immigration channel” and strain resources at understaffed civil registries.

For multinational employers, the sunset of the LMD removes a fast-track nationality option that had proven useful for Latin-American executives relocating to Spain; Spanish citizenship waives work-permit requirements EU-wide. Companies are urging mobility managers to review pending cases quickly and to consider alternative residence categories—such as the digital-nomad or highly-qualified-professional permits—for employees who missed the cut-off.
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