
The UK Foreign, Commonwealth & Development Office (FCDO) updated its Spain travel advice page on 25 October 2025 to spell out how the imminent Entry/Exit System will affect British nationals. The notice warns holiday-makers to expect “longer than usual waits” at Spanish airports from 12 October and tells residents to “proactively show” their Tarjeta de Identidad de Extranjero (TIE) to avoid biometric registration.
Visitors who cannot prove residency will have their fingerprints and photo taken and receive a digital record valid for three years. Border guards may also ask for proof of onward travel, accommodation and funds. The FCDO reminds travellers that overstaying the 90/180-day Schengen limit can trigger automatic fines and future entry bans once EES goes live.
The guidance is significant for global-mobility teams because Spain remains the most popular EU destination for British short-term assignees and workcationers under the post-Brexit rules. HR departments are advised to refresh staff briefings, ensure employees carry return tickets and to review time-in-country tracking tools that rely on manual passport stamps, which will disappear in 2026.
British retirees with green EU residence certificates issued before 2021 are urged to swap them for the biometric TIE to guarantee exemption from EES registration. Failure to do so could complicate healthcare eligibility and may trigger double-taxation disputes if travel data contradicts Spanish tax residency claims.
Visitors who cannot prove residency will have their fingerprints and photo taken and receive a digital record valid for three years. Border guards may also ask for proof of onward travel, accommodation and funds. The FCDO reminds travellers that overstaying the 90/180-day Schengen limit can trigger automatic fines and future entry bans once EES goes live.
The guidance is significant for global-mobility teams because Spain remains the most popular EU destination for British short-term assignees and workcationers under the post-Brexit rules. HR departments are advised to refresh staff briefings, ensure employees carry return tickets and to review time-in-country tracking tools that rely on manual passport stamps, which will disappear in 2026.
British retirees with green EU residence certificates issued before 2021 are urged to swap them for the biometric TIE to guarantee exemption from EES registration. Failure to do so could complicate healthcare eligibility and may trigger double-taxation disputes if travel data contradicts Spanish tax residency claims.







