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Dec 20, 2025

EU publishes 8th Visa-Free Compliance Report: what Spanish mobility teams must watch

EU publishes 8th Visa-Free Compliance Report: what Spanish mobility teams must watch
The European Commission’s Directorate-General for Migration and Home Affairs issued its eighth report under the Visa Suspension Mechanism on 19 December, evaluating how 27 visa-free partner countries continue to meet benchmarks on migration management, security and border control. While the document focuses on the Western Balkans, Eastern Partnership states and certain Caribbean and Latin American countries, its findings have direct consequences for Spain, which processes millions of visa-exempt travellers each year through Madrid-Barajas, Barcelona and the Canary Islands.

Key risk flags include slow progress on readmission agreements, a surge in asylum claims lodged by Georgian and Serbian nationals in EU states – Spain among them – and continued use of investor-citizenship schemes in several Caribbean jurisdictions. The Commission warns that if remedial steps are not taken, it may trigger Article 8 of Regulation 2018/1806, re-imposing visa requirements on specific nationalities.

For Spanish employers this matters because any reinstatement of visas would lengthen onboarding times for short-term assignees and business visitors from the affected countries. HR teams should therefore map employee nationality mixes and, where relevant, pre-register travellers in Spain’s advance appointment system to mitigate bottlenecks at consulates.

EU publishes 8th Visa-Free Compliance Report: what Spanish mobility teams must watch


At this juncture, VisaHQ can serve as a valuable partner for Spanish businesses and travellers alike, offering real-time visa requirement checks, application assistance and document courier services for more than 200 jurisdictions. Their Spain-dedicated portal (https://www.visahq.com/spain/) consolidates the latest EU and national policy updates, enabling HR teams to anticipate changes stemming from mechanisms such as Article 8 or the forthcoming EES and to streamline the paperwork for any employee who suddenly needs a visa.

The report also dovetails with Spain’s own preparations for the EU Entry/Exit System (EES) – now delayed to autumn 2026 – by highlighting the need for coordinated biometric data capture. Companies running high-volume rotational travel (engineering projects, cruise ship crew changes, etc.) are advised to start pilot programmes for fingerprint collection and digital travel credential issuance.

The Commission will review progress again in 12 months. Spanish mobility professionals should monitor whether Madrid aligns with Brussels in pushing for partial visa suspensions – a step that could come rapidly if asylum numbers continue to rise.
VisaHQ's expert visas and immigration team helps individuals and companies navigate global travel, work, and residency requirements. We handle document preparation, application filings, government agencies coordination, every aspect necessary to ensure fast, compliant, and stress-free approvals.
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