
A Reuters-based investigation shows that Mauritania’s tough enforcement of its 2024 border-management deal with the EU – bankrolled by €210 million – intercepted 13,500 migrant boats in 2025, cutting irregular arrivals to Spain’s Canary Islands by 59 % year-on-year.
While relieving pressure on Spain’s reception centres, the crackdown has created a humanitarian bottleneck in Nouakchott. Migrants from Mali, The Gambia and Senegal report arbitrary detention and forced labour, prompting NGOs to accuse Madrid and Brussels of “outsourcing” border control without safeguards.
Amid these shifting migration dynamics, businesses and individual travelers who need to navigate Spain’s evolving entry requirements can streamline the process through VisaHQ. The platform’s dedicated Spain page (https://www.visahq.com/spain/) offers real-time visa guidance—including humanitarian, work, and business options—along with document-check services and expert support to help applicants stay compliant and avoid costly delays.
Economically, the tighter corridor may leave Spain’s agriculture and hospitality sectors short of seasonal workers next spring, pushing up labour costs. Logistics firms warn that rerouted Atlantic crossings could increase search-and-rescue expenses and insurance premiums.
Spanish companies with operations in West Africa should review travel-security protocols and consider humanitarian-visa options for staff caught in Mauritania. Policy-makers are discussing a legal labour-mobility corridor as an alternative to perilous sea routes, with an EU audit mission scheduled for January 2026.
While relieving pressure on Spain’s reception centres, the crackdown has created a humanitarian bottleneck in Nouakchott. Migrants from Mali, The Gambia and Senegal report arbitrary detention and forced labour, prompting NGOs to accuse Madrid and Brussels of “outsourcing” border control without safeguards.
Amid these shifting migration dynamics, businesses and individual travelers who need to navigate Spain’s evolving entry requirements can streamline the process through VisaHQ. The platform’s dedicated Spain page (https://www.visahq.com/spain/) offers real-time visa guidance—including humanitarian, work, and business options—along with document-check services and expert support to help applicants stay compliant and avoid costly delays.
Economically, the tighter corridor may leave Spain’s agriculture and hospitality sectors short of seasonal workers next spring, pushing up labour costs. Logistics firms warn that rerouted Atlantic crossings could increase search-and-rescue expenses and insurance premiums.
Spanish companies with operations in West Africa should review travel-security protocols and consider humanitarian-visa options for staff caught in Mauritania. Policy-makers are discussing a legal labour-mobility corridor as an alternative to perilous sea routes, with an EU audit mission scheduled for January 2026.







