The Beckham Law 180-day rule is the most misunderstood technicality of Article 93. In 2026, the 6-month window to file Model 149 is strictly preclusive. This technical guide provides the exact methodology to calculate your “Day One” based on Social Security milestones to avoid a permanent administrative rejection.
Official 2026 Reference: Following the latest Ley de Startups (BOE) guidelines, the Beckham Law 180-day rule is a mandatory period that cannot be suspended, even for administrative delays in obtaining a NIE.
2026 Deadline Calculation Table
| Applicant Profile | “Day One” Trigger | Deadline Example |
|---|---|---|
| Standard Employee | Social Security “Alta” Date | Alta June 1st → Dec 1st |
| Digital Nomad | Visa Start / SS Contribution | Start Feb 10th → Aug 10th |
| Relocated Executive | Certificate of Coverage Date | Start Oct 5th → April 5th |
Wealth Strategy: For a complete analysis of the 24% tax savings and international asset protection, see our Beckham Law Spain 2026: Wealth Shield Guide.
1. The Mechanics of Model 149 Filing
The Beckham Law 180-day rule refers to the precise six-month window provided by Article 93. The legislation is clear: the application (Model 149) must be filed electronically via the AEAT E-Office within six months of the date the taxpayer begins their activity in Spain.
2. Why 180 Days is “Preclusivo”
In Spanish administrative law, a “preclusivo” deadline means that once the time expires, the right is lost forever. There is no possibility of late correction (subsaneamiento). Administrative hurdles, such as NIE delays or digital certificate issues, are not valid grounds for an extension in 2026.
3. Advanced Scenarios: The “Double Alta” Trap
For executives with a history in Spain, the AEAT applies a rigorous filter. If you were registered in the Spanish Social Security system years ago for an internship or a previous role, the inspector may trigger the clock from that historical date unless your dossier clearly proves a 5-year fiscal disconnection.
Inter-Company Transfers: If relocated within a multinational, your “Day One” is often tied to the Certificate of Coverage start date. Any delay in filing beyond 180 days from that specific legal anchor results in automatic disqualification.
4. Documentary Evidence & The “Vida Laboral”
To secure approval, your filing must include proactive evidence. In 2026, we focus on three pillars:
- Official Social Security Extract: Cross-referencing the “Fecha de Efecto” of your Alta.
- The Nexo Clause: An employment contract explicitly linking your move to the Spanish role.
- UGE Resolution: For Digital Nomads, the 6-month clock ticks from the resolution date, not when you receive the physical TIE card.
5. The Satellite Window: Family Extensions
Family members (spouses and children) have their own 180-day clocks. They must relocate within the first year of the main applicant’s arrival. Crucially, each member requires an individual Model 149 filing. Missing the spouse’s specific 180-day window from their arrival date will exclude them from the 24% tax shield, even if the main applicant is approved.
Secure Your 24% Flat Rate
A single day of discrepancy in Form 149 is irreversible. Our legal architects handle the technical sequence—from the Social Security Alta to the final Tax Certificate.
Request Expert Filing📊 What is at stake if you miss the window?
Don’t lose the opportunity to save thousands in taxes. Missing the 180-day deadline means being taxed at progressive rates up to 47% instead of the 24% flat rate. Use our 2026 simulator to see your exact net salary difference.