29 Jun, 2026 @ 18:30
1 min read

Spain formally removes Gibraltar from tax haven blacklist after 35 years in €30m boost for border economy

SPAIN has officially removed Gibraltar from its list of tax havens, bringing an end to 35 years of diplomatic and economic friction.

Hacienda, the Spanish Finance Ministry, confirmed the move after determining that the British Overseas Territory now effectively exchanges tax information with Spain.

The delisting resolves a critical commitment from the 2021 International Tax Agreement that had remained pending for over five years.

READ MORE: Alarm as Gibraltar coast appears to be engulfed in large brown stain – dredging work for huge Eastside marina development blamed

It comes after Chief Minister Fabian Picardo recently warned that the Gibraltar government would study withdrawing from the treaty entirely if Spain did not honour the pledge.

Picardo celebrated the move as a long-overdue rectification of a historic wrong.

He said: “This is therefore a moment for celebration of a historic wrong of over 30 years being finally undone.”

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He added: “The result will mean a lot to many people with cross-frontier interests, not least businesses, workers and those with second homes in Spain.”

The removal of the label is expected to provide a significant economic boost to the border region.

Juan Franco, the mayor of La Linea de la Concepcion, estimates that the change will keep approximately €30 million within the local economy.

READ MORE: The military base, signing date and a future PP/Vox government: What Gibraltar’s Chief Minister told the Spanish press as the border comes tumbling down

It provides immediate relief for thousands of cross-border workers who live in Spain but work on the Rock.

Those earning under €60,000 will no longer be forced to pay the difference in Spanish income tax (IRPF), a move that had previously caused significant financial hardship.

Spain originally included Gibraltar on its list of non-cooperative jurisdictions in 1991.

READ MORE: Spain begins tearing down border infrastructure with Gibraltar as frontier opening gathers pace

The territory has long argued the label was unjust, noting that it has been on the white list of the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OCDE) since 2009.

While removing the Rock, the Spanish government simultaneously updated its blacklist to include Russia.

Hacienda stated that the addition of Moscow was due to a damaging tax regime for international holding companies.

The ministry clarified that this move will have little economic impact on Spain due to existing trade sanctions linked to the war in Ukraine.

Click here to read more Gibraltar News from The Olive Press.

Walter Finch, is the Digital Editor of the Olive Press and occasional roaming photographer who started out at the Daily Mail.
Born in London but having lived in six countries, he is well-travelled and worldly. He studied Philosophy at the University of Birmingham and earned his NCTJ diploma in journalism from London's renowned News Associates during the Covid era.
He got his first break working on the Foreign News desk of the Daily Mail's online arm, where he also helped out on the video desk due to previous experience as a camera operator and filmmaker.
He then decided to escape the confines of London and returned to Spain in 2022, having previously lived in Barcelona for many years.

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