GENERAL

Bank Account in Spain as a Foreigner — Without NIE and with Spanish Banks in Your Country (2026)

16 de April de 2026 7 Min. Lesezeit
En resumen: Cómo abrir una cuenta bancaria en España sin NIE: Santander Online No Residentes, BBVA en Latinoamérica, neobancos como N26, Revolut y Wise, y la estrategia ideal según tu situación.

How to open a bank account in Spain as a foreigner (2025)

You arrive in Spain and need a bank account. But you don't have your NIE yet. And traditional banks ask for your NIE for everything. Don't worry: there's a solution from day one.

This guide explains exactly what to open, in what order, and why. No jargon, no beating around the bush.

Your first day without a NIE — what you can open right now

Revolut and N26 can be opened with your passport in less than 10 minutes. No NIE, no appointment, no need to set foot in any office.

You just need to download the app, take a photo of your passport and record a quick selfie. Within a few hours you have a working account.

The best part: both give you a Spanish IBAN, starting with the letters ES. That means you can receive transfers, set up direct debits and operate in Spain just like anyone with an account at a local bank.

Important: Don't open Wise thinking it'll work as your main account in Spain. Wise has a Belgian IBAN, not a Spanish one. Companies and the tax authority (Hacienda) may reject it for payroll and direct debits. We explain this further below.

Revolut vs N26 — which one is right for you

Both are good options. The real difference is in the details. Here's the honest comparison:

Feature Revolut N26
Spanish IBAN (ES) Yes, since August 2023 Yes, since 2019
Can be opened without NIE Yes, with passport Yes, with passport
Basic plan with no fees Yes Yes
Bizum Yes Yes
Receive payroll Yes Yes
Pay taxes in Spain Yes Yes
Deposit guarantee Lithuanian Deposit Guarantee Fund — up to €100,000 German Deposit Guarantee Fund — up to €100,000
Supervised by Bank of Spain German banking regulator (BaFin)
Currency accounts 38 currencies Limited
Type of entity Bank Bank with European licence
Tip: If you frequently send or receive money to and from your home country, Revolut gives you more of an advantage with its 38 currencies and competitive exchange rates. If you only need to operate in euros in Spain, N26 is just as valid and slightly simpler to use.

Neither is a bad option. Many expats have both open and use each one for what it does best.

Wise — for receiving money from your home country

Wise is not a bank. It's a payment institution, which means it has fewer regulatory obligations but also fewer protections for you.

Its IBAN is Belgian, not Spanish. That's a real problem: many Spanish companies don't accept foreign IBANs for payroll, and Hacienda may reject it for certain paperwork.

Watch out: Don't use Wise as your main account in Spain. You can't reliably set up payroll direct debits with it, and some payments to official bodies won't work.

That said, Wise is unbeatable for one thing: cheap international transfers. If you send money home or receive payments from abroad, Wise's fees are much lower than any bank's.

Use it as a complementary tool, not as a substitute for Revolut or N26.

When you need a traditional bank

There are situations where a good old-fashioned bank is still necessary. Mainly three: applying for a mortgage, working for a large company that requires a traditional Spanish bank, or certain dealings with Hacienda and Social Security.

For those cases, Spanish banks have specific products for foreigners. The most useful ones are:

  • CaixaBank HolaBank: designed specifically for foreigners arriving in Spain. Customer service in several languages and an adapted process.
  • Sabadell Key Account: aimed at non-residents and international students. A good option if you don't yet have official residency.
  • Santander basic non-resident account: more limited in features but accessible.
Important: All traditional banks will ask for your NIE to open an account. If you don't have it yet, start with Revolut or N26 and sort out the traditional bank once you have your NIE in hand.
Tip: Don't wait until you have a traditional bank account to get started with life in Spain. With Revolut or N26 you can pay rent, receive your salary and handle all your day-to-day tasks while you process your NIE.

The foreign IBAN trap — it no longer exists

If you've been researching this for a while, you'll have read that Revolut and N26 "don't work for payroll in Spain" because their IBANs were foreign. That was true for years.

N26 solved the problem in 2019, when it started issuing Spanish IBANs. Revolut did the same in August 2023.

Today both accounts have an ES IBAN, the same format as CaixaBank or Santander. No Spanish company can reject it on the grounds that it's a foreign IBAN, because it isn't.

Tip: If a company tells you it won't accept your Revolut or N26 IBAN, show them that it starts with ES. If they still won't accept it, the problem is their internal policy, not your account. You can push them to review it.

What nobody tells you about deposit guarantees

Here's something you should know, even though it rarely matters in practice.

When you open an account at a Spanish bank like CaixaBank or Santander, your deposits are protected by the Spanish Deposit Guarantee Fund up to €100,000. If the bank goes under, the Spanish state steps in.

With Revolut, the guarantee comes from the Lithuanian Deposit Guarantee Fund, also up to €100,000 but under Lithuanian jurisdiction. With N26, it's the German Deposit Guarantee Fund, likewise up to €100,000 but managed from Germany.

Important: The guarantee exists in all three cases and the limit is the same: €100,000. But if you ever needed to claim it, the process would be in Lithuania (Revolut) or Germany (N26), not in Spain. For normal day-to-day amounts, this isn't a real issue.

If you have significant savings — more than €50,000, for example — it makes sense to diversify and keep some in a traditional Spanish bank with a local guarantee. For everyday use, don't worry about this.

Your next step

Don't wait until you're in Spain to open your account. You can do it today, from wherever you are, with your passport in hand.

Download Revolut or N26, complete the verification process and you'll have your Spanish IBAN ready before you even board the plane. On your very first day you'll be able to pay, receive money and get around without depending on anyone.

Tip: Open both if you can't decide. They're both free on the basic plan and having two accounts gives you more flexibility. Then you can decide which one you use more based on your actual experience.

Once you've sorted your NIE, consider whether you need to add a traditional bank for a mortgage or other specific paperwork. But to get started, Revolut and N26 are all you need.

Aviso: Este articulo es informativo y no constituye asesoramiento legal. La normativa puede cambiar. Consulta siempre fuentes oficiales y, si tu caso es complejo, busca un abogado de extranjeria.

ℹ️ La información de esta web es orientativa y de carácter general. No constituye asesoramiento jurídico. Para tu caso concreto, consulta con un abogado especializado en extranjería o con la oficina oficial correspondiente. Emigra España nunca aconseja actuar fuera de la legalidad.