Map of Balearic Islands with Moroccan, Colombian and Venezuelan flags highlighting 2024 naturalizations

Who takes the Spanish passport on the islands — a look behind the numbers

Who takes the Spanish passport on the islands — a look behind the numbers

The Balearic Islands are experiencing a demographic shift: Moroccans, Colombians and Venezuelans make up the majority of naturalizations in 2024. Why Germans are hardly among them and what this means for Mallorca.

Who takes the Spanish passport on the islands — a look behind the numbers

Key question: Why do most naturalizations in the Balearic Islands today come from Morocco, Colombia and Venezuela — and not from Germany, as discussed in Balearic Islands on the Rise – More Visitors, Fewer Germans: How Mallorca Can Manage the Transition?

If you stroll across the Mercat de l’Olivar on a Monday morning, you smell freshly brewed coffee and fried fish, vendors stack crates of oranges, and several languages can be heard between the stalls. Still, these everyday scenes only partly reflect who formally becomes Spanish. The official figures are clear: in 2024 well over a thousand people from Morocco received citizenship in the Balearics; almost 1,400 were Colombians, and nearly 640 were Venezuelans — a strong increase compared with 2014. By contrast, 19 Germans applied for nationality in 2014; in 2024 there were only seven.

This is not a quirk of the statistics but the result of several factors working together. First: countries of origin and length of residence. People from many Latin American states can apply after a significantly shorter time (often two years), while most others must meet a ten-year residence requirement plus language and cultural tests. Second: the labor market and geographic distribution. Moroccan families are often rooted in more rural municipalities such as Sa Pobla, Inca or Manacor; they work in agriculture, hotels or gastronomy. Colombians and Venezuelans are frequently based in Palma and its surroundings — construction, services and hospitality are typical sectors. These patterns are detailed in Colorful Job Market: How Foreign Workers Support the Balearic Islands — and What Is Still Missing. Third: political ruptures play a role: the massive rise in Venezuelan naturalizations is closely linked to the crisis in their homeland; recent events in early January 2026 — the arrest of the Venezuelan former president and the international turmoil — reinforce the desire for legal security here.

What the raw numbers do not show is how this new citizenship plays out in everyday life. Economically, a Spanish passport often means better job security, social protection and mobility within the EU. For municipalities it means more taxable residents, but also pressure on schools, health services and especially the housing market. This pressure is amplified by the high share of foreign property purchases reported in Almost every second property in the Balearic Islands in foreign hands – what does this mean for Mallorca?. You can hear it in the noise of construction near Platja de Palma, in crowded classrooms in the suburbs and in rental ads that disappear within a week.

What is missing from the public debate is a sober discussion of several points at once: first, a distinction between legal status and integration. A passport is a legal step — but not a guarantee of language skills, professional recognition or participation in local clubs. Second, there are hardly any transparent figures on how many naturalizations lead to permanent settlement and how many are rather the formalization of temporary life situations. Third, we rarely talk about EU citizens such as Germans: many keep their passport because pension entitlements, tax situations or mobility within Europe are more important to them than Spanish nationality. A broader demographic perspective is available in Who Shapes Mallorca's Streets? A Reality Check on Island Demographics.

An everyday scene: at the weekly market in Sa Pobla, between tomato stalls and the sound of an old radio, a farmer woman of Moroccan origin speaks Mallorquí and Spanish; she has children in school here and often holds both passports. That same morning a Colombian family in Palma sets up a small café — they have just submitted their paperwork and hope that the passport will make it easier to get a loan. Such scenes show that naturalization is often the result of years of rootedness, not a short-term plan.

Concrete proposals to prevent the development from causing local tensions or displacement: first, municipalities and the Balearic government should provide closer offers for professional recognition and qualification for new citizens — for example accelerated recognition procedures for trades and construction qualifications. Second, additional state-sponsored language and culture courses are needed, combined with flexible schedules for shift workers. Third, targeted housing programs are required: municipal support for affordable housing in communities with high immigration and binding rules for holiday rentals so that long-term housing does not disappear permanently. Fourth, better data collection would be helpful: not only the number of naturalizations, but also age structure, sector affiliation and intention (permanent stay vs. formalization) should be recorded so that policy can respond appropriately.

In conclusion: the rising naturalization numbers are not an “import” of loyalty but an expression of an island society that relies on workers and in which people from very different countries put down roots. That Germans comparatively rarely take the Spanish passport is more a pragmatic decision than a sign of exclusionism. Those who mean integration seriously must now build the bridge between legal belonging and genuine, everyday settling — in language, work, housing and participation. That is the task for town halls, employers and all of us who walk across the market in the morning and count the voices but too rarely see the development plans.

Frequently asked questions

Why do so many people in Mallorca become Spanish citizens after moving from Morocco, Colombia or Venezuela?

The main reason is that nationality rules are different depending on where someone comes from. Many Latin American citizens can apply after a shorter period of residence, while most other foreign residents must live in Spain much longer and also meet language and culture requirements. In Mallorca, that makes naturalisations among people from Morocco, Colombia and Venezuela more common than among some other national groups.

How long do foreigners usually have to live in Spain before applying for citizenship in Mallorca?

It depends on the applicant’s country of origin. Many people from Latin American countries can apply after a much shorter period, often two years, while most other foreign residents need ten years of legal residence and must also pass language and cultural tests. That difference strongly shapes who becomes Spanish in Mallorca.

Does getting a Spanish passport in Mallorca automatically mean someone is well integrated?

Not necessarily. A passport is a legal status, but it does not automatically show language ability, professional recognition or participation in local life. In Mallorca, many people become Spanish after years of work and family life, but integration still depends on everyday things such as school, work, housing and community ties.

Why are many new Spanish citizens in Mallorca from Palma and the surrounding area?

Many Colombians and Venezuelans in Mallorca live in Palma or nearby areas because that is where more jobs are available in construction, services and hospitality. Urban areas also tend to offer more contacts, rental options and support networks. That makes it a natural place for many families to settle and later apply for nationality.

What role do rural towns in Mallorca play in naturalisation figures?

Some rural municipalities in Mallorca, such as Sa Pobla, Inca and Manacor, have long-standing migrant communities, especially among people from Morocco. Many residents work in agriculture, hotels or food service and have built family lives there over many years. That is why naturalisation is not just an urban issue, but also part of life in inland Mallorca.

What changes for people in Mallorca after they get Spanish citizenship?

For many people, Spanish citizenship brings more legal security, better access to social rights and easier mobility within the EU. It can also improve job prospects and make everyday life less uncertain, especially for families who plan to stay in Mallorca long term. For local institutions, a growing number of citizens can also mean more long-term residents using schools, health services and housing.

Is housing pressure in Mallorca linked to more foreign residents becoming Spanish?

Only indirectly, but the two trends do overlap. When more people settle long term in Mallorca, demand for housing increases, especially in places where jobs and schools are concentrated. The pressure becomes stronger when holiday rentals reduce the stock of homes available for year-round residents.

Why do many Germans living in Mallorca keep their German passport instead of applying for Spanish nationality?

For many EU citizens, keeping their original passport is simply more practical. Pension rights, tax considerations and freedom of movement within Europe often matter more than taking Spanish nationality. In Mallorca, that is one reason why Germans apply far less often than many non-EU residents.

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