The EU Entry/Exit System (EES) is now live at Spanish airports including Alicante-Elche. British nationals must register fingerprints and a facial photo on first entry. Initial queues ran 45–180 minutes at peak times. EES also enforces the 90-day Schengen rule automatically — property owners who visit frequently need to track their days carefully. EU nationals (Swedish, German, Dutch) are unaffected.
If you own a property on the Costa Blanca and travel out regularly from the UK, something changed at Alicante Airport in late 2025: the EU's new Entry/Exit System (EES) went live, replacing the old paper-stamp system with automated biometric border checks.
For EU nationals — Swedish, German, Dutch, Belgian buyers — nothing changed. They continue through the EU lane as before. For British nationals (non-EU post-Brexit), every Schengen entry now involves fingerprint and facial photo registration, and every day in Spain is automatically counted toward the 90-day limit.
This guide covers what EES means in practice for British Costa Blanca property owners, the queue situation at Alicante, and how to manage your visits and residency status going forward.
What EES Actually Requires at the Border
At an EES-equipped border point — Alicante-Elche Airport (ALC) among them — British nationals entering Spain for the first time after EES went live must:
This first-time registration typically takes 5–15 minutes per traveller at the kiosk — but during peak arrival periods (Friday evenings, summer Saturday mornings), the queues to reach the kiosk are where the time goes. Early operational reports showed 45–180 minutes total processing time at Alicante peak periods.
For subsequent visits, the biometric data is stored for three years. Re-entry verification checks your fingerprints against the stored record — a significantly faster process (typically 2–5 minutes at the kiosk itself, though queue time still applies).
What this means practically: Add 60–90 minutes buffer to your arrival-day plan on first entry. On subsequent visits, 30–45 minutes is more realistic. Arriving mid-week, early morning, or outside peak summer weekends reduces queue time significantly.
The 90-Day Rule: Now Automatically Enforced
This is the EES change that matters most for property owners who visit frequently.
British nationals can spend a maximum of 90 days in the Schengen Area in any rolling 180-day period without a visa or residency permit. This rule existed before EES — but it was tracked by border officials manually checking passport stamps, an imperfect system that many frequent visitors found easy to mismanage.
EES changes this entirely. Every entry and exit is recorded digitally with an exact timestamp. The system calculates your rolling Schengen day count automatically and displays it to border officials. If you arrive on a day that would push you over 90 days, the system flags it immediately.
What counts toward your 90 days:
What does not reset your count:
For property owners who might spend 2–3 months in their Costa Blanca home during the summer and make additional shorter visits during spring and Christmas, it's entirely possible to hit the 90-day limit without careful planning. EES makes exceeding it risky in a way it wasn't before.
Implications for Costa Blanca Property Owners
The combination of biometric registration requirements and automated 90-day enforcement has several practical implications for British owners of Costa Blanca properties.
Managing rental properties remotely
Many British Costa Blanca property owners also use their homes as short-term tourist rentals when they're not visiting. Property management companies handle guest check-in and the day-to-day, but owners often visit for maintenance, deep cleans between seasons, or to address property issues. These visits now count against the 90-day limit like any other stay.
Owners who previously made a handful of 10–14-day trips per year — spring setup, summer stay, autumn close-down — may be approaching or exceeding 90 days if they also take a winter break. The maths: 14 + 60 + 14 + 14 = 102 days — already over the limit before any extra trips.
The Airbnb property visit problem
For owners who manage their rental properties hands-on (checking in guests, handling maintenance in person), frequent short visits can rapidly accumulate Schengen days. EES now makes this visible to border officials in real time.
Long-term stays
Owners who planned to spend 3+ months a year in their Costa Blanca property — enjoying it for extended periods while it's not being let — need to either stay within the 90-day limit with careful planning or obtain Spanish residency to remove the constraint entirely.
The Residency Solution
For British property owners who regularly spend significant time in Spain, formal Spanish residency is now the practical solution rather than a nice-to-have.
Spanish residents (holding a valid TIE — Tarjeta de Identidad de Extranjero) are not subject to EES registration, travel through the EU/resident lane at airports, and have no 90-day limit on their stays in Spain. They're effectively treated like EU citizens at the border.
Residency also brings practical property ownership benefits: easier Spanish bank account access, Spanish health system access, and exemption from the proposed non-resident property surcharge (which, while not law, remains a legislative risk).
Routes to Spanish residency for British property owners:
Non-lucrative visa — for those with sufficient passive income or savings. Requirements: approximately €2,400/month income (pension, investments, savings income) plus private health insurance with no co-payments. Valid for 1 year initially, renewable twice, then 5-year permit. No working in Spain allowed.
Digital nomad visa — for those with remote employment income from non-Spanish employers. Introduced 2023, processing times have improved. Can work remotely while living in Spain legally.
Golden visa — requires €500,000 minimum property investment. Grants immediate residency for the investor and family. Spain's government has signalled phase-out plans but the programme continues as of June 2026.
For most British property owners, the non-lucrative visa is the natural route — particularly for retirees or those with rental income from UK properties.
Итоги
EES has added a layer of practical complexity to British travel in Spain that didn't exist 18 months ago. Biometric registration on first entry is manageable — allow extra time, travel off-peak when possible. The 90-day rule enforcement is the more significant change: it's now accurate, automatic, and difficult to inadvertently exceed without consequence.
For British Costa Blanca property owners who spend more than a few weeks a year in Spain, the math on residency is increasingly straightforward. The 90-day limit, EES enforcement, and the legislative environment around non-resident buyers all point in the same direction: formal residency is the right long-term answer for British owners who genuinely use their Spanish properties.
Browse our current Costa Blanca listings — all our new build properties come with full legal documentation support, and we can connect you with solicitors who advise on residency applications alongside property purchases.
Часто задаваемые вопросы
1What is EES and how does it affect British property owners in Spain?▼
2Do EU buyers (Swedish, German, Dutch) need to worry about EES?▼
3How long are EES queues at Alicante Airport?▼
4Can British property owners spend more than 90 days a year in Spain?▼
5What happens if a British property owner overstays 90 days?▼
6What is the easiest route to Spanish residency for a British property owner?▼
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