BARCELONA, Spain — Nariola Romo, 34, and her household immigrated to Spain from Colombia, however that wasn’t their preliminary plan. Their purpose was to journey to america, however they couldn’t acquire the 2 loans they wanted to make the journey, so that they sought a brand new life in Europe as an alternative.
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“Issues didn’t work out for us, and we thought it was God’s will that we didn’t get the prospect to go there, and, effectively, right here we’re,” she stated.
Right this moment, as she nears acquiring authorized standing in Spain, she feels grateful for the flip her life has taken. “Take a look at how issues are in america with migrants. It looks like God didn’t need us to be there, as a result of with all the things that’s occurred, we might have been deported already,” she stated.

In Spain, a rare regularization course of is underway that’s anticipated to legalize the standing of greater than 500,000 undocumented immigrants.
If authorised, the work and residence allow is legitimate for one 12 months for grownup immigrants, who will then should display employment to keep up their allow. For minors, their standing is regularized for 5 years.
It’s a distinction from the U.S., the place President Donald Trump — who stated throughout the 2024 presidential marketing campaign that undocumented immigrants had been “poisoning the blood” of the nation” — has carried out a large marketing campaign to detain and deport immigrants and stem immigration.
In Spain, the deadline for submitting functions is June 30, and the method is anticipated to take three months after the paperwork are submitted. This system, introduced by the Spanish authorities in January, acquired over 43,000 functions in simply three days when the applying interval opened on April 16. Inside a month, the variety of functions had risen to 549,596.
Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez stated the transfer was an act of “normalization” and that the immigrants who will profit from it are already a part of the day by day lives of Spaniards.
Romo’s household is a type of hoping to profit from the measure.
“Thankfully, someday we came upon by way of social media {that a} regularization course of was coming, and from then on, we tried to ensure the time got here shortly so we might full the method,” stated Romo, who, alongside along with her household, has utilized for the profit.
After two years in Barcelona and the denial of asylum, which left the household in limbo in November 2025, Romo, her husband, who works in building, their two kids, ages 4 and 12, and her father have utilized for regularization.
The household, initially from Barranquilla, had a number of companies and fled Colombia in 2024 looking for security, as they had been dealing with threats and extortion from prison gangs, stated Romo, a trainer by occupation who in Spain has labored at a warehouse and as a personal tutor.
“To to migrate, you need to be extremely courageous, leaving your house, what you are promoting, your job, your colleagues, your loved ones, all the things. … I got here with my life in a 10-kilo (22-pound) suitcase,” Romo stated, including she felt lucky as a result of “Spain is a rustic that welcomes immigrants.”
And though it was a troublesome choice, Romo now feels at peace and believes they made the precise alternative. “I’m actually very blissful as a mom to have my kids right here,” she stated.
‘I can work and assist my household’
The scenario for Diadji Nguirane’s household is totally different. Nguirane and his companion, Maimouna Gueye, each from Senegal, have three daughters born in Spain, and the mass regularization will solely profit him, since she and the ladies have already got authorized standing within the nation.

“I’ve been in Spain for 2 years, and after I get my paperwork, that might be very favorable as a result of I can work and assist my household,” stated Nguirane, who only a few days in the past acquired affirmation that his case was being processed.
To date, Nguirane says his solely choice has been “working often serving to a pal, doing upkeep duties, however and not using a contract.”
Since Nguirane hasn’t been capable of work legally, his companion, Gueye, has been supporting the household financially. She does cleansing work at a hospital in Terrassa, a city about 17 miles from Barcelona the place they stay. “I depart the home at 5 a.m. and he takes the ladies to highschool,” Gueye stated.
As soon as Nguirane will get his authorized allow, Gueye hopes he could be employed for sanitation work on the hospital whereas nonetheless serving to to deal with the youngsters.
Nguirane’s household can be looking for security and stability in Spain.
“Returning to Senegal just isn’t in my plans as a result of it’s a nation I’ve not lived in, it’s a nation I have no idea, and at any time when I am going, even whether it is for 15 days, it’s troublesome for me,” Gueye stated.
The second main regularization in 20 years
To use for regularization, immigrants should meet plenty of necessities and supply paperwork.
Along with a passport, immigrants should show they had been in Spain earlier than Jan. 1, 2026, and had been within the nation constantly for no less than 5 months on the time of software, which they will present by way of a registration certificates, medical information or proof of getting kids enrolled in class.
Immigrants even have to supply proof — from their nation of origin or wherever they’ve lived within the final 5 years — of a clear prison file. In some instances, officers additionally request a vulnerability certificates, which could be issued by social service companies to confirm the troublesome circumstances the individual is experiencing, resembling problem accessing employment or housing, amongst different points.
This isn’t the primary time Spain has opted to regularize its undocumented inhabitants.
“That’s been achieved a number of instances already. The final time was 20 years in the past with [the Zapatero government]. However this can be a course of that isn’t solely achieved in Spain, however in each nation on this planet. … It’s widespread observe,” stated Verónica Jaramillo, a lawyer on the Bayt al-Thaqafa Basis, a Barcelona-based group that helps migrants.
Though there are not any official figures, the #RegularizacionYa motion, which is driving the present regularization course of, estimated that 500,000 immigrants had been undocumented in Spain. In the meantime, the Funcas assume tank estimated that quantity had risen to over 800,000 by 2025.
Regularization can profit not solely immigrants but additionally economies with getting older populations, resembling Spain’s. The nation’s getting older index reached file highs final 12 months, with 148 folks over 64 years outdated for each 100 who had been beneath 16.
In line with Jaramillo, any “self-respecting” nation ought to do what Spain is doing, which is including extra individuals who pays into its Social Safety system.
“It’s completely and completely utilitarian, sure,” Jaramillo stated, however “that’s the reason for the regularization.”
Nevertheless, the measure has met with fierce opposition from right-wing events, which have described it as irresponsible and a technique to additional collapse a rustic with sure public providers which can be already stretched to the restrict.
Isabel Díaz Ayuso, a conservative who’s president of the Madrid area, stated that the measure to legalize immigrants was a technique to “manipulate the census,” “culturally remodel Spain” and “sabotage the elections.” Nevertheless, immigrants who profit from the legalization course of won’t be able to vote.
For the Romo and the Nguirane households, the hope is that the mass regularization will change their life prospects in a rustic the place they search not solely to settle, but additionally to place down roots.











