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Spain is set to introduce some of the harshest cash controls in Europe, with a €150,000 penalty for failing to report cash withdrawals over €3,000 with at least 24 hours’ notice. In a direct assault on the financial privacy of its citizens, under new rules coming into force as part of Royal Decree 253/2025, Spaniards
The post Spain to introduce strict cash controls with €150K penalty for noncompliance appeared first on CryptoSlate.
Spain is set to introduce some of the harshest cash controls in Europe, with a €150,000 penalty for failing to report cash withdrawals over €3,000 with at least 24 hours’ notice. In a direct assault on the financial privacy of its citizens, under new rules coming into force as part of Royal Decree 253/2025, Spaniards must formally notify the tax authorities before accessing their own money.
They must also state the amount, the purpose, and the recipient of the withdrawal, in a clear example of the Orwellian surveillance society taking hold in Europe. Banks are required to block withdrawals if any paperwork is missing and report suspicious or frequent smaller transactions, meaning even repeated withdrawals below the threshold could invite scrutiny or penalties.
Failure to comply can result in fines starting at €600 and escalating to an eyewatering €150,000 depending on the seriousness of the violation. The measures are part of a broader government strategy to combat tax fraud, money laundering, and terrorism financing, but their scope reaches far beyond criminal activity. Ordinary citizens making large or repeated cash withdrawals risk being treated as potential suspects, with their cash movements fully traceable by the state.
Such controls represent a dangerous expansion of Spanish state surveillance. By forcing citizens to seek permission to access their own funds, the government is effectively eroding the concept of private property and financial autonomy.
CitizenX CEO Alex Recouso posted:
“When state authorization is required to access your money, it’s no longer your money. The EU is bankrupt and will try to seize your assets.”
Bitcoin personality Peter McCormack replied:
“F**k this totalitarian bullshit. We need a revolution in the West.”
Rising state incursion across the continent
The trend is not isolated to Spain. Across Europe, similar measures to cash controls are being introduced or considered. Italy and France have already imposed strict limits on cash transactions, while the European Union is actively exploring continent-wide caps and reporting requirements as part of its anti-money laundering directives.
The World Economic Forum has also advocated for greater financial transparency and digital tracking, further normalizing the shift toward a cashless, fully monitored economy, and acting as one of the best pieces of marketing for Bitcoin and decentralized digital assets.
Unlike cash held in a bank, Bitcoin enables users to move and store value without state oversight or the risk of arbitrary restrictions, providing a way to preserve financial freedom, privacy, and cash controls in an increasingly surveilled world.
The post Spain to introduce strict cash controls with €150K penalty for noncompliance appeared first on CryptoSlate.