Planning a long-term stay in a foreign country may seem like a daunting task, but don’t despair. With our guide to Spanish visas you’ll find out how to get the visa you need to go to Spain, or you may even discover that you don’t require a visa at all!
Citizens of these countries may enter Spain without a visa and stay for up to three months:
- Antigua and Barbuda
- Andorra
- Argentina
- Australia
- Barbados
- Bermuda
- Brazil
- Brunei
- Canada
- Chile
- Costa Rica
- Croatia
- El Salvador
- Guatemala
- Honduras
- Hong Kong
- Israel
- Japan
- Macau
- Macedonia
- Malaysia
- Mauritius
- Mexico
- Monaco
- Montenegro
- New Zealand
- Nicaragua
- Panama
- Paraguay
- San Marino
- Serbia
- Seychelles
- Singapore
- South Korea
- United States
- Uruguay
- Vatican City
- Venezuela
So do you need a visa to come to Spain? That depends on a couple of factors.
European Union and Schengen Area Countries
First of all, if you are a citizen of any European Union country or of Norway, Switzerland, Iceland or Liechtenstein, you do not need any sort of visa or permit to come live in Spain, whatever your reasons for doing so. This is because all of these countries have signed the Schengen Area Agreement, which provides for freedom of travel and settlement between them.
Non-Schengen Countries with Tourist Visa Waiver
For those of you who are not citizens of any of the above mentioned countries, don’t fret. You might not need a visa either, depending on the length of your stay. Consult the list of countries in the column on the right hand side of this page. If your country is on the list, don’t worry about a thing. Just come on over with your passport, it will be stamped and you can just walk right in, no problem! These countries have reciprocal tourist visa waiver agreements with the European Union which allow their nationals to enter and exit EU member states for a period of three months as tourists without having to apply for a visa. After your three month stay is up, however, you must leave the EU and you may not return to any EU member state for at least six months after the end of your stay. In addition, you do not gain the right to work in Spain. You may, however, study and do non-paid internships.
How to Apply for a Spanish Visa
So now you know when you don’t need a visa to enter Spain, but when do you need a visa? You will need to apply for a visa if:
- You are not a citizen of a Schengen country (any EU member state or Norway, Switzerland, Iceland or Liechtenstein) nor of one of the countries listed in the column on the right.
- You are not a citizen of a Schengen country and you want to stay in Spain for more than three months at a time and/or you want to do paid work in Spain, even if you are a citizen of one of the countries listed in the column on the right. This includes students looking to do a long term study abroad in Spain (longer than three months).
What do you do if you need a visa? First you should know that there are several kinds of Spanish visas. Just head to your nearest Spanish embassy or consulate and apply for the visa that best suits your needs or goals in Spain. If you explain to the people at the embassy what your plans are they can help you select and apply for an appropriate visa and will guide you through the steps. Normally your university or school will help you to get a Spanish study visa, if you need one, by sending you documents accrediting you as a student, so check with them. Remember, though, that if you will be studying for three months or less and are from one of the countries listed in the column on the right a visa will not be necessary as it is perfectly legal to come in as a tourist and study.
The most commonly requested Spanish visas are:
- Visado de estudios (Student Visa): This visa allows you to come to Spain to study or to research and remain here until your studies conclude. It does not allow you to do paid work.
- Visado de estancia (Tourist Visa): You will need this visa if your country is not on the list of countries with tourist visa waivers provided above in the column on the right. It allows you to stay in Spain for up to three months at a time. Once you conclude your visit you will have to wait at least a further six months before you may return. You may not do paid work.
- Visado de trabajo y residencia (Work and Residence Permit): This visa allows you to live and work for money in Spain. Generally your employer must first hire you “en origen“, that is, in your home country. Then they will provide the necessary paperwork for you to bring to the embassy to get this visa. These visas usually limit the paid work you can do to the field for which you are hired.
- Visado de residencia (Residence Permit): This visa allows you to remain indefinitely in Spain, but not to do paid work.
- Visado de cortesía (Courtesy Visa): This visa is granted to diplomatic envoys, consular officials, delegates of permanent missions and employees of international or intergovernmental organisations with branches in Spain.
Most students opt to come in on a tourist visa (or just with their passport, if they qualify for the visa waiver) if they are studying for three months or less, whereas if they intend to study for more than three months they apply for a visado de estudios.
Whatever your particular case, come on over to Spain to study Spanish abroad and have the time of your life!
Posted by gospanishabroad 


Each year revellers from all around Spain, Europe and the world gather in Puerta del Sol, Madrid, to ring in the New Year in style.
It is customary to eat twelve grapes in tune with the twelve strokes of midnight, one grape per stroke. If you successfully eat all twelve before the twelfth gong sounds, congrats, you’re in for a lucky year. This relatively recent tradition only started in the early 20th century, when a bumper crop left farmers in Alicante with more grapes than they knew what to do with. To stimulate demand for grapes that year they devised this tradition which has since spread to all of Spain and beyond. Its popularity is such that there is even a related turn of speech in the Spanish language; “¡nos van a dar las uvas!” (meaning, “soon it will be grape time”) is often said to chide the sluggish into hurrying up.
