Step by StepConsulate & In-SpainInsurance Help

The Spain Visa Application Process, Step by Step

A clear, English-language walkthrough of how a Spanish long-stay visa application works — consulate vs in-Spain, legalising documents, the insurance certificate, appointments, the decision and life after arrival — with the health-insurance step built in.

Consulate & in-Spain routesApostilles & sworn translationsInsurance certificate & start datesAvoidable mistakes flagged
The ProcessOverview
WhereConsulate or in Spain
LegaliseApostille + translation
Key stepInsurance certificate
After arrivalNIE / TIE / padrón
We help withInsurance + quote
Get a Quote →
End-to-end walkthrough
Legalisation explained
Insurance step covered
Confirm details with the authorities

Overview

How a Spanish Visa Application Works

We do not handle visa applications or give immigration legal advice. We are English-speaking Sanitas health insurance specialists who help you arrange the private health insurance many Spanish visa and residency routes require — suitable policy options, certificate wording, start dates and personalised quotes. Visa rules vary by consulate and change over time, so always confirm the full immigration requirements with the relevant Spanish consulate, an Extranjería office or a qualified immigration specialist.

Most Spanish long-stay visas follow a similar shape: confirm your route and eligibility, gather and legalise documents, arrange health insurance, book and attend a consulate appointment (or apply from inside Spain where allowed), wait for the decision, then travel and complete the residence formalities. The detail varies by route and consulate, so treat this as the general map and confirm the specifics for yours.

One theme runs through it: the parts you can control — documents, legalisation and insurance — are worth finishing early, because the parts you cannot control, like appointment availability and processing time, set the real timeline.

Where you apply

Consulate Applications

For most routes you apply at the Spanish consulate covering your country of residence. You book an appointment (often through the consulate’s system or a visa service provider), attend in person with originals and copies, give biometrics, pay the fee, and wait for the decision before travelling. Consulates differ in document formatting, appointment systems and waiting times, so always read your specific consulate’s current checklist.

In-Spain

In-Spain Applications

Some routes — notably the Digital Nomad Visa and certain residence permits — can be applied for from inside Spain after a legal entry, through the immigration office (Extranjería) rather than a consulate abroad. The documents and insurance requirements are similar, but the procedure and timelines differ. Confirm whether your route is consulate-based or in-Spain before you start, as it changes the order of steps.

Insurance timing

When to Arrange Health Insurance

Arrange it before your appointment. For most non-EU routes a compliant private policy and its certificate are needed at submission, so leaving it late is a common cause of delay. The good news: a policy can usually be arranged in advance with a future start month aligned to your move or visa needs, so you are not paying for cover before you need it.

This is the step we handle. We match a suitable Sanitas policy to your route, make sure the certificate shows what the consulate expects, and set the start date sensibly. See visa-compliant health insurance.

Legalisation

Apostilles & Sworn Translations

Foreign public documents usually need two things before a consulate will accept them: an apostille (a Hague-Convention legalisation stamp that authenticates the document for use abroad) and an official sworn (jurada) translation into Spanish by an authorised translator. Both take time and are easy to underestimate.

  • Apostille the original public document first (criminal-record certificate, marriage/birth certificates).
  • Then have it sworn-translated — the translation usually needs to include the apostille.
  • Check your consulate’s rules on how recent each must be.

Our Tier-3 guides cover apostille and sworn translations in detail.

Certificates

Criminal-Record & Medical Certificates

Most routes require a recent criminal-record certificate from your country of nationality and any country of recent residence, apostilled and sworn-translated. Many also require a medical certificate confirming you are free of diseases with public-health implications, often on specific wording. Both have validity limits, so obtain them close to your application date rather than months ahead. See criminal-record certificate and medical certificate.

Certificate wording

The Insurance Certificate & Its Wording

The health-insurance certificate is where applications often stumble — not because cover is missing, but because the certificate does not say the right things. Depending on the route it usually needs to show comprehensive cover valid in Spain, no co-payments where required, no waiting periods that leave gaps, an insurer authorised in Spain, the insured person’s name, and the validity dates.

A quote, a receipt or a marketing brochure is not a certificate. The certificate is issued once the policy is in force, and requirements can vary by consulate — we make sure yours matches.

This is exactly what we get right, so the certificate does not become the reason for a delay.

Appointments

Booking Consulate Appointments

Appointments can be the tightest bottleneck. At busy consulates, slots are released periodically and fill quickly, so book as soon as your documents are on track rather than waiting until everything is perfect. Take every original plus copies, arrive early, and check whether your consulate uses a third-party appointment provider. Missing a single required document can mean rebooking and losing weeks.

Delays

Common Delays & How to Avoid Them

  • Documents missing an apostille or sworn translation
  • Criminal-record or medical certificates obtained too early and now out of date
  • Insufficient or poorly evidenced funds/income
  • An insurance certificate with the wrong wording, co-payments or gaps
  • Booking the appointment too late for your timeline
  • Inconsistent names, dates or addresses across documents

Most of these are avoidable with early preparation. Sorting the insurance certificate ahead of time removes one of the most common ones.

The steps

The Application, Step by Step

Confirm route & eligibility

Match your situation to a visa and read its checklist.

Gather & legalise documents

Apostille and sworn-translate in good time.

Arrange compliant health insurance

Policy + correct certificate, start date set to your move.

Book the consulate appointment (or in-Spain)

As early as your documents allow.

Submit & give biometrics

Attend in person with originals and copies; pay the fee.

Wait for the decision

Times vary by route and consulate.

Collect the visa & travel

Enter within the visa validity period.

Complete residence steps

NIE, TIE, padrón and activating your cover.

After approval

After Approval: NIE, TIE & Padrón

A visa gets you to Spain; a few formalities make you resident. The NIE is your foreigner identification number; the TIE is the physical residence card, applied for after arrival at a police appointment with fingerprints; the padrón is your town-hall address registration, needed for many local services. Around the same time you activate your health cover so it is live from your start date.

We focus on the insurance; our Tier-3 guides cover the NIE, TIE and padrón once those are built.

Start dates

How Start Dates Work for Sanitas Insurance

A frequent question: when should the policy start? In many cases a policy can be arranged in advance with a future start month, so the certificate is ready for your appointment while cover begins around your move or as the route requires. This avoids paying for cover too early and helps line the policy up with your visa timeline. The exact options depend on current Sanitas processes, so we confirm the timing with you before you commit.

Insurance mistakes

Common Mistakes With Health Insurance

  • Buying a travel policy instead of a comprehensive residence policy
  • A plan with co-payments, exclusions or waiting periods where the route or consulate expects full qualifying cover
  • Submitting a quote or receipt instead of an issued certificate
  • A certificate that does not name every applicant (families)
  • Leaving the insurance to the last minute and missing the appointment window
  • Assuming every consulate accepts identical wording

We help you avoid each of these — that is the part of the process we own.

Important information

Important Information

Important: We do not handle visa applications or provide immigration legal advice. Our role is to help English-speaking applicants understand and arrange the Sanitas private health insurance required for many Spanish visa and residency routes, including suitable policy options, certificate wording, start dates and personalised quotes. Visa and residency decisions are made by the Spanish authorities, and applicants should always confirm the full immigration requirements with the relevant Spanish consulate, Extranjería office or a qualified immigration specialist.

Sort the Health Insurance Step Early

Tell us your route and timeline and we will prepare a suitable Sanitas policy and a correctly-worded certificate, with the start date set to your move. We help with the health-insurance part of your application. Acceptance and exact policy terms depend on the insurer’s rules; visa decisions rest with the Spanish authorities.

  • Certificate wording handled
  • Start date timed to your move
  • English-speaking team
  • Every long-stay route
  • Cover for the whole family

Request a Visa Health Insurance Quote

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English-speaking Sanitas specialists can help with the health-insurance part of your visa or residency application.

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FAQs

Spain Visa Application Process — FAQs

Common questions about this Spanish visa route and the health-insurance requirement. Always confirm current rules with the official authorities or a qualified immigration specialist.

Confirm your route, gather and legalise your documents, arrange health insurance, book a consulate appointment (or apply from inside Spain where allowed), submit your application and biometrics, then wait for the decision. The steps vary by route.
Usually at the Spanish consulate covering your place of residence. Some routes, such as the Digital Nomad Visa, can be applied for from inside Spain. Confirm the rule for your route.
Start several months ahead. Apostilles, sworn translations and appointment slots each take time, and criminal-record and medical certificates have validity limits.
Before your appointment. A compliant policy and correct certificate are needed at submission for most non-EU routes, and a policy can usually be arranged in advance with a future start month.
An apostille is a Hague-Convention legalisation stamp that authenticates a public document for use abroad. Many visa documents, such as criminal-record and civil-status certificates, need one.
Foreign documents usually need an official sworn (jurada) translation into Spanish, often including the apostille. Plan time for this.
Typically comprehensive cover valid in Spain, no co-payments where required, no gaps from waiting periods where required, an insurer authorised in Spain, the insured person's name, and validity dates. A quote or receipt is not enough.
In many cases yes — policies can often be arranged in advance with a future start month aligned to your move. We confirm the timing with you.
Common reasons include un-legalised or out-of-date documents, insufficient funds, and non-compliant insurance. We help remove the insurance risk.
You collect the visa, travel within its validity, then apply for the TIE, register on the padrón and activate your insurance.
No — we are health insurance specialists, not immigration lawyers. We help with the insurance certificate and explain the process; use a qualified immigration specialist for the application itself.
Tell us your route and timeline and we will prepare a suitable policy and a correctly-worded certificate.