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Get a Quote →Everything non-EU employees need to understand the Spanish work visa — the employed route, employer sponsorship, requirements, the process, social security and healthcare, and when private cover helps. We help with the Sanitas cover only.
What it is
The Spanish work visa is for non-EU citizens with a job offer from a Spanish employer. Once employed and registered with Spanish social security, healthcare is often covered publicly — but private cover can bridge the gap before that starts, or add speed, choice and English-speaking support. This guide explains the route; we help with the insurance.
The Spanish work visa (residence and work authorisation, cuenta ajena) is for non-EU citizens who have a job offer from an employer in Spain. The employer is usually closely involved, and the role often needs to meet labour-market and qualification conditions. It leads to a residence and work permit and a TIE card.
This is the route guide. For cover, see our commercial page, work visa health insurance. We help with the insurance only; we do not process the visa or give immigration advice.
Who it suits
Senior or specialist hires may instead use the faster Highly Qualified Professional route.
Who it doesn't suit
Requirements
The employer typically initiates or supports the authorisation, and the role and salary usually need to meet defined conditions. As the applicant you provide identity, qualifications, a criminal-record certificate and other documents. Exact requirements vary by role and change over time — confirm with the employer and a qualified immigration specialist. See broader Spain visa requirements.
Process
The employer initiates or supports the permit.
Identity, qualifications, criminal-record certificate.
Where required, after authorisation.
TIE, social-security registration, padrón.
Public via social security once registered; private to bridge.
Healthcare
Once you are employed and registered with Spanish social security, you and your dependants generally gain access to public healthcare. Before that point — or for faster appointments, choice of specialist and English-speaking support — private health insurance is often useful. We do not claim private insurance is always required for the work route; it depends on your timing and preferences.
Timeline
The employer initiates or supports the work authorisation in Spain.
Where required, after authorisation is granted.
Enter Spain to start the role.
Apply for the TIE; the employer registers you with social security.
Public access once registered; private cover bridges any gap.
Renew with continued employment.
Ajena vs propia
Spanish work authorisation distinguishes cuenta ajena (employed by an employer) from cuenta propia (self-employed). This guide focuses on the employed route. If you will work for yourself, the self-employed / autónomo path applies — and remote work for foreign clients is usually the DNV instead.
Employer-led
The employed work route is largely employer-driven: the employer usually initiates or supports the authorisation, and the role and salary often need to meet defined conditions. As the applicant you provide identity, qualifications and certificates. Keep in close contact with the employer’s HR or legal team, who lead the immigration steps.
When SS starts
Public healthcare on the work route follows social-security registration, which the employer completes around the start of employment. Until that registration is active, you may have no public cover — the gap private insurance is designed to bridge.
Changing employer
Work authorisations can be tied to the employer and role, so changing jobs may require modifying your permit. This is an immigration matter to confirm with a specialist; your private health cover can usually continue through any transition.
Avoid
Why private
Examples
Compare
| Route | Basis | Work in Spain | Healthcare |
|---|---|---|---|
| Work visa (employee) | Spanish job offer | Yes | Social security |
| Highly Qualified Professional | Senior / specialist job | Yes (faster) | Social security |
| Digital Nomad Visa | Remote foreign work | Remote only | Private / social security |
| Entrepreneur / startup | Own innovative business | Yes (own business) | Private then social security |
Timeline
Between arriving (or starting the role) and your Spanish social-security registration becoming active, there can be a window with no public-healthcare access. This gap is the most common reason work-route movers take private cover — it keeps you and your family covered from day one while the paperwork completes. Once social security is active, you can review whether to keep private cover for speed and choice.
Family
Family members relocating with you generally gain public-healthcare access once you are in the social-security system, but may need private cover until then — or for faster access and English-speaking support. We can quote family cover alongside yours. If your family will join you in Spain, see our guide to family reunification.
Documents
The employer typically provides the job contract and supports the work authorisation, with company and role evidence.
Passport, qualifications, and a criminal-record certificate (apostilled and sworn-translated) where required.
TIE application, social-security registration (employer-led), and padrón.
Exact lists vary by role and change — confirm with the employer and a specialist. See broader Spain visa requirements.
After arrival
Before day one
There is often a window between arriving in Spain (or getting your visa) and your first day of employment — and social-security-based public healthcare usually does not start until you are registered through the job. In that window you have no public cover, which is the most common reason work-route movers take private insurance: it keeps you and your family protected from arrival until the public system activates.
Family healthcare
Family relocating with you generally gain public-healthcare access as your dependants once you are in the social-security system — but not before. Private family cover bridges that gap, and some families keep it afterwards for faster access and English-speaking support. We can quote family cover alongside yours.
Renewal
Work permits are renewed while you remain employed and meeting the conditions, building towards long-term residence over time. If your job, employer or circumstances change, you may need to modify the permit — for example moving to a different employer or to the HQP route. Through any renewal or change, keep your healthcare arrangements continuous; we can keep private cover in place so there is never a gap while paperwork updates.
Health insurance
See work visa health insurance, compare Sanitas Residents and comprehensive cover, or get a quote.
How we help
We arrange suitable Sanitas private cover where it helps your work-route move — bridging a gap before social security, or for choice and English-speaking support. We do not process the visa or give immigration advice. Get a quote.
Important information
Tell us your timing and we will arrange suitable private cover to bridge or supplement your work-route healthcare. 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.
English-speaking Sanitas specialists can help with the health-insurance part of your visa or residency application.
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.