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Get a Quote →A guide to Spain’s Highly Qualified Professional route and the EU Blue Card — who qualifies, why it is faster, healthcare via social security, and when private cover helps. We help with the Sanitas cover only.
What it is
Spain’s Highly Qualified Professional (HQP) route is for senior managers, specialists and qualified graduates being hired or relocated, and is usually faster than the standard work visa. Healthcare often comes through Spanish social security once employed, with private cover useful to bridge the start or add choice. This guide explains the route; we help with the insurance.
The Highly Qualified Professional (HQP) route is for non-EU professionals in senior, specialist or highly-qualified roles being employed or relocated to Spain. It generally offers a faster, more streamlined process than the standard work visa, and is often used by companies hiring international talent. The related EU Blue Card is a parallel highly-qualified route recognised across much of the EU.
This is the route guide. For cover, see our commercial page, highly qualified worker health insurance. We help with the insurance only; we do not process the visa or give immigration advice.
Who qualifies
If the role is not senior/specialist, the standard work visa route applies instead.
Why faster
The HQP route is designed to attract talent, so it typically has a more streamlined, employer-led process than the general work visa. Exact criteria (salary thresholds, qualifications, role definitions) vary and change — confirm with the employer and a qualified immigration specialist.
EU Blue Card
The EU Blue Card is a highly-qualified-worker permit recognised across many EU countries, with its own salary and qualification thresholds and some mobility benefits within the EU. Whether the HQP national route or the Blue Card suits you depends on your role, salary and plans — take advice. The healthcare and insurance position is broadly similar.
Healthcare
As with other employed routes, once you are registered with Spanish social security you generally gain public-healthcare access. Many highly-qualified hires also receive or choose private cover — whether through an employer package or arranged independently — for speed, choice and English-speaking support. Private insurance is not always required; it depends on timing and preference.
Timeline
Senior, specialist or highly-qualified position.
Usually a streamlined, employer-supported process.
As applicable to your situation.
Apply for the TIE; the employer registers social security.
Public via social security; private bridges any gap or supplements.
Renew with continued qualifying employment.
What counts
‘Highly qualified’ generally points to senior managers, specialists with sought-after skills, and qualified graduates in qualifying roles. The assessment looks at the role, responsibility level, qualifications and salary — the exact criteria change and are applied case by case. Confirm whether your role qualifies with the employer and a specialist.
Sponsorship
The HQP route is employer-led: your employer (or the Spanish entity hiring you) usually drives the authorisation. The company’s HR or legal team handles the immigration steps, while you supply identity, qualifications and certificates. Stay close to that team for timing.
Salary caution
Public healthcare
As with other employed routes, once you are registered with Spanish social security you and your dependants generally gain public-healthcare access. Before that point, or for speed and choice, private cover is useful.
Private before package
Many highly-qualified hires receive a private-health package from the employer — but it may start on the first day of employment, not on arrival, and may not cover family. Independent private cover bridges that window so you are protected from the moment you land. See HQP health insurance.
Ask employer
If the answers leave a gap, we can arrange suitable private cover to fill it.
Examples
Compare
| Feature | HQP (national) | EU Blue Card | Standard work visa |
|---|---|---|---|
| For | Senior / specialist roles | Highly-qualified roles | General employed roles |
| Speed | Usually fast | Comparable | Slower |
| Recognition | Spain | Many EU states | Spain |
| Healthcare | Social security | Social security | Social security |
Not a senior/specialist role? See the standard work visa.
Family
Highly-qualified routes often have favourable family provisions, with dependants able to accompany you. They generally gain public-healthcare access once you are registered with social security, with private cover bridging until then or adding speed and choice. We can quote family cover. If your family will join you in Spain, see our guide to family reunification.
Employer scheme
Where an employer scheme leaves a gap, we can arrange suitable private cover to fill it. Get a quote.
Documents
Job contract for the qualifying role and the company’s support for the authorisation.
Passport, qualifications/degrees, and a criminal-record certificate (legalised) where required.
TIE, social-security registration, and padrón.
Thresholds and lists change — confirm with the employer and a specialist.
After arrival
HQP vs DNV
Both attract international talent, but the HQP route is for a Spanish employer/role, while the Digital Nomad Visa is for working remotely for a foreign employer or clients. If your work is remote for a non-Spanish company, the DNV is usually the right route.
Blue Card detail
The EU Blue Card is a highly-qualified-worker permit recognised across many EU member states. It typically requires a recognised higher qualification (or equivalent experience) and a job offer meeting a salary threshold, and can offer some mobility to work in other EU countries over time. Spain operates both its national HQP route and the Blue Card; which suits you depends on your role, salary and whether intra-EU mobility matters. The healthcare and insurance position is broadly the same for both — public via social security once registered, with private cover bridging or supplementing. Take immigration advice on which permit to pursue.
Relocation
Many highly-qualified hires relocate under an employer package that may include flights, housing support and sometimes health cover. Where health cover is included, check exactly when it starts and who it covers (see the questions above); where it is not, or leaves a gap, independent private cover ensures you and your family are protected from arrival. We arrange the cover and align it with your start date.
Renewal
The HQP permit is renewed while you continue in a qualifying role, building towards long-term residence. Changing employer or role may require a modification, and some holders later move between the national HQP route and the EU Blue Card. Keep your healthcare continuous through any change — an employer scheme may lapse between roles, so private cover can bridge it. We help keep cover in place.
Health insurance
See highly qualified worker health insurance, compare Residents Platinum and comprehensive cover, or get a quote.
How we help
We arrange suitable Sanitas private cover where it helps your HQP move — bridging a gap, supplementing an employer scheme, or covering family. We do not process the visa or give immigration advice. Get a quote.
Important information
Tell us your timing and whether an employer scheme applies, and we will arrange suitable private cover. 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.