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Get a Quote →Everything English-speaking applicants need to understand Spanish visas — short stays, long-stay residence routes, who needs a visa, what each one requires, the application process, life after arrival, and exactly where private health insurance fits in.
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Moving to Spain almost always starts with two questions: which visa do I need, and what does it require? This hub answers both, then walks the whole journey — visa type, requirements, documents, the application itself, life after arrival, and the private health-insurance step that most long-stay routes depend on.
Use it as your map. Each route and stage links to a dedicated guide so you can go as deep as you need. Throughout, we are clear about our role: we are English-speaking Sanitas health insurance specialists. We do not process visa applications or give immigration advice — we make sure the health-insurance part of your application is sorted correctly.
If you already know your route, jump to Spain visa types, the requirements, or the application process. If you just need cover, go straight to a personalised quote.
The basics
A Spanish visa is official permission to enter Spain for a particular purpose and length of stay. For short trips, many travellers do not need one at all; for living, working, studying or joining family in Spain, non-EU citizens generally need a long-stay (national) visa obtained before they move, which then leads to a residence card once they arrive.
Spain is part of the Schengen Area, so short-stay rules are shared across much of Europe, while long-stay residence visas are governed by Spanish national law. That distinction — Schengen short-stay versus Spanish national long-stay — underpins everything else on this page.
Two categories
Short-stay (Schengen): up to 90 days in any 180-day period, for tourism, visiting family or business. Many nationalities are visa-exempt for this; others apply for a Schengen visa. It is not a residence permit and cannot, by itself, be turned into one. Short-stay visitors normally rely on travel insurance rather than a Spanish residence health policy.
Long-stay (national) visas: for living in Spain beyond 90 days. These are applied for at a Spanish consulate in your country of residence, or for some routes from inside Spain, and lead to a TIE residence card after arrival. Many non-EU long-stay routes require comprehensive private health insurance from an insurer authorised in Spain, unless the applicant is covered through Spanish social security, an employer route or another accepted arrangement.
| Feature | Short-stay (Schengen) | Long-stay (national) |
|---|---|---|
| Length | Up to 90 days / 180 | Beyond 90 days |
| Purpose | Tourism, family visit, business | Living, working, studying, family |
| Leads to residence? | No | Yes (TIE card) |
| Insurance | Travel insurance | Comprehensive private cover (most routes) |
| Applied for | Often visa-exempt, or Schengen visa | Consulate or in-Spain |
Who needs one
Whether you need a visa depends on your nationality and how long you want to stay:
If you are unsure which group you fall into, confirm with the relevant Spanish consulate — nationality rules change and we cannot advise on immigration eligibility.
The routes
For people moving to Spain long-term, the route depends mainly on how you will support yourself. The most common options:
| Route | Best for | Work in Spain? | Insurance |
|---|---|---|---|
| Non-Lucrative Visa (NLV) | Living on savings or a pension | No | Private cover required |
| Digital Nomad Visa (DNV) | Remote workers & freelancers | Remote, foreign clients | Private or social-security route |
| Work visa | Employees with a Spanish job offer | Yes | Often via social security |
| Highly Qualified Professional | Senior/specialist roles, Blue Card | Yes | Social security / employer scheme |
| Student visa | Studying 3+ months | Limited | Student or private cover |
| Family reunification | Joining a resident family member | Depends on permit | Cover for each member |
| Entrepreneur / startup | Founders, innovative projects | Yes (own business) | Private cover commonly needed |
Dedicated guides: NLV · Digital Nomad Visa · work visa · Highly Qualified Worker · student visa · family reunification · entrepreneur visa. Not sure which fits? See which Spain visa you need.
Note on the Golden Visa: Spain’s residency-by-investment scheme closed to new applicants in 2025. Most former candidates now look at the Non-Lucrative or Digital Nomad Visa instead.
Insurance fit
Private health insurance is one of the most common requirements across Spanish long-stay routes — and one of the easiest to get wrong. Depending on the route, the policy usually needs to provide full cover in Spain, no co-payments for the insurer’s benefit where the route expects it, and a certificate showing the right details. A travel policy or a simple quote is not enough.
This is the part we handle. We match your route to a suitable Sanitas policy, make sure the certificate wording is right for the consulate, and time the start date around your move.
| Route | Typical insurance position |
|---|---|
| Non-Lucrative Visa | Comprehensive private cover, full cover in Spain, usually no co-payment |
| Digital Nomad Visa | Full private cover, or private alongside Spanish social security (autónomo/employee) |
| Student visa | Student or private cover for the study period |
| Work / HQP | Often covered via Spanish social security once employed; private may bridge the gap |
| Family reunification | Cover for each family member, each named on a certificate |
| EU registration | Private cover if not working / no public entitlement |
Start with visa-compliant health insurance, compare comprehensive cover and copay vs no-copay, or browse health insurance by nationality.
Where you apply
Most long-stay visas are applied for at the Spanish consulate covering your country of residence: you book an appointment, attend in person with your documents, give biometrics, and wait for the decision before travelling. Some routes — notably the Digital Nomad Visa and certain residence permits — can be applied for from inside Spain after a legal entry.
The route determines which path applies, and consulates differ in their appointment systems and document formatting. Always confirm the current procedure for your route and consulate before you begin. Whichever path you use, the health-insurance certificate is usually needed at submission, so it is worth arranging early.
Documents
Document lists vary by route, but most long-stay applications draw from the same core set:
Legalisation takes time, so start early. See the full Spain visa requirements and the step-by-step application process.
After arrival
A long-stay visa gets you to Spain; a few formalities then make you resident:
We focus on the insurance step; the NIE, TIE and padrón are part of the wider process and have their own dedicated guides.
Avoid these
Getting the insurance right early removes several of these risks at once.
The journey
Match your situation to a visa type.
Income, documents, health insurance, criminal record.
Apostilles and sworn translations take time.
Most long-stay routes need a compliant private policy.
Slots can be limited — plan ahead.
Processing times vary by route and consulate.
NIE, TIE, padrón and activating your cover.
See the full application process for the detail.
How we help
Our role is narrow and clear: we help English-speaking applicants arrange the Sanitas private health insurance that many Spanish visa and residency routes require. That means matching a suitable policy to your route, getting the certificate wording right for the consulate, timing the start date to your move, and giving you a personalised quote — in plain English.
We do not handle visa applications or give immigration advice. Visa and residency decisions are made by the Spanish authorities. For the application itself, work with a qualified immigration specialist or the relevant consulate.
Compare visa-compliant health insurance, Sanitas Residents and Residents Platinum, or request a quote.
Important information
Tell us your visa route and situation and we will help you choose a suitable Sanitas policy, get the certificate wording right, and request a personalised quote. 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.