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Education
Education system in Spain: legal status of public, private and mixed schools
Detailed overview of the education system in Spain: public, private and concertado schools, legal status and features of choice.
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Each direction is a separate strategy with clear deadlines, stages and results
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Residence permit Nomad
Digital nomad residence permit for 3 years
i For remote workers and freelancers with income from abroad. Obtaining a residence permit for 3 years with the possibility of extension.
Benefits:
- Language knowledge: not required
- Family: spouse and children under 18 years of age
Main parameters:
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Validity period: 3 years
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Receipt time: from 5 weeks
Price: from €2,500More details -
Residence permit Nomad
Residence permit Nomad with search for remote work
i For those who want to live and work in Europe. We help with the contract, proof of income and preparation of documents.
Benefits:
- Language knowledge: not required
- Family: spouse and children under 18 years of age
Main parameters:
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Validity period: 3 years
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Receipt period: 4 months
Price: from €12,300More details -
Student residence permit
Student residence permit in Spain for 1 year
i For those who want to live legally in Spain through training. No high income requirements.
Benefits:
- Language knowledge: not required
- Family: spouse and children under 18 years of age
Main parameters:
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Validity period: 1 year
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Receipt period: 3 months
Price: from €1,500More details -
Financially independent
Residence permit for financially independent persons
i For applicants with passive income or savings. No need to work in Spain.
Benefits:
- Language knowledge: not required
- Family: spouse and children under 18 years of age
Main parameters:
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Validity period: 1 year
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Receipt period: 6 months
Price: from €2,000More details -
Business
Business immigration and company formation
i Registration of a residence permit through opening or transferring a business to Spain. Support at all stages of document submission.
Benefits:
- Language knowledge: not required
- Family: spouse and children under 18 years of age
Main parameters:
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Validity period: 1 year
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Receipt period: 8 months
Price: from €4,000More details -
permanent residence
Permanent residence permit for 5 years
i Permanent residence status in Spain with the right to work and business. Registration of permanent residence on legal grounds.
Benefits:
- Language knowledge: not required
- Family: no
Main parameters:
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Validity period: 5 years
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Receipt period: 6 months
Price: from €90,000More details -
Citizenship
Spanish citizenship under the 2 year program
i Assistance in legal programs for obtaining Spanish citizenship. Preparation of documents and support at all stages of the process.
Benefits:
- Knowledge of the language: preparation and passing the state exam. exam
- Family: no
Main parameters:
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Validity period: unlimited
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Receipt period: 2 years
Price: from €182,000More details
Navira Global blog about Spain: visas, residence permits, taxes, medicine, education and documents
Navira Global blog about Spain created for people who don’t want to assemble their move from random advice, outdated checklists and short answers in the comments. Here we analyze Spain as a system: what documents are needed for legal entry and residence, how a visa differs from a residence, when tax residency appears, how medicine and insurance work, what to do with a diploma, how to choose a school for a child, and why the same route can be simple for one family and risky for another. The materials are written around practical issues that arise before filing, while waiting for a decision, and after moving.
The main value of this section is not that it repeats general formulations about life by the sea. We look at Spain through documents, deadlines, money, legal status and everyday consequences. If a person studies Residence permit in Spain, Digital Nomad Visa Spain, student visa, diploma homologation, Spanish taxes, health insurance or the school system, it is important for him to understand not only the list of requirements, but also the logic of decisions: why the certificate must be recent, why an apostille is needed, how to read the insurance conditions, when income becomes an argument for the migration authority, and when it remains just a number on the statement.
Blog cards are collected in key areas: legalization, education, medicine and insurance, business and taxes, family issues, real estate, news and practical guides. This order helps to quickly find material for the task, but the topics themselves are interconnected. The person who designs Residence permit for a digital nomad in Spain, will almost inevitably be faced with tax residency, TIE, insurance, rent, school for children and proof of professional status. Therefore, the blog should be read not as a collection of disparate articles, but as navigation through a real moving scenario.
Digital nomad residence permit in Spain: what is important to understand before applying
One of the central blog materials is dedicated to the topic Residence permit for a digital nomad in Spain 2026. This is not just a popular visa for remote workers, but a legal regime where every connection matters: who pays the applicant, where the employer or customer is registered, whether the work can be done remotely, what income is confirmed by documents, how long the professional activity has existed and whether the package is ready to withstand the inspection of the Spanish side. That is why in the article about Digital Nomad we separately consider the requirements for income, remote format, contracts, certificates and family applications.
People often start with the question: “How much money do you need to show for Nomad Spain?” In practice, the amount is important, but it does not replace the structure of the case. The income should not only be sufficient, but also understandable. If the applicant receives a salary, documents from the employer and confirmation of the right to work remotely are required. If a person is a freelancer, contracts, invoices, regularity of receipts and proof that clients are located outside of Spain are important. If the applicant owns a business, you will have to explain the relationship between the company, personal income, and management role. That's why Digital Nomad Spain starts with a diagnosis, not a questionnaire.
In the blog we also emphasize the family aspect. For a spouse, children and financially dependent family members, the requirements do not disappear, but expand: documents on kinship, translations, apostilles, correct calculation of income and a unified filing strategy are needed. An error in the certificate, certificate period or translation may delay the entire package. If a family is planning for school, rent, health insurance and future renewals, it's best to consider these issues right away. Strong case on Spanish residence permit for remote work must answer not only the question “will they approve,” but also the question “how to live after approval.”
It is especially important to understand the difference between filing through the consulate and filing within Spain. In one scenario, a person obtains a visa before entry and then arranges next steps on the spot. In another, he is already in Spain legally and is applying for residence. Each route has its own deadlines, restrictions, document requirements and risks. In blog articles, we do not push everyone to one option, because migration strategy depends on citizenship, current status, family composition, willingness to wait and the quality of the original documents.
Student visa: not only study, but also a legal life scenario
The material on the student visa to Spain answers a question that often sounds simpler than it looks in the documents: is it possible to move through study and live in the country legally. Student visa to Spain Suitable for those entering an educational institution, language program, vocational training or other format that meets the requirements. But the idea of “going to study” itself is not enough. The Spanish side looks at the curriculum, accreditation, duration, payment, financial security, health insurance and intention to comply with the conditions of stay.
In the blog, we look at what documents are usually needed for a student route: invitation or confirmation of enrollment, passport, application form, insurance, proof of funds, police clearance certificate for long-term programs, medical documents, translations and apostilles. The calendar is also important: registration at the consulate, review period, start date of studies, validity period of documents and entry plan must match. If documents are prepared without taking into account dates, a person may receive a formally complete package, which in practice is difficult to submit on time.
The student visa is also related to future decisions. A person may be planning an extension of education, a transition to work, an internship, a change in status, or a family move. Therefore, it is useful to understand in advance what actions are permissible, what restrictions a student’s stay has, and how not to confuse a study route with a full-fledged work residence. In this sense, the article on the student visa complements the materials about Residence permit in Spain: it shows an alternative path to legalization, but does not promise that it is suitable for everyone without exception.
Education in Spain: schools, legal status and family choices
When a family moves, education is almost always one of the top decisions. The blog has a separate article about the Spanish education system, which discusses public, private and mixed schools, the legal status of the child, documents for registration and the real differences between the options. It is important for parents not only to find a “good school,” but also to understand how the area of residence affects access to a government place, what documents will be required, how languages of instruction work, and what will happen if the family is still in the process of obtaining status.
The Spanish school system is structured differently than the usual models in many countries. There is compulsory education, autonomous regional regulations, different language regimes, municipal procedures and application deadlines. In some regions, residence registration or address registration is important, in others the availability of available places plays a significant role. A private school can provide more flexibility, but requires budget and program review. A mixed school often seems like a compromise, but it also has enrollment rules and payment features. Therefore, an article about schools is needed not for general erudition, but for family planning.
If the family registers Residence permit in Spain, the child’s school should not be considered separately from the migration package. We need documents about kinship, translations, insurance, residential address, understanding of the timing of the move and financial support. Sometimes it is important for parents to be in time for the start of the school year; sometimes it is wiser to secure their status first and then choose a school without haste. In the blog we show that the educational issue is not limited to the rating of the institution: it is related to the legal status of the family, region, language, budget and future adaptation of the child.
Diploma homologation: when confirmation of education becomes the key to a profession
A separate blog topic - confirmation of diploma in Spain, or homologation. For some professions, a diploma is needed as a formality for the employer, for others it provides access to regulated activity, a professional association or further training. In the article on homologation, we explain how diploma recognition differs from a simple translation, when an official procedure is needed, what documents to prepare and why the deadlines can be long. This is especially important for doctors, engineers, teachers, lawyers and specialists whose profession involves licensing.
Homologation begins not with submission, but with verification of the target. If a person wants to work in a profession, he needs to understand whether this activity is regulated in Spain. If you are planning a master's degree or other educational program, the requirements may differ. If a diploma is needed to strengthen your migration case, sometimes proof of qualifications and experience is sufficient, but sometimes a more formal format is required. Therefore, in the blog we share practical scenarios: employment, study, professional license, confirmation of competence for a visa or residence.
Documents for homologation require accuracy: diploma, application, curriculum, hours, translations, apostille, sometimes additional certificates and confirmations. An error in title, incorrect hours, incomplete translation, or lack of required legalization may result in a request for additional materials. For someone already making plans to move, this could mean months of waiting. Therefore, the article about the diploma logically coexists with materials about education in Spain and legalization: the professional future often depends on how early the preparation of documents begins.
Medicine and insurance: how not to make mistakes in basic security
The material on medicine in Spain in 2026 examines a question that cannot be left to the last minute. Health insurance for Spain needed not only for peace of mind, but also for many visa and residency procedures. In this case, the insurance must meet the requirements of a specific route: coverage, absence of unnecessary surcharges, validity period, territory, terms of service and policy format may be important. A cheap policy chosen by name sometimes does not solve the problem if its conditions are not suitable for application.
The Spanish medical system combines public and private circuits. Access to free assistance depends on status, registration, work, social contributions and regional regulations. It is important for a new resident to understand where he can get help right away, how to choose private insurance, what to do with chronic diseases, how to read exceptions in the contract and why “I have travel insurance” does not always equal “my policy is suitable for a residence permit.” In the blog we explain this in practical terms, because an error in insurance can be a problem for both your filing and your life.
Medicine is especially important for families, students, older people and applicants with children. It is better to understand issues of vaccination, pediatrics, pregnancy, prescriptions, urgent care and private clinics in advance. If a person moves to Digital Nomad Visa Spain, student visa or other basis, insurance must be built into the overall package of documents. In this sense, the medical blog material helps not only to choose a policy, but also to see the connection between legal status and access to basic services.
Taxes in Spain: residency, rates and consequences of moving
An article on the Spanish tax system answers one of the most sensitive questions: when does a person become a tax resident in Spain and what does this change? Spanish tax residence does not always coincide with the date of receipt of the card or visa. Days of residence, center of vital interests, family, work, source of income and international agreements are important. Therefore, a person who plans to live in Spain for a long time should look at taxes in advance, especially if he has a remote job, business, dividends, real estate or income from several countries.
In the blog we examine basic concepts: resident and non-resident, tax rates, declarations, social contributions, possible regimes for specialists, income from work, entrepreneurship, rent, investments and foreign assets. There is no point in promising one universal figure, because the tax burden depends on the region, type of income, family situation, status and applicable rules. But it makes sense to explain what questions need to be asked before moving, so as not to discover the consequences after a person begins to live in the new system.
For applicants for Residence permit of Spain Digital Nomad The tax topic is especially important. Remote income, foreign employer, freelancing, own company, autónomo registration, possible preferential treatment and future extensions are interconnected. Sometimes a migration-friendly income structure requires a separate tax assessment. Sometimes it’s the other way around: a tax decision affects how best to prepare work and documents. Therefore, the Navira blog considers taxes not as a dry table of rates, but as part of a strategy for living in Spain.
Legalization of documents: apostille, translation and package quality
Almost any route to Spain depends on documents: certificates, certificates, contracts, diplomas, bank statements, insurance, letters from employers, proof of income and family documents. In the blog we constantly return to the topic legalization of documents for Spain, because it is she who often decides the fate of the serve. A document may be correct in content, but unsuitable in form: there is no apostille, the validity period has expired, the translation was made in the wrong way, the name is written differently, the required page is missing, or the amount does not match another certificate.
An apostille is needed not for beauty or “just in case,” but as confirmation of the legal validity of a document outside the country of issue. The translation must be understandable to the Spanish authorities and comply with the requirements of the specific procedure. Sometimes a sworn translation is needed, sometimes a different format is acceptable, but the decision depends on the place of submission and the type of document. If the applicant is preparing a police clearance certificate, marriage certificate, diploma or corporate documents, it is important to check in advance where and how to legalize them, how long it will take and what the validity period will be at the time of submission.
The quality of the package is evident in the details. A good kit answers the reviewer's questions before they arise: who the applicant is, why he is eligible for the chosen status, how income, relationship, profession, insurance, address and absence of impediments are verified. This approach reduces the risk of requests and makes the process smoother. Therefore, the blog treats documents not as a formal list, but as an evidence base for visas to Spain, residence, study, work, school, medicine and professional recognition.
How to use a blog: from the first idea to life after approval
If you are just starting to explore Spain, it is logical to read the blog from general to specific. First you need to understand which path is right for you: Digital Nomad Visa Spain, student visa, financially independent status, family scenario, business immigration or other option. Then you need to check the documents: passport, income, contracts, certificates, diplomas, family certificates, insurance and deadlines. After this, it makes sense to compare application routes, prepare transfers, plan entry and think about TIE, address registration, school, taxes and the medical system.
If you have already chosen a route, a blog helps you see your weak points. A remote worker should carefully read the materials about a digital nomad residence permit, tax residency and insurance. For a family with children - articles about schools, medicine, documents and family filings. For students - material about a student visa, financial support, insurance and future status options. For a specialist with a diploma - analysis of homologation and professional recognition. For entrepreneurs - topics on taxes, business structure, income verification and long-term planning.
The convenience of a blog is that it does not separate legal requirements from life. Getting approval is important, but after it other tasks begin: signing up for imprints, applying for a TIE, rent, registration, school, insurance card, banking and consumer services, renewals, taxes, change in family situation or job. Therefore, each material should be read with the question: “What does this mean for my next step?” This approach turns the information into an outline rather than an endless folder of saved links.
Why Navira materials are useful for indexing and for a living reader
SEO text for a blog should not be a set of repeated keywords. The search engine understands better and better whether the page responds to a real request: whether there is a structure, whether related topics are covered, whether precise terms are used, whether the text matches the content of the cards, whether there are specifics on documents, deadlines, statuses and consequences. Therefore, important phrases are naturally highlighted in this block: Residence permit in Spain, digital nomad visa Spain, student visa to Spain, taxes in Spain, medicine in Spain, homologation of diploma in Spain, legalization of documents. They are built into meaning, not scattered for the sake of density.
This is also important for the reader. A person who comes from a search should quickly understand that they are not on a general display, but in a section where answers to real moving problems are collected. Cards provide entry into specific articles, categories help you narrow down a topic, and a long overview explains how the materials are related to each other. Such text is useful for indexing because it expands the semantics of the blog page, and is useful for the user because it shows in advance a map of issues that will have to be resolved.
Navira Global works with Spain as a practical route: from the choice of basis to documents, submission, approval, adaptation and renewal. Therefore, the blog is not trying to replace an individual consultation, but helps you prepare for it much better. The more accurately a person understands their status, income, family situation, education, medical needs and tax implications, the easier it is to build a realistic strategy. This is the task of the section: to give not a beautiful promise, but clear support for the decision to move.
The main topics covered by the Navira Global blog
The section contains materials on topics that most often become key for future residents of Spain: obtaining a residence permit in Spain, digital nomad, student status, diploma confirmation, Spanish school, health insurance, free assistance, tax rates, tax residency, family relocation, documents for children, transfers, apostille, TIE, NIE, extension of residence, working for a foreign employer, freelancing, business, income from abroad and legal adaptation after entry.
Each of these topics may seem separate until a person begins to prepare for the actual move. Then it turns out that a police clearance certificate is needed on time, insurance must match the requirements, the school depends on the address, taxes depend on the actual life, the diploma may require a long procedure, and the remote income must be explained with documentation. A blog helps you see these connections in advance. This saves time, reduces anxiety and makes the conversation with a lawyer or consultant substantive.
If your goal is moving to Spain without chaos, the blog should be used as a working reference. Save materials along your route, compare requirements, check document deadlines, and do not transfer other people’s cases to yourself without analysis. Spain offers many legal opportunities for living, studying, working and family adaptation, but each opportunity requires careful preparation. This is exactly what the Navira Global blog is built on: less noise, more practice, more connection between the law, documents and real life.
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