Study abroad in Spain
Visa, costs, healthcare and the best cities for exchange students in Spain.
Capital
Madrid
Languages
Spanish (Castilian) nationwide / Catalan/Valencian, Basque, Galician, and other co-official languages in their autonomous communities
Academic Year
Most universities run a fall semester from September to January and a spring semester from February to June, with exam periods at the end of each term.
Population
49,128,297
Typical Budget
EUR 850 - 1,500/month
Overview
Warm, social, and exchange-friendly, with strong Erasmus networks, good public transport, and easier day-to-day living costs than many Western European study destinations.
Country Overview
What student life feels like in Spain.
Spain works especially well for exchange students who want a social semester, solid public universities, and a lifestyle that feels lively without being impossible to navigate on a student budget. Madrid and Barcelona are the most expensive entry points, but cities like Valencia stay noticeably easier on rent while still offering big-campus energy. Expect late mealtimes, strong regional identities, fast high-speed rail between major cities, and a bureaucracy that rewards students who prepare documents early.
Country Framework
What shapes student life in Spain.
Use this page to understand the legal context, budget baseline, safety feel, and everyday rhythm before comparing cities or universities.
Safety Snapshot
Spain is generally manageable for students, but petty theft is common in crowded tourist zones, nightlife corridors, and busy public transport interchanges.
Before You Land
A few practical setup details students usually sort before arrival
Connectivity, insurance, and secure public WiFi are the boring things you only notice when you need them. Keep them on your checklist, but keep the guide itself front and centre.
Arrival Connectivity
Sort an eSIM before you land
Maps, ride apps, 2FA codes, and WhatsApp are usually the first things students need from the airport.
Coverage Check
Confirm your travel insurance
Even when the university gives guidance, students usually need to double-check what is covered before departure.
Public WiFi
Have a backup for shared networks
Campus halls, airports, and cafés are convenient, but many students prefer an extra privacy layer when they first arrive.
Safety & Cost Indices
Source: Numbeo crowdsourced data. Lower crime = safer. Higher safety = safer.
Crime Index
Low
World avg: 44.7
Safety Index
Moderate
World avg: 55.3
Cost of Living
Moderate cost
EUR 850 - 1,500/month
Crime factors measured
Big Cities vs Small Towns
Big Cities
- Madrid and Barcelona are two of Europe's most vibrant cities for international students — exceptional nightlife, food culture, and universities (Complutense, UAB, UPF, IE Business School).
- Barcelona is more expensive than Madrid, especially for rent, but the Catalan capital has a distinct cosmopolitan and design-forward identity.
- Madrid has a more traditional Spanish atmosphere — bullfighting, flamenco, and the Prado are part of the cultural fabric.
- Both cities have enormous Erasmus communities — social integration is easy but bubble risk is real.
Small Towns
- Salamanca, Granada, and Seville are Spain's classic student cities — beautiful, affordable, and with large language-school and Erasmus populations.
- Granada has a legendary student scene: cheap tapas (free with every drink), proximity to the Sierra Nevada for skiing, and the Alhambra on the doorstep.
- Salamanca's university (founded 1218) is the oldest in Spain — the city's golden stone architecture and student culture make it a uniquely atmospheric place to study.
- San Sebastián and Bilbao in the Basque Country offer a distinct cultural identity, lower Erasmus crowds, and exceptional food.
Culture
Social Norms
- Expect later lunches and dinners than in much of northern Europe; 14:00 lunch and 21:00 dinner are normal.
- People often greet with warmth and more small talk than exchange students expect from purely transactional systems.
- Regional identity matters. In Barcelona and Valencia especially, showing basic respect for Catalan or Valencian goes a long way.
Daily Rhythm
Local pace09:00–11:00
Morning
Spain runs late. Breakfast (desayuno) at a bar: café con leche and a tostada with tomate or a croissant. Most businesses don't fully open until 10:00. Students catch late-morning classes.
14:00–16:00
Midday
La comida is the main event — a full multi-course meal eaten 14:00–16:00. Menú del día (€10–14 with starter, main, dessert, and drink) runs Mon–Fri. Shops close. Most of Spain stops.
17:00–21:00
Afternoon
Siesta/rest 15:00–17:00, then back to life. Shops reopen at 17:00. Late-afternoon socialising and errands. Aperitivo hour from 20:00 — vermouth, olives, patatas bravas.
21:00–23:00
Evening
Dinner starts at 21:30–22:00. Eating at 19:30 = tourist. Tapas bars fill from 21:00. Terrazas (outdoor terraces) packed in summer until midnight.
00:00–05:00
Night
Spanish nightlife starts at midnight. Clubs don't fill until 02:00. Discotecas in Madrid, Barcelona, and Sevilla run until 06:00. Thursday–Sunday is peak.
Food Culture
Menu del dia
EUR 10-16Weekday fixed-price lunch menus are one of the easiest ways to eat well on a student budget.
Lunch is usually the best-value meal of the day; save restaurant dinners for group plans.
Bocadillo or pincho
EUR 3-6Fast, filling, and common near campuses, transit hubs, and neighborhood bars.
University bars and old-school cafeterias usually beat tourist-center prices.
Coffee and toast breakfast
EUR 2.50-4.50A standard weekday breakfast in student neighborhoods.
Local cafes often offer a breakfast combo before mid-morning.
Paella valenciana
EUR 12–22Saffron-infused rice cooked with chicken, rabbit, and green beans in a wide flat pan — the original and most authentic form of Spain's most globally famous dish, from Valencia.
Authentic paella takes 40 minutes to cook; restaurants serving it in under 20 minutes are using pre-cooked rice — look for places that state a 30–40 minute wait.
Gazpacho
EUR 2–6Cold blended soup of tomatoes, cucumber, green pepper, garlic, and olive oil — a refreshing Andalusian summer staple consumed from a glass or bowl.
Gazpacho is sold in cartons at any supermarket for under EUR 2 — one of the cheapest, healthiest, and most culturally authentic things you can drink in Spain.
Tortilla española
EUR 3–8Thick egg and potato omelette — one of the most universally eaten dishes in Spain, served as a tapa, a snack, or a full meal at every bar and cafeteria.
Order a wedge of tortilla at a local bar — it is cheaper than most sandwiches and far more filling as a quick lunch.
Dos and Don'ts
Do
Say hello ('Buenos días', 'Hola') before asking for help in shops, bars, and small offices — skipping this greeting is considered rude, not efficient.
Plan around slower August routines, holiday closures, and reduced office hours — much of Spain operates at significantly reduced capacity in August.
Carry some patience for paperwork; getting frustrated rarely speeds anything up.
Use the local university's Erasmus or buddy ecosystem early instead of waiting to make friends organically.
Do your empadronamiento (census registration at Ayuntamiento) early — it is required for non-EU students staying over 90 days and for some banking and healthcare access.
Use the menu del día (fixed weekday lunch, EUR 10–16) at local restaurants near campus — the best-value cooked food in Spain and a genuine daily saving versus eating à la carte.
Register with your local Centro de Salud (public health centre) if you have EHIC or SNS access — this gives you a GP assignment and priority care route without private insurance costs.
Book Renfe AVE (high-speed rail) tickets 2–3 weeks ahead using the Renfe Joven discount (under 26) — early booking can bring Madrid-Barcelona from EUR 30-50 versus EUR 100+ last-minute.
Don't
Do not assume everyone will automatically switch to English outside international offices and tourist-heavy areas.
Do not sign housing contracts without checking whether bills, deposit rules, and agency fees are included — Spain has no single standard lease, and contract terms vary significantly.
Do not leave your phone or wallet loose in nightlife districts, beaches, or packed metro lines — pickpocketing on Barcelona metro L2/L3 and Madrid Sol area is the most common student risk.
Do not treat regional languages as decorative — on some campuses in Catalonia, Valencia, and the Basque Country, classes and admin use the co-official language and showing basic respect goes a long way.
Do not eat dinner before 20:30 at a proper Spanish restaurant — kitchens genuinely do not serve until then, and trying to eat at 18:00 will find most restaurant doors closed.
Do not underestimate housing demand in Madrid and Barcelona — good rooms near campus are taken 3–5 months before semester start; use university accommodation offices and verified platforms (Uniplaces, Idealista) first.
Do not ignore the Tarjeta Sanitaria Individual (health card) process — EU students can request one at the local Centro de Salud with EHIC; it gives full SNS access and removes the need to pay upfront for most care.
Do not use taxis from airport ranks in Barcelona — officially licensed taxis are fine, but unlicensed touts at El Prat charge 3–4x standard rates; use the Aerobus, metro, or Uber/Cabify instead.
Lifestyle & Travel
Tapas Bar Hopping
In Granada, tapas come FREE with every drink. San Sebastián pintxos are a culinary pilgrimage. This is Spain's most iconic student ritual.
Feria de Abril
Spain's most spectacular fair. Flamenco, horse-drawn carriages, and casetas (private party tents). Book accommodation months in advance.
Camino de Santiago Section
You only need 100km on foot for the Compostela certificate. The Camino Francés from Sarria is the most popular and well-serviced route. Pilgrims pay €10-15/night in albergues.
La Tomatina or San Fermín
Two of Spain's most legendary festivals. Tomatina is a giant tomato fight. San Fermín is the Running of the Bulls — watching from a balcony is safer and equally thrilling.
Day Trip to a Medieval Village
Spain has dozens of perfectly preserved medieval towns within 1 hour of major cities. €10 round-trip bus or cheap RENFE train.
Beach Weekend
Spain has over 5,000km of coastline. Tarifa is Europe's kitesurfing capital. The Canaries offer year-round warmth even in winter.
Festival Calendar
Travel Tips
- Siesta Culture is Real: Many shops close 2-5pm. Schedule errands for mornings or evenings — Spain runs late by default.
- AVE High Speed Rail: Spain AVE network is excellent. Madrid-Barcelona in 2.5h. Book ahead on Renfe for cheap fares.
- Bono Joven Transport: Youth transport passes in Madrid and Barcelona offer 50% discounts on metro for under-26s.
- Dinner at 9pm is Normal: Restaurants often do not fill up until 9-10pm. Eating at 7pm marks you as a tourist.
- Student Price (Precio Reducido): Galleries, museums, and attractions across Spain offer half-price entry with a valid student card.
Benefits & Scholarships
Personalize this layer
Add where you currently study in your profile to separate incoming support from outgoing scholarships.
Support is clearer once we separate incoming help from outgoing mobility money.
Useful either way
Support and discounts that still matter even if you are not in a strict incoming or outgoing case.
Young traveller discounts
Mas Renfe Joven gives discounted rail travel for students aged 14 to 25 on long-distance, medium-distance, and commuter services.
Renfe
Official sourceRegional youth-card discounts
Regional Carnet Joven schemes can unlock discounts on culture, leisure, and selected transport or partner services depending on the autonomous community.
Regional youth-card programmes
Official sourceUniversity sports, menus, and orientation support
Most public universities include subsidised sports access, lower-cost campus meals, welcome sessions, and international-office support in the student ecosystem.
Host universities
Visa Requirements
Difficulty: EasyPassport or national ID, then local EU registration if your stay exceeds 90 days
EU/EEA/Swiss students do not need a student visa, but longer stays normally require local residence formalities after arrival.
No study visa for the study stay itself; a short-stay visa may still depend on your nationality
Spain's study-visa route is for stays exceeding 90 days.
Study visa
Longer exchange stays normally require a study visa, proof of admission, health insurance, and enough financial means.
Application Checklist
4 steps-
1
Confirm whether your exchange stay is above or below 90 days before booking flights.
-
2
Keep your university acceptance letter, proof of funds, and insurance ready in one folder.
-
3
If you are non-EU and staying over 90 days, start the study visa process at least two months early.
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4
If your city asks for local registration or empadronamiento for housing/admin tasks, do it early in your first weeks.
Regional Variations
Catalonia, Valencia, Basque Country, Galicia and other bilingual regions
Local administration, signage, and parts of university life can use a co-official language alongside Spanish.
Canary Islands
The islands run one hour behind mainland Spain.
Health & Healthcare
How It Works
Spain operates a universal public healthcare system (SNS — Sistema Nacional de Salud) funded through general taxation and social contributions. EU/EEA students with a valid EHIC are entitled to the same level of medically necessary treatment as Spanish nationals at public facilities. For stays over 90 days, EU students can request a Tarjeta Sanitaria Individual (health card) at the local Centro de Salud, which gives full ongoing SNS access without paying upfront. Non-EU students must hold private international health insurance that satisfies both visa requirements and provides day-to-day access, since they are not entitled to SNS coverage. Healthcare quality is high: major university hospitals (Hospital La Paz, Hospital Clinic, Hospital Universitario La Fe) are well-equipped, and English is spoken by most specialist doctors in large cities.
Student Needs
EU students: bring EHIC and visit the local Centro de Salud within your first 2 weeks to request your Tarjeta Sanitaria Individual — once issued, all GP visits, specialist referrals, and hospitalisation are free. Non-EU students: arrange a private health insurance policy before departure; Adeslas and Sanitas are widely used insurers that satisfy Spanish student-visa requirements (budget EUR 300–600/year for a compliant plan). All students: campus university health services (Servicio de Salud Universitario) handle minor illness, sexual health, and mental health referrals for enrolled students — register at the start of the semester.
Emergency vs Clinic
Call 112 for all emergencies (unified police, fire, ambulance). For non-urgent after-hours medical care, go to the Urgencias at your nearest Centro de Salud or hospital — public hospital A&E treats all patients. For minor non-urgent issues, use your campus health service or a primary care Centro de Salud appointment with your Tarjeta Sanitaria. Pharmacies (farmacias) with green cross signage are widely available and pharmacists handle minor illness advice and many over-the-counter treatments directly.
Public Coverage Notes
EHIC covers medically necessary treatment at Spanish public SNS facilities for EU students — request the Tarjeta Sanitaria Individual at Centro de Salud for full ongoing access.
Non-EU students: private insurance is a visa requirement; budget EUR 300–600/year for a policy covering Spain with hospitalisation and repatriation.
Campus health services are free for enrolled students regardless of nationality — for routine consultations, mental health, and referrals.
Emergency
112Cities to Explore
Madrid
Spain's biggest exchange hub: strong universities, late-night social life, fast domestic travel, and a housing market that rewards students who start early.
Open City Guide
Barcelona
A coastal, design-heavy student city with global appeal, strong public transport, and one of Spain's most competitive rental markets.
Open City Guide
Valencia
Spain's most balanced exchange city: beach access, a huge Erasmus crowd, lighter rent pressure than Madrid or Barcelona, and an easy everyday…
Open City Guide
Granada
A classic Erasmus city with UGR at the center of daily life, lower rents than Spain's biggest hubs, tapas culture, mountain access,…
Open City Guide
Seville
A warm, sociable Andalusian Erasmus base with big-university scale, strong bike and bus options, Semana Santa and Feria intensity, and summer heat…
Open City Guide
Salamanca
A compact, affordable university city built around Spanish practice, historic streets, student nightlife, and one of Spain's most famous academic identities.
Open City Guide