Master every requirement for Spain's student visa. From financial thresholds (IPREM calculations) and health insurance compliance to criminal record apostille, medical certificates, and country-specific nuances—we cover it all. Avoid the 12 most common rejection reasons.
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IPREM breakdown, insurance compliance, apostille paths
If your course runs 180 days or longer, you need a formal Student Visa (Visa de Larga Duración para Estudiante) and will obtain a TIE (Tarjeta de Identidad de Extranjero) residence card within 30 days of arrival in Spain. This is the full student visa pathway. All requirements outlined on this page apply to this category.
You are required to meet these standards: financial proof of at least 100% IPREM (~€7,200/year), Spain-approved health insurance (no copayments), criminal record certificate (apostilled and sworn-translated for courses 6+ months), medical certificate (Modelo 06, if 6+ months), and formal accreditation of your institution. These are non-negotiable; applications missing any core requirement are rejected outright.
If your course is shorter than 180 days, you typically apply for a short-stay visa (Schengen D visa) rather than the full student visa. Short-stay applications have relaxed documentation requirements—no TIE, no formal accreditation verification, and simplified accommodation proof. However, you still need health insurance, valid passport, acceptance letter, and basic financial evidence.
EU Citizens: EU and EEA nationals (and Swiss citizens) do not require a visa for short-stay (up to 90 days per 180) or long-stay (residence) in Spain. Instead, you register your empadronamiento (local residence) and apply for a registration certificate (Certificado de Registro). Financial and health insurance requirements still apply if you reside longer than 3 months.
Spain's student visa financial requirement is set at 100% IPREM (Indicador Público de Renta de Efectos Múltiples—Public Income Index for Multiple Effects). For 2026, 100% IPREM equals approximately €7,200/year or €600/month. This figure updates annually each January; consulates use the current year's figure.
Single applicant: €7,200/year minimum (100% IPREM). Calculated monthly, this is €600/month minimum visible on bank statements.
With spouse: Add 75% IPREM = €5,400/year (~€450/month). Total: €12,600/year combined.
With one child: Add 25% IPREM = €1,800/year (~€150/month). Total: €9,000/year combined.
With spouse and two children: 100% + 75% + 25% + 25% IPREM = €14,400/year (~€1,200/month combined).
Consulates require original or certified bank statements showing available liquid funds. Do not confuse this with salary slips, investment statements, or property deeds—only cash accounts and savings accounts count.
Timeline: Provide bank statements covering the most recent 3–6 months. If applying in April for a course starting September, statements should show consistent balances from January through March/April.
Acceptable account types: Current account (cuenta corriente), savings account (cuenta de ahorros), student account (cuenta joven), or Spanish account opened in your name. Joint accounts are acceptable only if the consulate verifies the funds are available to you (typically with a signed letter from the co-holder stating funds are for your use).
Currency conversion: If your statements are in USD, GBP, CNY, or other non-EUR currencies, consulates will convert at the exchange rate on the date of your application. Provide statements in original currency; include a conversion calculation referencing the exchange rate used.
Scholarship as substitute: If you hold a scholarship or grant covering living expenses, you may substitute this for bank statements. Provide a scholarship letter from the granting institution stating the monthly or annual amount awarded. Some consulates still require a small reserve (€1,000–€2,000) even with a scholarship; verify with your consulate.
Sponsor letter: If a family member or organisation is sponsoring your funds, they must provide a notarised letter stating they guarantee your financial support for the duration of your course, with attached bank statements showing their funds. Sponsor statements are scrutinised; consulates verify the sponsor's financial stability and their relationship to you.
Common rejection reasons: Insufficient balance (less than €7,200), sporadic deposits suggesting borrowed funds, multiple withdrawals suggesting funds are not stable, or recent large transfers from unknown sources (consulates may request proof these are not loans).
If you receive a large transfer immediately before applying (e.g., inheritance, family loan, work bonus), include a signed letter explaining the source. Consulates flag sudden influxes as suspicious; transparency prevents delays and rejections.
Spain's student visa mandates private health insurance with very specific requirements. Public healthcare for international students is complex; private insurance is simpler and universally accepted by consulates.
Coverage standards: No copayments (pagos a cargo del usuario), no deductibles (franquicias), no waiting periods (períodos de carencia), and 24-hour emergency coverage worldwide. Policy must cover hospitalisation, outpatient care, prescription medicines, and dental emergencies.
12-month validity: Insurance must run for at least 12 months or for your course duration if longer. Consulates reject policies valid for only 6 months or tied to academic terms if your visa validity is longer.
Policy document format: Submit a certified copy of the full policy document (póliza), not just a quote. Include the policy number, coverage dates, premium amount, and insurer contact details. Some consulates request English translations of key sections; verify with your consulate.
Recommended providers: 247expatinsurance.com (covers UK, EU, US, commonwealth students; policies issued by SURA or Allianz Spain) and spanish-healthinsurance.com (MAPFRE, Adeslas, Sanitas policies). Both specialise in Spain-compliant student plans and issue policies in English with Spanish authority recognition.
When to arrange: Purchase insurance 1–2 months before your course starts. Consulates need time to verify the policy; applications submitted with insurance effective dates in the future (after the visa decision) are often rejected. Ensure your policy effective date is before your visa application submission date or your course start date (whichever is earlier).
Common rejection reasons: Travel insurance (not comprehensive health insurance), plans with copayments or deductibles, international policies not recognised by Spanish authorities, 6-month validity only, or policies issued after application submission date.
For courses 6+ months, consulates require a medical certificate (Modelo 06) issued by any licensed doctor. This form confirms you are free from infectious/contagious diseases, mental illness, or drug dependency that would prevent you from studying safely in Spain.
Who can complete it: Any licensed physician—your home-country GP, a private clinic, or a doctor in Spain once you arrive. The certificate does not require a full medical exam; a doctor's signature on the form suffices.
Form language: Complete in Spanish if possible; English-language certificates are sometimes rejected. Download the Modelo 06 from your consulate website, have your doctor complete it, sign all sections, and stamp with the doctor's official clinic stamp.
Validity: Medical certificates are valid for 3 months from completion. If you apply 6+ months after the certificate date, consulates may request an updated certificate.
Submission: Provide as a colour scan or certified photocopy. Original is retained by the consulate during your interview.
For courses 6+ months, consulates require a criminal record certificate (antecedentes penales or certificado de antecedentes) from your home country. This document must show no criminal convictions.
Who must submit: All applicants age 18+. Minors (under 18) typically do not require criminal record certificates; verify with your consulate if you're 17–18.
Time period covered: For adults, the certificate covers the last 5 years. Some countries issue "lifetime" certificates; these are accepted. If you have a conviction from more than 5 years ago, include a separate letter explaining the conviction and any rehabilitation.
Obtaining the certificate: Contact your home country's police authority, national criminal record office (e.g., FBI Clearance in the US, RCMP in Canada, PNC in India). Processing times vary from 2 weeks to 3 months depending on your country. Start this process early.
Apostille requirement: Your criminal record certificate must be apostilled—certified under the Hague Apostille Convention. This is a signature, seal, and certificate issued by a designated government authority in your home country stating the document is authentic.
How to apostille: After receiving your criminal record certificate, contact your local court, government office, or ministry of justice and request apostille. In the US, each state has a designated apostille office (usually the Secretary of State); in the UK, the Apostille Office is part of the Home Office. Online services (Strix Apostille, The Apostille Company) can obtain apostilles for a fee if you cannot visit in person.
Sworn translation: Your apostilled criminal record must be sworn-translated (traducción jurada) into Spanish by an official Traductor Jurado. This is a certified translator registered with the Spanish government. Translation cost is typically €30–€80; processing time is 2–7 days. Do not use standard translation services; the official jurado stamp is required.
Submission format: Submit the original apostille + certified copy, plus the apostille + Spanish sworn translation (certified copy acceptable). Some consulates request colour scans; originals are retained during your interview.
Apostille + sworn translation can take 6–12 weeks total. If your course starts in September, obtain your criminal record by June at the latest. Delays in this document are a leading cause of missed application deadlines.
Apostille: Certification by a government authority in your home country that the document is authentic. Covers the bank statements, birth certificate, marriage certificate, passport copy, or other official documents. Required for all official documents submitted for Spanish visa applications.
Sworn translation: Certified translation of a document by an official translator (Traductor Jurado) registered with Spanish authorities. The translator signs and stamps the translation, attesting to its accuracy. Required for all documents issued in a non-Spanish language (except English in some EU consulates, but best to translate everything).
Criminal record: Apostille first, then sworn translation of the apostilled document. You cannot translate the document first and apostille the translation; the apostille must be on the original document from your home country.
Bank statements: Consulates accept bank statements in original currency without apostille in most cases. However, if your bank issues statements in a non-English language not understood by the consulate, provide a sworn translation. English-language statements are typically accepted without translation.
Minimum validity: Your passport must be valid for at least 6 months beyond your planned stay in Spain. If your course ends 30 June 2027 and your passport expires 31 December 2027, you meet the requirement (6+ months after course end). If it expires 30 June 2027 (same day as course end), you do not meet the requirement and must renew before applying.
Passport ID page copy: Submit a certified colour photocopy of your passport's ID page (the page with your photo, signature, passport number, and issue/expiry dates). Consulates require certified copies; black-and-white or uncertified photocopies are often rejected.
Renewal timing: If your passport expires before 6 months after your course end, renew it before applying for the visa. Renewal processing times vary: US passports (8–11 weeks standard, 3–5 weeks expedited), UK passports (3–4 weeks), EU passports (2–6 weeks). Build this into your timeline.
Specifications: Two standard photos, 3.5 cm × 4.5 cm (or 35×45 mm), colour, printed on white or light background. No glasses, no head coverings (unless religious, and even then, face must be fully visible). No smiling or serious frown—neutral expression. Taken within last 6 months.
Format: Printed on photo paper or standard paper (consulates accept either). Digital or Polaroid photos are rejected. Visit any photo shop or use online services (Boots, Walgreens, etc.) to have photos printed to specification.
Rejection reasons: Poor quality/blurry, black-and-white photos, head coverings, glasses, photos older than 6 months, or oversized/undersized prints.
Definitive enrolment (matrícula definitiva): Consulates require official confirmation of your enrolment (matrícula) in your course. This is an official document from your institution confirming your place in the programme, course duration, start/end dates, and your enrolment status. Pre-enrolment letters (matrícula provisional) or generic acceptance letters without official enrolment stamp are often rejected. Contact your institution and request your "matrícula definitiva" or "confirmación oficial de matrícula".
Content requirements: The enrolment document must clearly state: institution name and official stamp, your full name and date of birth, course/programme title, course duration (start and end dates), course hours per week, total course hours, and course level (bachelor's, master's, vocational, language course, etc.).
Timing: Request enrolment confirmation only after you have paid any upfront tuition fees. Institutions issue definitive enrolment only once you are fully enrolled and have completed any payment obligations.
Acceptable documents: Signed rental contract (contrato de alquiler), dormitory confirmation letter from your university, family member's hosting letter confirming you will stay with them, or university student housing agreement.
Content requirements: Accommodation proof must clearly state: your full name, the address where you will live, course dates (or at minimum, the period of your stay), and landlord/institution contact information. Generic letters without specific address details are rejected.
Rental contracts: If renting privately, the contract should include landlord's name and ID number (NIF), property address, rental dates, monthly rent, and both your and landlord's signatures. Some consulates require the landlord's bank details or tax registration number for verification.
Shared accommodation: If living with roommates, include the full rental contract showing all residents and the address. Your name must appear on the contract; a roommate's letter confirming you have a room is insufficient.
Family hosting: If staying with family (parents, siblings, cousins), provide a letter from the family member confirming your stay, their relationship to you, and the address. Include the family member's ID copy and contact details. Some consulates request utility bills (electricity, water, gas) or property deed to verify the family member actually resides at that address.
United Kingdom: UK citizens (post-Brexit) are third-country nationals and require a student visa. Criminal record certificates from the UK are issued by the Disclosure and Barring Service (DBS); these are not standard certificates and often require a covering letter explaining they are the official UK equivalent. Apostille from the UK Foreign Office (or the court that issued the underlying certificate). British passports require 6+ months validity.
United States: US citizens require FBI Clearance (UACIC—Uniform Apostille and Certification Information Card) or FBI fingerprint-based clearance. Processing time is 10–16 weeks; order early. FBI Clearance can be ordered online through the FBI's website. Apostille from the US Department of State (if ordered via FBI) or individual state Secretary of State (if state-issued). US passports must have 6+ months validity; most US passports expire 10 years from issuance.
India: Indian criminal record certificates are obtained from your local police commissioner or through the Ministry of External Affairs (MEA). Processing time is 4–12 weeks. Apostille in India is issued by the District Courts or the Ministry of External Affairs. Sworn translation is critical; many Indian applicants face delays due to poorly translated documents. Use a Madrid-accredited Traductor Jurado with experience in Indian documents.
China: Chinese criminal record certificates (无犯罪记录证明 or 无犯罪证明信) are issued by local Public Security Bureaus (PSB). Processing is 2–4 weeks. Apostille is issued by Chinese provincial courts or the Ministry of Foreign Affairs. English-language apostilles are rare; translated apostilles are required. Sworn translation into Spanish is mandatory. Many consulates request additional verification due to language barriers; provide certified documents only.
Nigeria: Nigerian criminal records are obtained from the Nigerian Police Force (NPF). Processing time is 4–8 weeks. Apostille is issued by the Federal Ministry of Justice or the Chief Justice of the Federation. English is Nigeria's official language; most consulates accept English apostilles without translation if the apostille itself clearly states the document is official. However, sworn Spanish translation is still recommended.
Canada: Canadian RCMP Clearance Certificates are obtained through the RCMP's National Police Records Check program. Processing time is 2–6 weeks. Apostille is issued by the provincial Attorney General or the Canadian provincial court system. Most provinces have online apostille services. US/Canada specific: consulates in these countries often have streamlined requirements; contact your Spanish consulate to confirm.
EU/EEA Citizens: EU and EEA nationals (and Swiss citizens) may face different requirements depending on your country of origin. Some EU consulates do not require criminal record certificates for students under 25; verify with your specific consulate. Financial thresholds and health insurance requirements still apply. Passport must be valid throughout your stay (no 6-month rule for EU citizens within EU; Schengen treaty applies).
Bank statements show less than €7,200 (single applicant) or combined thresholds for families. Solution: Wait until your account reaches the required balance before applying, or ask a sponsor to provide their bank statements with a supporting letter.
Your school is not on Spain's official accreditation list. Solution: Request official accreditation confirmation from your institution or check the Ministry of Education database (educacionyfp.gob.es) before applying.
Policy has copayments, deductibles, waiting periods, or is valid for less than 12 months. Travel insurance, international plans, or student plans issued by your home country are often rejected. Solution: Purchase a Spain-specific policy from 247expatinsurance.com or spanish-healthinsurance.com; confirm it has zero copayments and covers emergency services 24/7.
Certificate is not apostilled, apostille is not recognised, translation is poor quality, or the translator is not a certified Traductor Jurado. Solution: Always use a Madrid or Spain-accredited Traductor Jurado (verified through the Ministerio de Justicia); keep original apostille + certified copy + translation together.
Letter lacks course duration, hours per week, official institution stamp, or specific programme name. Generic templates or preliminary acceptance letters are rejected. Solution: Request a new, official matrícula definitiva with all required details and official letterhead/stamp.
Passport expires within 6 months of your course end date or is damaged/has blank pages missing. Solution: Renew your passport before submitting your application.
Rental contract lacks landlord details, utility bills show a different address, or family hosting letter has no contact information. Solution: Ensure accommodation proof explicitly names you as the occupant, includes the full address, course dates, and landlord/host contact information.
Certificate is in English (Spanish-language version required), is older than 3 months, lacks doctor's signature or clinic stamp, or is a blank form. Solution: Ensure completion is by a licensed doctor, signed and officially stamped. If in English, provide a sworn Spanish translation.
Large deposits from unknown sources, frequent withdrawals suggesting funds are borrowed, or no explanation for sudden balance spikes. Consulates flag these as red flags for misrepresentation. Solution: Include a signed letter explaining any unusual transactions (inheritance, family gift, work bonus, loan from family—if a loan, clarify whether it must be repaid and include details).
Your course is under 180 days, but you've applied for a long-stay student visa instead of a short-stay visa. Or you're applying for wrong visa category. Solution: Confirm your course duration. If under 180 days, apply for a short-stay (Schengen D visa) unless your consulate explicitly offers student visas for short courses.
Your acceptance is only "matrícula provisional" (pre-enrolment/conditional) pending final exam results or payment. Consulates require "matrícula definitiva" (definitive enrolment confirming your place is confirmed). Solution: After paying tuition, request updated enrolment confirmation from your institution.
The apostille stamp is photocopied, the apostille certificate is not genuine, or it's missing entirely on documents that require it. Solution: Always request official apostille from government authorities in your home country. Do not use third-party services claiming to "provide" apostilles without verifying they are government-issued.
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