A Spain Short-Stay Tourist Visa is a permit that allows you to travel to Spain for the main purpose of performing touristic activities, like vacation, sightseeing, exploring and visiting friends or family members living in Spain and staying there for a maximum of 90 days within a 180-day period.
You will not need to apply for a Spanish tourist visa if you are from:
However, if you are a national of any of the world countries not listed above will need to apply for a visa in advance, before taking a trip to Spain for any of these two purposes.
To apply for a Spain tourist visa, you need to submit the following required documents:
In addition, you will also need to submit proof of employment status, according to your situation, as follows:
To apply for a Spain Tourist or Visitor visa you will need to follow these steps:
As soon as you make the appointment, you should start collecting the documents required to present on the day of your appointment. Start with the application form.
There is one common visa application form for all types of short-stay visas, for every country in the Schengen territory. Complete this form, print it, and then sign it at the end.
After you complete the form, check if all your questions are correct and if you made any typo. Note that your answers in this form must comply with the information in the rest of the required documents for a Spain Visitor Visa or Spain Tourist Visa, whichever you are applying for.
After figure out the two things listed above, you should make an appointment for the submission of your visa application file and the interview.
You can make an appointment for a Spain Visa application through the website of the authority responsible for the admission of your application or through a phone call. In some countries, there is only one option available, while in others are both.
Next, proceed collecting the rest of the documents required for a Spain Visitor Visa, or Spain Tourist Visa, according to your purpose of the application.
Once you make the appointment, and you have all the required documents ready, you should wait for the day of your interview.
When that day comes, make sure you show up at the Spanish embassy/consulate/VAC on time. Have all your documents with you, arranged in order. You will attend a meeting with a consular officer. The latter will ask you questions regarding your trip to Spain, the purpose of the application for a visa, and will ask you to hand the documents to her/him.
If this is the first time in the last 5 years that you are applying for your Schengen visa, you will also need to provide your biometric data – your facial image and fingerprint.
You will need to pay a fee of €90 to apply for a Spain Tourist Visa or a Spain Visitor Visa. The fee is required in order to cover the expenses that come out of the processing of your application.
Note that children under the age of 12 are subject to a fee of €45, while those under six are exempt from any fee for a Spain short-stay visa.
In addition, the nationals of a few countries and several other categories are exempt from paying a fee for a short-stay visa for Spain. Check here for a full list of these categories.
The Spanish authorities are responsible for the admission and the processing of your application only if Spain is your main Schengen destination, which means:
Once you make sure that Spanish authorities are the ones responsible for the admission of your visa application, check at which Spanish representation in your country you should lodge your application. This could be:
According to the Short Stay visa rules for Spain, the earliest that you can submit an application is six months before the date of your planned trip to Spain, while the latest is two weeks in advance.
Normally, the Schengen embassies, including the Spanish ones, are obliged to process visa applications for short-term visas for tourism and visiting within a period of 15 days. Yet, in some cases this period may be extended for 30 days, or even 60 days.
Such extension may happen at times when the embassy where you lodge your application is receiving many requests for visa application processing, or due to your specific case.
A Spain tourist or visitor visa can be valid for a maximal period of three months within half a year. Yet, it is the authority that grants you the visa that decides on the validity of your visa, depending on how they see it reasonable. You can calculate your legal stay in Spain here.
While you can get a visa valid for three months, you can also get one valid for three days. When you receive your passport with the Spain visa sticker on it, pay attention to the following tags:
The visa sticker in your passport contains a lot of other information, as the countries in which you may not be permitted to enter, the permitted number of entries with that visa, etc. Check how to read a Schengen visa sticker to learn more.
If you receive a negative response on your Spain visa application, you will also get a letter with a reason why your application is being rejected. In this case, you have two choices:
You can extend your Spain tourist or visitor visa only in some very specific cases as late entry, humanitarian reasons, force majeure, or other important personal reasons.
A Spain visa permits you to visit all Schengen countries, as long as it is valid. Pay attention to your visa sticker if it contains the minus sign (-) and the acronym of any Schengen country, i.e. SCHENGEN STATES (-DK). This will mean that you will not be able to enter only that particular country, in our example Denmark.
No, you cannot work in Spain with a tourist or visitor visa. You will instead have to apply for a Spanish work visa, or even a working holiday visa.
You can visit your family members in Spain with a Spanish Visitor visa, but you cannot settle and live with them. Instead, you will need to apply for a Spanish family visa.