
Moving from the United States to Spain is one of the most popular international relocations for Americans — and for good reason. Lower cost of living, excellent healthcare, Mediterranean climate, and a lifestyle that prioritizes enjoyment over productivity. But the logistics of actually making the move involve months of planning, significant paperwork, and decisions that have long-term financial consequences. This guide covers everything from choosing a visa to shipping your furniture, structured as a timeline you can follow from 12 months out.
Why Americans Move to Spain
The numbers tell the story. Spain consistently ranks in the top 5 countries globally for expat satisfaction. Here’s what Americans gain:
| Category | United States | Spain |
| Healthcare | ~$600/month (individual premium) | €50-150/month (private insurance) |
| Rent (1BR, mid-range city) | $1,500-$2,500 | €600-€1,100 |
| Dining out | $15-25/meal | €10-15/meal |
| Climate | Varies dramatically | 300+ sunny days (Mediterranean coast) |
| Safety | Varies by city | Consistently low violent crime |
| Paid vacation | 0-15 days standard | 22 days minimum (employed) |
| Life expectancy | 77 years | 84 years |
You’re not imagining it — life in Spain is measurably better in most quality-of-life metrics, and measurably cheaper. For a detailed cost comparison, see what you’ll actually spend each month.
12 Months Before: Research and Planning
Choose your visa path. This is the foundational decision. The two main options for Americans:
- Non-Lucrative Visa (NLV): For retirees and passive income earners. Requires €28,800/year in passive income. No work allowed.
- Digital Nomad Visa (DNV): For remote workers. Requires ~€34,200/year in active income. Work for non-Spanish companies.
If you’re not sure which fits your situation, our visa comparison breaks down every difference, or try our visa finder quiz for a quick recommendation.
Choose your city. Start researching where you want to live. The most popular cities for American expats: Valencia (best value), Málaga (warmest), Madrid (biggest), Barcelona (most international). Our city guide ranks them by cost, climate, and lifestyle.
Book a scouting trip. Don’t choose a city from your laptop. Spend 2 weeks visiting your top choices. Our scouting trip itinerary covers how to structure the visit.
9 Months Before: Documents and Finances
Start the FBI background check. This is the longest lead-time item. The FBI Identity History Summary Check takes 12-14 weeks by mail (or 24-48 hours through an approved channeler for $50-100). The apostille from the US Department of State adds 2-4 weeks.
Get health insurance quotes. You’ll need a Spanish or international policy that meets visa requirements: full coverage, no copays (sin copago), comprehensive benefits equivalent to Spain’s public system and no annual limits. Sanitas, Adeslas, and Cigna Global are common choices. See how the medical system works for newcomers for provider comparisons and pricing.
Assess your finances. Calculate how much income or savings you need for your visa application. Gather 3-12 months of bank statements, pension letters, investment statements, and any other financial documentation. The more organized this is, the smoother your consulate appointment.
Research tax implications. Americans must file US tax returns from anywhere in the world. The Foreign Earned Income Exclusion (FEIE) and Foreign Tax Credit (FTC) help avoid double taxation, but the interaction with Spanish taxes is complex. Consult a cross-border tax advisor who understands both systems.
6 Months Before: Formal Applications
Book your consulate appointment. Spanish consulate appointments fill up weeks in advance. Book as soon as you have your documents in order. Your nearest consulate has jurisdiction based on your state of residence.
Decide what to bring, sell, or store. Moving a full household to Spain costs $3,000-$8,000 for a standard container shipment and takes 4-8 weeks by sea. Many expats sell most possessions and bring only essentials, then buy furniture in Spain (IKEA, Maisons du Monde, and local shops are widely available).
Notify your bank. Tell your US bank and credit card companies you’re moving abroad. Some banks restrict accounts for customers without a US address. Charles Schwab and Fidelity are generally expat-friendly. Set up international wire capability.
Address US obligations:
- Mail forwarding: Set up a virtual mailbox service (Earth Class Mail, Traveling Mailbox) for a US address
- Driver’s license: Your US license is valid in Spain for the first 6 months. After that, you need a Spanish license (the process varies by state reciprocity)
- Voter registration: You can vote in US elections from abroad via absentee ballot
- Power of attorney: Consider granting someone in the US power of attorney for any remaining US legal/financial matters
3 Months Before: Logistics
Ship your belongings. If you’re shipping, book at least 3 months before your departure. Sea freight is cheapest; air freight is faster but more expensive. Declare everything for Spanish customs — undeclared items can result in import duties.
Health preparations:
- Get a comprehensive medical checkup
- Stock up on prescription medications (bring a 3-month supply plus prescriptions)
- Get dental work done (cheaper in the US for some procedures, though Spain is competitive)
- Ensure vaccinations are current
Settle US housing. If you’re renting, give notice. If you own, decide whether to sell or rent out your property. Rental income from US property counts as passive income for NLV purposes.
Set up a Wise account. For transferring money from the US to Spain at real exchange rates. This will save you thousands of dollars compared to bank wire transfers over the course of a year. See our banking guide for the full setup.
1 Month Before: Final Preparations
Attend your consulate appointment. Bring all originals and copies. The consulate collects your passport for processing (2-8 weeks).
Cancel or transfer US subscriptions and services. Streaming services often have geographic restrictions (Netflix Spain has different content). Phone plans need international coverage or cancellation.
Say goodbye. Host a farewell gathering. Exchange contact information. Set up video calling routines with close friends and family.
First Month in Spain: Arrival Checklist
Your first 30 days in Spain follow a specific sequence. Each step unlocks the next:
| Priority | Task | Unlocks |
| 1 | Arrive and settle into temporary housing | Base of operations |
| 2 | Apply for NIE (if not assigned with visa) | Banking, renting, utilities |
| 3 | Open a Spanish bank account | Rent payments, direct debits |
| 4 | Register on the Padrón (town hall census) | Healthcare, residency processes |
| 5 | Apply for TIE (residency card) | Official ID in Spain |
| 6 | Find permanent housing | Stability |
| 7 | Set up utilities (electric, gas, water, internet) | Move-in ready |
| 8 | Register for healthcare (public or confirm private) | Medical access |
| 9 | Register children in school (if applicable) | Education continuity |
| 10 | Get a Spanish phone number | Local communication |
For details on each step, see our guides: NIE process, opening a bank account, and renting an apartment.
Costs of Moving
| Expense | Estimated Cost |
| FBI background check + apostille | $200-$500 |
| Visa application fee | $80-$90 |
| Certified translations | $300-$800 |
| Health insurance (first year) | $1,000-$3,000 |
| Scouting trip | $2,000-$3,500 |
| Shipping belongings (sea freight) | $3,000-$8,000 |
| Flights (one-way, family of 2) | $600-$2,400 |
| First month rent + deposit | €1,200-€3,000 |
| Temporary housing (2-4 weeks) | €1,000-€2,000 |
| Setup costs (furniture, SIM, basics) | €1,000-€3,000 |
| Total estimated | $10,000-$25,000 |
This varies dramatically based on how much you ship, where you settle, and whether you’re moving as a single person or a family.
US Tax Obligations from Spain
You still file US taxes. American citizens and permanent residents must file a US tax return every year, regardless of where they live. This applies even if all your income is earned abroad and taxed in Spain.
Key tax tools for Americans abroad:
- Foreign Earned Income Exclusion (FEIE): Excludes up to ~$132,900 (2026) of foreign earned income from US taxation
- Foreign Tax Credit (FTC): Credits taxes paid to Spain against your US tax liability
- FBAR (FinCEN 114): Required if your foreign bank accounts exceed $10,000 at any point during the year
- FATCA (Form 8938): Required for foreign financial assets above certain thresholds
The FEIE and FTC prevent most double taxation, but the interaction with Spanish taxes (especially under the Beckham Law) is complex enough to warrant professional advice. A cross-border tax advisor who understands both US and Spanish tax law is worth every dollar.
NOTE from US Tax Consultants: It’s important to remember that all US citizens living in Spain must file and pay their Spanish taxes first, as Spain has the primary right to tax residents. Because the Spanish tax season runs later than the US one, most Americans in Spain should request an extension to file their US tax return. This ensures that the correct Spanish tax paid can be used when calculating Foreign Tax Credits on the US return, avoiding double taxation and unnecessary amendments later.
What Americans Miss Most
Honest assessment from the expat community:
- Target and Amazon Prime — Spanish online shopping is less developed (though Amazon Spain exists and is improving)
- American-style customer service — Spain operates at a different pace; bureaucracy is slower and less customer-oriented
- Mexican food — Spain’s food is extraordinary, but good Mexican restaurants are rare
- Air conditioning — Many Spanish apartments don’t have it, and Mediterranean summers are hot
- Over-the-counter variety — Fewer OTC options at Spanish pharmacies compared to US drugstores, though pharmacists can recommend and dispense more medications
What they don’t miss: insurance premiums, gun violence, tipping culture, car dependency, and the cost of healthcare.
Common Mistakes
Underestimating the timeline. The FBI background check alone takes 3-4 months. Add document gathering, consulate appointments, and processing — the full process is 6-12 months. Don’t quit your job or sell your house until the visa is approved.
Shipping too much. Furniture is cheaper to buy in Spain (IKEA, Wallapop secondhand, local stores) than to ship from the US. Ship sentimental items and essentials; buy the rest locally.
Not learning basic Spanish. You can survive in major cities with English, but you can’t thrive without Spanish. Start language classes 6-12 months before your move. Even basic conversational Spanish dramatically improves your experience.
Ignoring the tax complexity. US-Spain tax interaction catches many Americans off guard. The FBAR, FATCA, FEIE, FTC, and their interaction with the Beckham Law create a tax puzzle that requires professional help. Budget $500-$1,500/year for a cross-border CPA. US Tax Consultants’ fees
Burning bridges at home. Maintain your US bank accounts, keep your credit score active, hold onto your Social Security card and other key documents. Some expats return, and those who don’t still need US financial infrastructure for pensions, investments, and taxes.
Bottom Line
Moving from the US to Spain takes 6-12 months of preparation, $10,000-$25,000 in relocation costs, and a significant amount of paperwork. The payoff: a dramatically lower cost of living, excellent healthcare, Mediterranean climate, and a lifestyle that most Americans find genuinely transformative. Start with the visa decision (NLV for retirees, DNV for workers), book your scouting trip, and begin the FBI background check. Everything else follows from there.


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