Spain
Valencia
Sunny, affordable, and beautifully liveable
Family budget at a glance
The all-in range matches the FAQ answer for "How much does a family typically need per month here?" The other cards are single-line benchmarks — they don't add up to that total (school fees and other costs are separate).
All-in / month (family of 4)
~$3,500–$4,500 / month
3-bed family home
~$1,400 / month
Dinner for 2 (mid-range)
~$50
Nanny
~$13 / hr
Valencia is one of Europe's best-kept secrets for relocating families. It offers a Mediterranean lifestyle — warm weather, fresh food markets, and beach access — at a fraction of the cost of Barcelona or Madrid. The city has a growing international school scene, reliable public transport, and a welcoming expat community that keeps expanding every year.
Action checklist
Concrete steps to make this move happen, in order.
Click any step to jump to that section ↓
- 1Verify income eligibility for the Spain Digital Nomad Visa (min. $2,570/month; +$990/month per additional family member)
- 2Obtain an Apostille-certified criminal record check (an Apostille is an official government certification that authenticates the document for use abroad) from your home country — required for the DNV application
- 3Arrange private health insurance before submitting your visa application (required document)
- 4Apply at the Spanish Consulate in your home country — allow 20–45 business days for processing
- 5Start searching for family housing 6–8 weeks before your move
- 6Contact international schools 6–12 months before your move — waiting lists are long
- 7Upon arrival, register on the Padrón Municipal (Spain's address register) at your local Ayuntamiento (city hall) within 30 days
- 8Apply for your NIE (foreigner ID number) and open a Spanish bank account (BBVA, Sabadell, or N26 are popular)
- 9Visit your local Centro de Salud with your Padrón certificate to apply for a SIP public health card
Family fit
Great for
- Families who value outdoor and beach lifestyle
- Budget-conscious relocators seeking a European base
- Parents looking for affordable international schools
- Families transitioning from a larger, more expensive European city
Watch out for
- English is limited outside expat areas — Spanish is essential day-to-day
- Summer heat can be intense (35°C+), especially in July–August
- Top international schools have waiting lists — apply early
- Bureaucracy moves slowly — NIE appointments and bank account opening can take 4–8 weeks
Climate & seasons
Monthly normals (2001–2020) · MERRA-2 (NASA POWER)
Rainy-day counts are approximate (from monthly rainfall).
- HottestJul · 38.5°Cmean daily high
- CoolestJan · -0.9°Cmean daily low
- WettestSep · 48.9 mmmonth total
- DriestJul · 9 mmmonth total
- Low
- -0.9°C
- Rain
- 30.4 mm
- Wet days
- ~3
- Low
- -0.4°C
- Rain
- 24.9 mm
- Wet days
- ~2
- Low
- 1.2°C
- Rain
- 40 mm
- Wet days
- ~3
- Low
- 4.5°C
- Rain
- 41.7 mm
- Wet days
- ~3
- Low
- 7.3°C
- Rain
- 37.8 mm
- Wet days
- ~3
- Low
- 12.3°C
- Rain
- 20.7 mm
- Wet days
- ~2
- Low
- 16.5°C
- Rain
- 9 mm
- Wet days
- ~1
- Low
- 16.4°C
- Rain
- 18 mm
- Wet days
- ~2
- Low
- 12.2°C
- Rain
- 48.9 mm
- Wet days
- ~4
- Low
- 7.3°C
- Rain
- 44 mm
- Wet days
- ~4
- Low
- 2.6°C
- Rain
- 45.6 mm
- Wet days
- ~4
- Low
- 0.5°C
- Rain
- 32.9 mm
- Wet days
- ~3
| Month | Typical high | Typical low | Rain (total) | Rainy days (~) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Jan | 20°C | -0.9°C | 30.4 mm | 3 |
| Feb | 20.9°C | -0.4°C | 24.9 mm | 2 |
| Mar | 25.6°C | 1.2°C | 40 mm | 3 |
| Apr | 27.2°C | 4.5°C | 41.7 mm | 3 |
| May | 31.3°C | 7.3°C | 37.8 mm | 3 |
| Jun | 36.1°C | 12.3°C | 20.7 mm | 2 |
| Jul | 38.5°C | 16.5°C | 9 mm | 1 |
| Aug | 38°C | 16.4°C | 18 mm | 2 |
| Sep | 34°C | 12.2°C | 48.9 mm | 4 |
| Oct | 30.2°C | 7.3°C | 44 mm | 4 |
| Nov | 24.1°C | 2.6°C | 45.6 mm | 4 |
| Dec | 19.9°C | 0.5°C | 32.9 mm | 3 |
Family notes
- Warmest month on average: Jul (mean daily high ~38°C); coolest: Jan (mean daily low ~-1°C).
- Most rainfall on average: Sep (~49 mm total); driest: Jul (~9 mm).
- Mean daily highs reach about 32°C or more in Jun, Jul, Aug, Sep — plan air-conditioning, shade, and limited midday outdoor time for babies and young children.
- Peak months can average above 35°C for daily highs — schedule playgrounds, walks, and errands for mornings or evenings when possible.
- Winter nights can dip near freezing (Jan, Feb, Mar, Dec) — reliable home heating and warm layers for school commutes matter for children.
These values are long-term monthly climatologies from NASA POWER (MERRA-2 reanalysis) for the nearest model grid cell to these coordinates — not a single city-centre weather station. Spatial resolution is about 50 km; coastal belts, hills, and dense urban cores can differ. Precipitation is corrected MERRA-2 rainfall; rainy-day counts are approximated from monthly totals.
Grid cell used: 39.474°, -0.380° (WGS84)
Visa options
Reviewed Jan 2026
Reviewed Jan 2026
If you hold a non-EU passport you need to apply for a visa before you leave your home country. EU and EEA passport holders can move freely with no restrictions. For non-EU families who work remotely, the Digital Nomad Visa is the main route.
Tap the ? next to a term for a quick definition.
EU / EEA citizens
Move, live, and work in Spain freely. The only post-arrival step is registering on the Padrón Municipal.
Schengen Tourist (non-EU)
Valid for a scouting trip before committing to the move. No right to work, no extensions, cannot be converted to residency.
Digital Nomad Visa (DNV)
For remote workers employed abroad or freelancers with international clients. Apply at the Spanish Consulate in your home country before you travel — not from inside Spain.
EU / EEA citizens — what to do after arriving
- No visa, permit, or income threshold required — you can move freely.
- Register on the Padrón Municipal at your local Ayuntamiento within 3 months of arrival.
- Bring your passport and rental contract or proof of address to register.
- The Padrón certificate unlocks public healthcare (SIP card), school enrolment, and most other local services.
- After 5 years of continuous residence you can apply for long-term residency status.
Schengen Tourist — what it allows and what it does not
- No right to work — this includes remote work for a foreign employer, which is technically not permitted on a tourist entry.
- Cannot be extended from inside Spain and cannot be converted into residency.
- You must leave before 90 days are up and cannot return until the 180-day window resets.
- Good use: spend 2–4 weeks scouting the city, checking neighbourhoods, schools, and housing before applying for the DNV.
- Do not attempt to live long-term on rolling tourist entries — Spanish immigration enforcement has tightened significantly.
Digital Nomad Visa — how to apply
Income requirement
- Who qualifies: remote employees working for a non-Spanish company, or freelancers earning at least 80% of income from foreign clients.
- Minimum: $2,570/month for the primary applicant, plus approximately $990/month for each dependent family member included.
- Thresholds are set at 200% of Spain's minimum wage and are reviewed annually — confirm the current figure before applying.
Required documents
- Valid passport with at least 6 months remaining.
- Apostille-certified criminal record check from your home country.
- Proof of remote employment (employer letter) or freelance contracts.
- 3–6 months of personal bank statements.
- Proof of accommodation in Spain.
Health insurance
- Private health insurance valid in Spain is required before submitting your application.
- The policy must cover all family members included in the visa.
- Travel insurance does not qualify — you need a full private health policy.
Where and how to apply
- Apply at the Spanish Consulate in your home country — you cannot apply from inside Spain.
- Allow 20–45 business days for processing after submitting a complete application.
- Book a consulate appointment as soon as your documents are ready; slots often fill weeks in advance.
Consulate appointments fill weeks in advance — gather all documents before booking your slot, not after.
Residency registration
Reviewed Jan 2026
Reviewed Jan 2026
- Register on the Padrón Municipal — Spain's official address register — at your local Ayuntamiento (city hall) within 30 days of arriving. Bring your passport, rental contract, and proof of address.
- Your Padrón certificate is proof that you live here. Without it you cannot get your healthcare card, book your NIE (your Spanish foreigner ID number) appointment, or enrol your children in school.
- Book your appointment online at the Valencia Ayuntamiento website (valenciaciudat.com) — walk-in slots are very limited and often unavailable.
- After 1 year on the Padrón, non-EU residents can apply for the TIE — Spain's physical residency card that legally proves your right to live here long-term.
Book your Padrón appointment at valenciaciudat.com on your first week — walk-in slots are rarely available and appointment queues fill 3–5 weeks ahead.
Banking & NIE
- Apply for your NIE — your Spanish foreigner ID number — as soon as you arrive. You need it to open a bank account, sign a lease, and enrol your children in school.
- NIE appointments are booked at the Extranjería (the local immigration office). Slots fill up 4–8 weeks in advance — book online on your first week, not when you need it.
- While waiting for your NIE, use N26 or Wise for day-to-day spending. Both open with just your passport — no Spanish address or NIE needed.
- Once you have your NIE, open a Spanish bank account. BBVA, Sabadell, and CaixaBank are popular with expats — most landlords require a local account number (IBAN) for rent payments.
- Most banks ask for: passport, NIE, Padrón certificate (your proof of local address), and a recent payslip or employment contract.
Start the NIE process the week you arrive — appointment slots at the Extranjería book out 4–8 weeks.
Housing
Valencia is one of the most affordable major cities in Western Europe. A 3-bedroom apartment in a family-friendly neighbourhood rents for $990–$1,980/month.
Where to search
These are local rental platforms — this is where residents rent long-term housing (cheaper than Airbnb).
Search 'Valencia' inside each platform to filter local listings.
Tip: start with a 2–4 week Airbnb or short-term stay — it's much easier to secure a long-term rental once you're in the city.
Typical monthly rents
- 1-bed flat, city centre: $750–$1,200/month
- 3-bed flat, family neighbourhoods (Ruzafa, Campanar): $1,100–$1,750/month
- 3-bed flat, beachside (El Cabanyal): $1,300–$2,000/month
- House with garden, outskirts (Paterna, Torrent): $1,650–$2,400/month
Best areas for families
What you need to rent
- Valid passport — NIE if you already have it
- 2–3 months of personal bank statements
- Proof of income: employment contract or last 3 payslips
- 1–2 months deposit (fianza) — legally required; some landlords ask for more
- Spanish bank account for direct debit (most landlords require a local IBAN)
- Reference letter from a previous landlord — helpful but not always required
Schools
Valencia has several strong international schools. Top choices for English-speaking families offer US, British, and IB curricula at fees far below comparable schools in the UK or US.
Public system
Spanish public schools are free, well-funded, and generally high quality — but instruction is entirely in Spanish and Valencian. Not recommended for children without Spanish language skills unless you plan a long-term stay (2+ years) and are willing to invest in language support.
International options
Several English-medium international schools operate in Valencia and the surrounding area. Demand has grown sharply with the expat influx — apply 6–12 months in advance. Schools follow US, British, or IB curricula and typically run from Early Years through Year 13 / Grade 12.
Language notes
Valencian (a Catalan dialect) is co-official with Spanish in the region. Most public schools teach in Valencian and Castilian Spanish. English-medium instruction is only available in private international schools.
Waitlists at international schools fill fast — apply 12+ months before your planned move.
Education options
British curriculum international schools
IGCSE and A-Level options in and around Valencia. Established expat choice.
US / IB curriculum international schools
Several schools offering the International Baccalaureate or US diploma.
Concertado schools (subsidized private)
Part state-funded private schools taught in Spanish and Valencian. Lower cost but require Spanish.
Childcare
Valencia has a strong childcare market — private nurseries, nannies, and au pairs are all easy to find and affordable by European standards.
Daycare & nurseries
- Private nurseries (guarderías) accept children from 4 months — widely available in Ruzafa, Campanar, and most family neighbourhoods
- Typical fees: $330–$660/month depending on hours and location
- Public nursery places (0–3 years) are subsidised but very limited — join the municipal waiting list immediately on arrival
- Tip: visit 2–3 nurseries in person before deciding — quality and staff attentiveness vary significantly
Nanny & au pair
- Live-out nannies (cuidadoras) charge $11–$16/hr — common among expat families
- Au pairs receive board, lodging, and $90–$165/week pocket money — a popular choice for language immersion
- Most nannies speak Spanish or Valencian only — good for helping your children pick up the language faster
Where to find childcare
- Sitly.es — most popular nanny-finding platform in Spain
- InfoJobs.es — broad job board, also used for nanny and cuidadora searches
- AuPairWorld.com — for au pair matching
- Search 'Valencia Expats' on Google — best source for personal recommendations
Healthcare
Reviewed Jan 2026
Reviewed Jan 2026
- Go to your local Centro de Salud (public health clinic) with your Padrón certificate to get a SIP card — Spain's free healthcare registration card that activates your access to the public system.
- The SIP card covers GP visits, specialists, hospital care, and prescriptions at reduced cost — for every family member who is registered.
- Each child needs their own SIP card — register them separately at the same clinic, bringing their passport and your Padrón certificate.
- Private clinics are fast and affordable — a GP appointment costs $55–$90 without insurance, and results are usually same-day.
- Popular private health insurers for expats: Sanitas, Adeslas, and Asisa — family plans start around $165–$275/month and give access to English-speaking doctors.
Bring your Padrón certificate on your first visit — without it the registration cannot proceed.
Safety
- Violent crime is very rare — Valencia ranks among Spain's safest major cities year after year
- Main risk is petty theft in tourist-heavy areas: the Central Market, old town, and beach — keep bags in front and avoid displaying phones
- Family neighbourhoods (Campanar, Benimaclet, Patraix) are extremely safe day and night
- Public transport is reliable and well-used by families, including late evenings
- Tip: the main beach (Malvarrosa) is lively and safe during the day — exercise normal caution at night
FAQ
Is Valencia good for families?
Yes — one of the best European cities for families. Low crime, warm weather, beach access, good food markets, and a welcoming expat community at a price point that undercuts most Western European alternatives.
How much does a family typically need per month here?
Budget $3,500–$4,500/month all-in for a family of four. Rent for a 3-bedroom apartment runs $1,000–$2,000/month depending on the neighbourhood. Groceries, transport, and restaurants are significantly cheaper than in northern Europe.
Is housing hard to find here?
Moderately competitive. Popular neighbourhoods move fast — expect to view and decide within 24–48 hours. Start searching 4–6 weeks before arrival.
Do children need international school here, or can local schools work?
Depends on Spanish fluency. Public schools are free and well-funded but teach entirely in Spanish and Valencian (a co-official language of the Valencia region). If your child has no Spanish and you're staying under two years, an international school is the safer first choice. Longer-term families often transition children into the public system after a year.
Is healthcare easy to access as a newcomer?
Yes, once you have your Padron (address registration). Take it to your local health centre and you'll be enrolled in Spain's public healthcare system at no cost. Optional private insurance runs roughly $60–$100/month per person and gives faster specialist access.
Do you need a car in Valencia?
No. Valencia has good buses, metro, and a city-wide bike-share scheme. Most families in central and family-friendly neighbourhoods live car-free. A car is useful for day trips to beach towns or surrounding countryside, but not a daily requirement.
How difficult is the paperwork and bureaucracy after moving?
Moderately involved. You need a NIE (Spanish foreigner ID number) and Padron registration as your first two steps, then optionally a TIE (physical residency card). NIE appointments at the Extranjeria (local immigration office) book out 4–8 weeks. Many families hire a gestor — a local admin agent — for around $200–$300 to handle the filings.
What usually surprises families after arrival?
Two things: how liveable it actually is at this price point — most families arrive expecting a second-tier city and immediately want to extend their stay. And the pace of bureaucracy — even routine registrations require appointments booked weeks in advance, so start the NIE process the day you arrive.
Sources
Official government, institutional, and public sources.
Community
Expat groups and community forums. Use the search buttons below to find them.
Search 'Valencia Expats' on Google — on-the-ground advice from residents
Search: “Valencia Expats”Search on Google