Bangladesh → Spain: the Student visa roadmap
Spain's student visa (visado de estudios) is the primary route for the study goal, covering full-time university, vocational (FP), doctoral, or accredited language study of more than 90 days. Applicants apply at the Spanish consulate for their jurisdiction after securing admission, proving 100% of the IPREM (600 euros/month, roughly 7,200 euros/year in 2026) in funds, full private health insurance, and accommodation. Note: sources diverge on how student time counts toward permanent residence; older practice counted student years at 50%, while the RD 1155/2024 reform is reported to count them fully toward the 5-year long-term residence threshold, so that figure should be treated with some caution.
Moving from Bangladesh
- You apply for the Student visa at the Spain consulate, embassy, or visa application centre that serves Bangladesh, confirm the office and the current appointment wait for your region.
- Qualifications and work experience earned in Bangladesh usually need a credential assessment or recognition before they count toward Spain's requirements.
- Budget for certified translation and apostille or legalisation of your Bangladesh documents (degree, police certificate, civil records).
- Check whether a Bangladesh passport needs a short-stay visa for any in-person biometrics or interview steps.
General guidance for any Bangladesh to Spain applicant; the eligibility and fees below are set by Spain.
At a glance
Who qualifies
- Hold an admission/acceptance letter from an authorized Spanish institution for full-time study (minimum 20 hours/week) of more than 90 days
- Prove financial means of at least 100% of IPREM per month for the stay (600 euros/month, ~7,200 euros/year in 2026); add 75% IPREM for the first dependent and 50% for each additional
- Hold private health insurance with full coverage, no copay, deductible, or waiting period (commonly 30,000 euros minimum)
- Provide a criminal-record certificate for stays over 180 days, plus a medical certificate issued within the last 90 days
- Hold a passport valid for the full stay with at least two blank pages
- Apply in person at the Spanish consulate for your country/jurisdiction of legal residence
Your step-by-step roadmap
Secure admission and prepare documents
- Obtain an acceptance/enrollment letter from an authorized Spanish institution
- Gather financial proof (100% IPREM), full health insurance, criminal-record and medical certificates
- Translate and, where required, legalize/apostille documents
Apply for the visa at the consulate
- Book an appointment and submit the national visa application in person, with biometrics
- Pay the visa fee (~80 euros / ~$106 general / $160 US citizens) at the consulate handling your jurisdiction
- Apply 2-6 months before the course start; expect a legal decision within ~1 month
Enter Spain and register (stays over 6 months)
- Travel to Spain on the entry visa (valid for a 365-day stay)
- Apply for the TIE foreigner ID card at the police/immigration office within 1 month of arrival
- Register your local address (empadronamiento) at the town hall
Work and convert status
- Work up to 30 hrs/week if enrolled at a university/FP program (not language schools)
- Renew the student permit each year while studies continue
- Apply for modification to a residence-and-work permit on a job offer (admisión a trámite lets you start full-time work immediately under the 2025 reform)
Progress to long-term residence and citizenship
- Accumulate 5 years of continuous legal residence to apply for long-term (permanent) residence
- Reach the required residence period for citizenship (10 years general, 2 years for eligible nationalities)
- File the nationality application (typically 1-2 years to process)
Government fees
Timeline & path to citizenship
Timeline: End to end, expect roughly 2-6 months from securing admission to entering Spain (apply 2-6 months before course start; legal decision within about 1 month), then register for the TIE card within 1 month of arrival for stays over 6 months.
Citizenship: After 5 years of continuous legal residence you can apply for long-term (permanent) residence (student years reportedly count fully under RD 1155/2024, though older practice counted them at 50%), and Spanish citizenship typically requires 10 years of legal residence, reduced to 2 years for Ibero-American, Filipino, Andorran, Portuguese, Equatorial Guinean, and Sephardic Jewish applicants.
This is general information to help you plan, not legal advice. For case-specific guidance, consult a licensed immigration professional.