Philippines → Spain: the Highly Qualified Professional visa roadmap
Spain's Highly Qualified Professional (HQP / Profesional Altamente Cualificado) permit, created under Law 14/2013 (the Entrepreneurs Law), is the main fast-track work route for skilled professionals with a qualifying job offer. It is employer-led and processed by the Large Companies and Strategic Sectors Unit (UGE-CE), which decides residence authorizations within 20 business days, with positive administrative silence in the applicant's favour. Confidence is medium: 2026 salary thresholds and processing times are well corroborated, but exact government fee amounts (Modelo 790) are set annually by ministerial order and the precise 2026 figures vary by source, so cost figures are approximate.
Moving from Philippines
- You apply for the Highly Qualified Professional visa at the Spain consulate, embassy, or visa application centre that serves Philippines, confirm the office and the current appointment wait for your region.
- Qualifications and work experience earned in Philippines usually need a credential assessment or recognition before they count toward Spain's requirements.
- Budget for certified translation and apostille or legalisation of your Philippines documents (degree, police certificate, civil records).
- Check whether a Philippines passport needs a short-stay visa for any in-person biometrics or interview steps.
General guidance for any Philippines to Spain applicant; the eligibility and fees below are set by Spain.
At a glance
Who qualifies
- Hold a firm job offer or employment contract in Spain for a highly qualified role (senior management, technical/intellectual professional, or qualified graduate/postgraduate)
- Possess a relevant university degree/postgraduate qualification or proven equivalent professional experience
- Be offered at least the minimum gross annual salary for the role category (approx. EUR 40,077 for professionals, EUR 54,142 for executives; reduced ~EUR 30,500 for applicants under 30 or SMEs in strategic sectors)
- Have no criminal record in Spain or in countries of residence over the last 5 years (certificate apostilled and translated)
- Hold private or public health insurance and a valid passport
- The employing company must be lawfully established and up to date with tax and social security obligations
Your step-by-step roadmap
Prepare and secure the job offer
- Obtain a qualifying highly skilled job offer or contract meeting the salary threshold for your role category
- Gather degree certificates, CV/experience evidence, passport, and apostilled criminal-record certificates translated into Spanish
File the residence authorization (UGE-CE)
- Employer (or legal representative) submits the application electronically to the Large Companies and Strategic Sectors Unit (UGE-CE)
- Pay the application fee (Modelo 790 Codigo 062) at filing
- Await decision within ~20 business days (positive administrative silence if no reply)
Apply for the visa (if outside Spain)
- Within one month of approval, book an appointment and submit the national visa application at the Spanish consulate in your country of residence
- Pay the consular visa fee and collect the visa (decision typically ~10 days)
Enter Spain and register
- Travel to Spain within the visa validity and register with local authorities
- Apply for the TIE foreigner ID card (fingerprinting), paying the card fee (Modelo 790 Codigo 012)
Maintain and renew
- Renew the permit for 2-year periods while you keep a qualifying job and meet conditions
- After 5 years of continuous legal residence, apply for long-term (permanent) residence
Government fees
Timeline & path to citizenship
Timeline: End to end, expect roughly 1 to 3 months: about 20 business days for the UGE-CE residence authorization, then around 10 days for the consular visa, plus time to travel, register and obtain the TIE card.
Citizenship: Time on the HQP permit counts toward permanent residence after 5 years of continuous legal residence, and toward Spanish citizenship after 10 years (reduced to just 2 years for nationals of Ibero-American countries, the Philippines, Andorra, Equatorial Guinea and Portugal, who may also keep dual nationality).
This is general information to help you plan, not legal advice. For case-specific guidance, consult a licensed immigration professional.