The full expat parent's guide to British, American, IB World, French and German schools in Spain — networks, fees, enrolment timing, scholarships and the bilingual concertado option that most families overlook.
Get a Family Health Insurance Quote WhatsApp Our TeamSpain hosts 80+ accredited British schools, around a dozen American schools, more than 100 IB World Schools and a long-established network of French lyces and German Deutsche Schulen. The biggest clusters sit in Madrid, Barcelona, the Costa del Sol, the Costa Blanca, Valencia, Mallorca and Tenerife — but you will find at least one English-medium option in almost every provincial capital.
Four curricula run in parallel: British (Cambridge, Pearson Edexcel or AQA through to A-levels), American (AP Diploma with US regional accreditation), International Baccalaureate (PYP, MYP, Diploma) and the home-state systems of the French, German and Scandinavian schools.
Expect tuition of roughly 8,000 to 25,000 per year by secondary, with enrolment fees, deposits, lunch and transport on top. Enrolment runs year-round at most international schools, scholarships exist, and the bilingual concertado network gives you a middle path for a fraction of the cost.
"English-speaking school" can mean six very different things in Spain. Before you start touring campuses, understand which network a school belongs to and what that means for accreditation, university pathways and fees.
Accredited by the National Association of British Schools in Spain, following the English National Curriculum with UK exam boards and external inspection. Best fit if you may return to the UK. Tuition 9,000-22,000/year.
Members of the Association of American Schools in Mexico, Central America, Colombia, the Caribbean and Spain follow a US curriculum with AP courses and US regional accreditation (Cognia, NEASC, MSA). Strongest for US college plans. Often the most expensive bracket.
100+ schools authorised by the IB Organisation to deliver PYP, MYP and the IB Diploma. Some are purely IB; many British and Spanish private schools layer the Diploma on top. Universally recognised at Spanish, UK, US and EU universities.
French (AEFE network) and German (Auslandsschulen) schools in Madrid, Barcelona, Valencia, Mlaga, Bilbao and the islands. Delivered in French or German with Spanish and English alongside. Excellent value versus British/American peers.
Spanish-curriculum schools with 30-50% English teaching plus IGCSE or Cambridge exams. Concertado 100-400/month; bilingual private 500-1,200/month. The most realistic option for long-term residents.
Free state schools in regional bilingual programmes — Madrid's Programa Bilinge, plus networks in Andaluca, Castilla y Len, Murcia and Aragn. Free, popular and credible if you live in the right catchment.
Start every shortlist with the official directories. They are the only way to confirm a school is genuinely accredited rather than simply marketing itself as "international". Bookmark these:
International school fees in Spain are quoted in tuition only. The real annual cost is always higher. Build your budget with all of these line items in mind — not just the headline number on the website.
Unlike public and concertado schools (which run a single regional admisin window in March-April), international schools operate their own rolling calendars. The pattern is broadly the same across NABSS, ASOMEX and IB schools — but the popular year groups fill up 12 to 18 months in advance.
Almost every established British and IB school in Spain runs some form of scholarship or means-tested bursary programme. They are rarely advertised — you have to ask. These are the routes that consistently exist:
If full-fee international school is unaffordable but you want strong English-medium teaching, the concertado bilinge route is the most-overlooked option in Spain. These schools are privately run but state-subsidised, with monthly fees a fraction of international school tuition — often 100-400/month rather than 800-2,000.
Most international school placements work out well — but plenty of families end up paying twice (deposit at the wrong school, mid-year switch to the right one) because of avoidable errors. These are the patterns we see again and again.
Choosing a school is one piece of the relocation puzzle. The other two pieces every international school will ask about on enrolment forms are family health insurance and home insurance at your Spanish address. We sort both, in English, in one place.
Fully authorised by Spain's insurance regulator, the Direccin General de Seguros y Fondos de Pensiones.
Policy wording, claims and renewals — all in plain English by people who live in Spain.
Weekends and bank holidays included. School illnesses and burst pipes do not respect office hours.
Paediatric care, vaccinations, dental and orthodontics — structured for international school families.
Building, contents, liability and legal cover — wording reviewed in English before you sign.
No copay, full repatriation, no waiting periods — the spec consulates demand for NLV and family visas.
An international school place is one part of getting the family set up. Make sure the rest of the cover stack is in place too.

Paediatric cover, dental, maternity and visa-compliant policies for expat families.
Read the guide ›
Building, contents, liability and legal cover for the family home in Spain.
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School trips, half-terms home and EU travel from your Spanish base.
Read the guide ›Other essential reading for expat families settling in Spain:
While you finalise the school place, get the rest of your family stack sorted. We compare Sanitas, Caser and the leading home insurers — DGSFP-registered, English-speaking, 7 days a week.
Get a Family Health & Home Insurance QuoteReverse mortgages need a personal consultation. Our specialist team will discuss eligibility, amounts and what suits your situation — in clear English.