Spain Visa UAE

Spain Visa Application from the UAE

UAE residents (Emirati nationals and expatriates legally resident in the UAE) applying for Spanish long-stay visas (Non-Lucrative Visa NLV, Digital Nomad Visa DNV, Student Visa, Family Reunification, Golden Visa and other routes) currently submit through the Spanish consular network in the UAE. This comprehensive guide covers the UAE submission process, what UAE-based applicants need to prepare, UAE document attestation through MOFA and Spanish Embassy, financial proof considerations for high-net-worth UAE applicants, why DHA-compliant Dubai health insurance, ADNIC, Daman, Bupa Arabia and international expat plans typically don’t meet Spanish visa requirements, repatriation cover, tax implications when moving from a no-income-tax jurisdiction to Spain, and how to prepare a Spanish-licensed visa health insurance pack ready for your Dubai or Abu Dhabi submission.

Need NLV, DNV or Golden Visa Insurance from the UAE?

247 Expat Insurance prepares Spanish-licensed visa health insurance certificates ready for UAE-based applicants. Send us your appointment date — we’ll prepare the insurance pack correctly. Seven days a week, with experience handling Dubai, Abu Dhabi and broader UAE applicants moving to Spain.

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UAE Spanish consular landscape

The Embassy of Spain in Abu Dhabi is the central diplomatic mission for Spain in the United Arab Emirates and handles consular services for UAE-based applicants. Specific submission arrangements can vary by visa category and may involve a designated visa application centre partner or direct consular appointment depending on current arrangements. Always confirm the current submission route on the Spanish Embassy in Abu Dhabi website before booking.

The visa itself — NLV, DNV, Student Visa, Golden Visa, etc. — has the same documentary, insurance and financial requirements regardless of where you submit. The submission centre changes; the visa type and consulate-side requirements do not.

Which submission centre do I use?

UAE-resident applicants typically submit through the arrangement designated by the Spanish Embassy in Abu Dhabi. Submission can be from any of the seven emirates — Dubai, Abu Dhabi, Sharjah, Ajman, Umm Al Quwain, Ras Al Khaimah, Fujairah — but the actual submission point typically routes via Abu Dhabi or a designated visa centre. Verify before booking. The Embassy serves both Emirati nationals and expatriates legally resident in the UAE.

How the application process works step by step

  1. Prepare the visa file — forms, supporting documents, financial proof, health insurance certificate, payment receipt, UAE document attestation and translations
  2. Arrange Spanish-licensed health insurance — obtain the certificate, payment receipt and policy schedule in advance
  3. Book the appointment via the current submission centre or Embassy booking page
  4. Attend submission in person with all required documents and biometrics
  5. Submission centre / Embassy forwards the file for assessment
  6. The Spanish Embassy assesses the application — typically several weeks to a few months from submission
  7. Decision is issued
  8. Collect your visa or refusal notice as instructed
  9. Travel to Spain within the visa validity period — typically 3 months from approval
  10. Complete TIE registration in Spain within 30 days of arrival

Visa categories commonly chosen by UAE residents

  • Non-Lucrative Visa (NLV) — very popular with UAE-based retirees, semi-retired professionals and high-net-worth applicants moving to Spain
  • Digital Nomad Visa (DNV) — popular with UAE-based remote workers, freelancers and consultants
  • Student Visa — for UAE-based students taking long-stay study
  • Family Reunification — for UAE-based spouses or family of Spanish residents
  • Work Visa — for UAE-based applicants with a Spanish employment offer
  • Highly Qualified Professional (HQP) — for UAE-based professionals relocating to a qualifying Spanish role
  • Entrepreneur / Startup Visa — for UAE-based founders launching ventures in Spain
  • Researcher
  • Golden Visa — popular with UAE-based property buyers and investors in Spain

High-net-worth applicant considerations

The UAE is a high-income market and a significant source of NLV, DNV and Golden Visa applicants moving to Spain. UAE-based applicants often include UK, US, European, Indian, Pakistani, South African, Australian and other expat professionals plus Emirati nationals.

For high-net-worth UAE applicants, key points to consider:

  • Spanish-licensed visa health insurance is required regardless of asset level — an Emirates Golden Visa or seven-figure portfolio doesn’t replace it
  • NLV financial proof needs to be presented in EUR-equivalent terms, with apostille-equivalent attestation
  • Comprehensive Spanish-licensed cover (including premium / VIP tier plans with global cover) is available
  • Spain’s Beckham Law and other tax incentives may apply to qualifying relocating professionals

NLV (Non-Lucrative Visa) for UAE residents

Key requirements:

  • Sufficient financial means (passive income / savings) above the official threshold (linked to IPREM — verify the current figure)
  • No intent to work in Spain
  • Health insurance from a Spanish-licensed insurer (DGSFP), sin copago, sin carencias, annual cover
  • Criminal record certificate from country of nationality (with apostille / attestation) and from UAE (Good Conduct Certificate)
  • Medical certificate
  • Accommodation evidence in Spain
  • Passport, photos, signed application form, UAE Emirates ID and residence visa proof (where applicable)

DNV (Digital Nomad Visa) for UAE residents

Key requirements:

  • Employment or freelance contract evidence (typically 3+ months with same client/employer)
  • Sufficient income above the DNV threshold
  • Professional qualification or 3+ years experience
  • Spanish-licensed health insurance (DGSFP), sin copago, sin carencias, annual cover
  • Country-of-nationality criminal record certificate (with apostille) plus UAE Good Conduct Certificate
  • Passport, photos, application form, Emirates ID

Golden Visa and property buyers

Spain’s Golden Visa programme has its own investment-based requirements (historically a EUR 500k qualifying property investment, though the programme rules are subject to change — verify current eligibility). Golden Visa holders still need Spanish-licensed health insurance during their period of residency. Many UAE-based property buyers in Spain (Costa del Sol, Mallorca, Marbella, Madrid) take this route, often alongside or instead of NLV.

Documents needed

  • Visa application form (signed)
  • Passport (valid for the visa period)
  • Emirates ID and residence visa proof (for UAE residents)
  • Photos to specification
  • Visa category supporting documents
  • Health insurance certificate from Spanish-licensed insurer (DGSFP) and payment receipt
  • Full policy schedule
  • Criminal record certificate from country of nationality (apostilled)
  • UAE Good Conduct Certificate (where required)
  • Medical certificate
  • Accommodation evidence in Spain
  • Certified translations into Spanish where required
  • Submission centre and consular fees

UAE document attestation (MOFA + Spanish Embassy)

The UAE has its own document attestation chain. UAE-issued documents (Good Conduct Certificate, marriage certificates, birth certificates, educational certificates) typically need:

  1. Notarisation by a UAE notary public (where applicable)
  2. Attestation by the UAE Ministry of Foreign Affairs and International Cooperation (MOFAIC)
  3. Attestation by the Spanish Embassy in Abu Dhabi (consular legalisation)

For documents issued in your country of nationality (UK, US, India, Pakistan, South Africa, etc.), the standard apostille flow from the issuing country applies, then translation into Spanish. The UAE itself is an apostille party as of 2025 — the exact attestation flow depends on the document type and current rules. Verify the chain before submission.

Most documents also need certified translation into Spanish. Use a sworn (jurado) translator for the cleanest submission.

Plan attestation and translation early — these are commonly the longest-lead items for UAE NLV submissions.

Financial proof and movement of funds

UAE-based applicants typically use:

  • UAE bank statements (Emirates NBD, ADCB, ADIB, FAB, Mashreq, HSBC UAE, Standard Chartered UAE, Citi UAE)
  • Investment portfolio statements
  • End-of-service gratuity entitlement evidence (for long-tenure UAE employees)
  • Property income evidence (from UAE or other countries)
  • Pension statements (from country of nationality or former employer schemes)
  • Business income (for free zone or mainland company owners)

Financial documents typically need attestation and translation. Movement of funds from UAE bank accounts to Spanish accounts is generally straightforward but allow time for international banking. Many UAE applicants pre-fund Spanish bank accounts before submission to demonstrate seriousness.

Insurance documents for UAE submissions

For NLV submissions from the UAE:

  • Certificate from a Spanish-licensed insurer (DGSFP authorised), referencing visa type, confirming sin copago, sin carencias, annual cover, comprehensive medical cover
  • Proof of payment showing the first 12 months paid upfront
  • Full policy schedule for backup verification
  • Repatriation cover where required

See our NLV certificate guide. Payment options: Spanish or EU IBAN, bank transfer, or credit/debit card. UAE-issued credit/debit cards work for the annual upfront payment.

Why UAE health insurance may not meet visa requirements

Most Spanish Consulates require health insurance that complies with Spanish visa requirements. Many applicants choose a Spanish-licensed insurer (with DGSFP authorisation) because these policies are specifically designed to meet Non-Lucrative Visa and Digital Nomad Visa requirements.

UAE-resident health insurance plans — including DHA Dubai-mandated plans, DOH Abu Dhabi-mandated plans, ADNIC, Daman, Bupa Arabia, Cigna UAE, AXA Gulf and others — provide cover within the UAE (and limited regional cover) but don’t hold Spanish DGSFP authorisation. They’re not designed to meet Spanish visa requirements once you become resident in Spain. Generic international expat plans (Cigna Global, Bupa Global, Allianz Worldwide) similarly often don’t meet the structural requirements (copayments, waiting periods, lack of DGSFP licensing).

Repatriation cover

Repatriation cover means cover for the cost of returning to the UAE / country of nationality (or returning your remains) in the event of serious illness or death. Many Spanish Consulates expect or require repatriation cover for NLV applications. Confirm against the current consulate checklist.

Booking, timing and travel from the UAE to Spain

  • UAE document attestation: 2–6 weeks lead time
  • Country-of-nationality criminal record apostille: add 2–8 weeks depending on country
  • Translation: 1–2 weeks
  • Spanish health insurance: often within 1 business day for many straightforward applications, with 2–5 business days where medical underwriting is needed. Times can vary.
  • Appointment booking: book as early as possible
  • Visa processing: several weeks to a few months
  • Travel to Spain: within visa validity period
  • TIE registration: within 30 days of arrival

UAE → Spain flights are typically 8 hours direct from Dubai or Abu Dhabi to Madrid / Barcelona. Many UAE applicants schedule the move around school terms (international schools in UAE typically follow Aug–Jun calendar).

Dubai

Dubai is the largest UAE city and the major source of high-net-worth NLV, DNV and Golden Visa applicants. Read our Dubai Spain visa guide.

Abu Dhabi (Embassy)

Abu Dhabi hosts the Spanish Embassy in the UAE. Read our Abu Dhabi Spain visa guide.

Family applications

UAE-based families applying together need separate certificates per family member and combined financial proof exceeding the family-adjusted IPREM threshold. Each family member needs their own Spanish-licensed health insurance certificate. Children under 18 typically follow their parents’ visa category. Plan family applications with extra lead time — UAE attestation and country-of-nationality apostille costs multiply for multiple family members.

Tax considerations moving from a no-income-tax jurisdiction

This is a significant area for UAE applicants. The UAE has no personal income tax, no capital gains tax on individuals, no inheritance tax in most cases. Spain has progressive income tax, capital gains tax, wealth tax (regional), inheritance tax, and worldwide tax residency once you spend 183+ days in Spain.

  • Beckham Law / Special Expatriate Regime may apply to qualifying relocating professionals, taxing only Spanish-sourced income at a flat rate for the first 6 years
  • Wealth tax (Impuesto sobre el Patrimonio) applies regionally — some regions exempt, others tax above thresholds. Madrid currently rebates wealth tax
  • Solidarity tax on large fortunes
  • Inheritance tax varies by region
  • Capital gains tax on worldwide gains once resident

UAE-Spain double tax treaty applies. Speak to a tax adviser experienced with UAE-Spain moves before the move — the difference between getting tax planning right and wrong for a high-net-worth UAE applicant can be six figures.

Practical setup in Spain

  • Spanish bank account (essential for utilities, rent, healthcare)
  • NIE — obtained as part of visa process
  • TIE registration within 30 days of arrival
  • Empadronamiento (town hall registration)
  • Rental contract or property purchase
  • Healthcare access (Spanish private from day one)
  • Driving licence — depends on country of nationality and UAE licence
  • International schools or local Spanish schools for children

Common mistakes by UAE applicants

  • Assuming DHA-compliant, ADNIC, Daman, Bupa Arabia or other UAE-resident plans will meet Spanish visa requirements
  • Buying generic international plans without DGSFP authorisation
  • Travel insurance, copago or carencias policies
  • Monthly-only payment evidence
  • Skipping repatriation cover
  • Underestimating UAE attestation + country-of-nationality apostille timelines
  • Submitting AED-only financial proof without certified translations
  • Not engaging tax planning before move — particularly important moving from no-income-tax jurisdiction
  • Late arrival or missed appointments
  • Confusing the submission with the consular decision
  • Not registering for TIE within 30 days

Why UAE applicants choose 247 Expat Insurance

  • Spanish-licensed insurer policies (DGSFP authorised) only — never travel insurance, never generic international plans
  • Certificate, payment receipt and policy schedule prepared together
  • Seven days a week support
  • Repatriation cover included where required
  • Premium / VIP tier Spanish plans available for high-net-worth applicants
  • Compliant cover for individuals, couples, families, retirees and pre-existing conditions
  • UAE-aware support: we understand the attestation chain, MOFAIC timing, and high-net-worth requirements

Related guides: NLV certificate, proof of payment, repatriation, NLV for retirees, visa health insurance hub.

Prepare your insurance pack for your UAE submission

Send us your appointment date, ages and visa route. We’ll prepare the insurance certificate, payment receipt and policy schedule ready for submission — Dubai, Abu Dhabi or elsewhere in the Emirates.

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FAQs

Where is the Spanish Embassy in the UAE?

The Spanish Embassy in Abu Dhabi is the central diplomatic mission for Spain in the UAE. Submission arrangements should be verified on the Embassy website.

Where do I submit my NLV in the UAE?

Through the arrangement designated by the Spanish Embassy in Abu Dhabi, currently. Verify before booking.

I’m a UAE-resident expat — not Emirati. Can I still apply?

Yes — UAE-resident expatriates legally residing in the UAE apply through the UAE consular network. You’ll typically need both country-of-nationality criminal record (apostilled) and UAE Good Conduct Certificate.

Can I use my DHA / ADNIC / Daman / Bupa Arabia plan?

UAE-resident plans (DHA-mandated, ADNIC, Daman, Bupa Arabia, Cigna UAE, AXA Gulf) are designed for healthcare within the UAE. Most Spanish Consulates require cover from a Spanish-licensed insurer with DGSFP authorisation — UAE plans typically don’t meet Spanish visa requirements.

What about international expat plans like Cigna Global or Bupa Global?

Generic international plans typically don’t hold specific Spanish DGSFP authorisation and aren’t structured to match Spanish visa requirements.

What insurance do I need for NLV?

Spanish-licensed insurer certificate (DGSFP), NLV reference, sin copago, sin carencias, annual cover, plus annual payment receipt.

What about the Golden Visa?

Spain’s Golden Visa has its own investment-based requirements. Health insurance requirements still apply during residency. Confirm current Golden Visa rules.

Can I pay with a UAE credit/debit card?

Yes typically — Visa and Mastercard from UAE issuers work for annual upfront payment.

How long does NLV processing take?

Typically several weeks to a few months from submission.

Do I need repatriation cover?

Many consulates expect repatriation cover. Confirm against the current checklist.

What documents need UAE MOFAIC attestation?

UAE-issued documents (Good Conduct Certificate, marriage certificates, birth certificates issued in UAE, educational certificates from UAE institutions) typically need notarisation, MOFAIC attestation and Spanish Embassy consular legalisation.

What about documents from my home country?

For documents from your country of nationality (UK, US, India, Pakistan, SA etc.), use the standard apostille flow from the issuing country, then certified translation into Spanish.

Do my financial documents need translation?

Typically yes — use a sworn (jurado) translator.

What about Beckham Law / Special Expatriate Regime?

This regime may apply to qualifying relocating professionals, taxing only Spanish-sourced income at a flat rate for the first 6 years. Specific eligibility rules apply. Speak to a tax adviser.

What about wealth tax?

Wealth tax applies regionally in Spain. Some regions (currently Madrid) rebate it; others tax above thresholds. There’s also a separate solidarity tax on large fortunes. Consult a tax adviser.

Can I include my partner and children?

Yes — family applications are common. Each family member needs their own certificate. Combined financial proof must meet the family-adjusted IPREM threshold.

What if I’ve moved between emirates?

You’re still UAE-resident — same consular jurisdiction (Spanish Embassy in Abu Dhabi).

What if my visa is refused?

Refusal notices come via the submission route. Resubmission may be possible with corrected documents. Consult an immigration adviser.

How long does it take to arrange Spanish insurance?

For many straightforward applications, certificates are often issued within 1 business day once the insurer has approved the application and payment has been completed. Processing times can vary depending on age, medical history, underwriting requirements and insurer workload.

When should I buy my insurance?

1–2 weeks before your submission appointment is typical.

What is DGSFP?

Dirección General de Seguros y Fondos de Pensiones — Spain’s insurance regulator. Consulates require cover from DGSFP-authorised insurers.