How to Convert Your Student Visa into a Work Visa in Spain
- Categories Barcelona Living
- Date 6 de April de 2026
For many international students, studying in Spain is the beginning of something bigger. After graduation, the next natural step is to stay, find work, and start building a professional life in a country they have come to know and love. The good news is that Spanish immigration law makes this possible. The process, however, requires planning, preparation, and a clear understanding of your options before you reach the finish line of your studies.
Here is what you need to know.
Can You Work in Spain on a Student Visa?
Yes, but within limits. While you are still enrolled, your student visa permits you to work up to 30 hours per week, provided that work does not interfere with your studies. Once you complete your course, that permission ends. To continue working legally in Spain after graduation, you need to convert your student status into a formal work authorisation.
The official procedure for doing this is known as a student visa modification, or in Spanish, a modificación de estancia por estudios a residencia y trabajo. It is not automatic. You need to apply, meet specific requirements, and in most cases, secure either a job offer or an internship agreement before the process can begin.
The Two Main Routes
There are two primary pathways available to graduates looking to remain in Spain.
Route one: Employee work permit (por cuenta ajena). This is the most common route. You find a job with a Spanish employer and the company sponsors your work authorisation. The application is submitted to the immigration office in your autonomous community, which in Catalonia means the Generalitat.
Processing typically takes around three months. The job does not need to be directly related to your degree, and the initial permit is valid for one year, after which it can be renewed into a longer residence. Salary requirements are also more accessible than those attached to a Highly Skilled Worker visa, and the route is open across most professional sectors. The main challenge, as many graduates discover, is finding an employer who is willing to take on the sponsorship.
Route two: Internship residency (residencia para prácticas). Spain also offers a residency option designed specifically for post-graduation internships. This route is particularly useful if you want to build Spanish work experience before securing a full-time sponsored position.
To qualify, your qualification must be at level six or higher, completed within the past three years or still in progress, and the internship must be directly related to your field of study. Internships under this route can last up to two years and the residency can later be converted into a standard employee work permit.
Documents You Will Need
For an employee work permit, you will typically need your passport, a certificate of course completion, a job contract or offer, and evidence of your employer’s social security registration.
For an internship residency, the requirements are your passport, a certificate of completion or current enrolment, the internship agreement linked to your area of study, and valid health insurance in Spain.
How Long Does It Take?
Employee work permit applications generally take around three months to process. Internship residencies tend to move faster, usually between one and two months. Initial permits run from one to two years depending on the route, and both pathways can lead to longer-term residence authorisations over time.
How This Differs From the Highly Skilled Worker Visa
Some graduates come across the Highly Skilled Worker visa during their research. It is worth knowing that this is a separate pathway with higher salary thresholds, often above 40,000 euros, more significant administrative demands on the employer, and restrictions to technical or managerial roles. For most recent graduates, a student visa modification is a far more accessible starting point.
Practical Tips for a Smooth Transition
Start conversations with potential employers before you graduate. The sponsorship question is easier to raise during the interview process than after you have already accepted an offer.
Confirm that your qualification is eligible for modification. Not all courses qualify, and it is worth verifying this early rather than discovering it at the application stage.
Prepare your documents in advance. Immigration processes in Spain can move slowly, and having everything ready before you need it reduces stress considerably.
If an employer is hesitant to sponsor a full contract, the internship route can be a practical way to get your foot in the door while you build your track record.
If you need professional legal guidance on your visa situation, ESEI recommends Antonio Segura Abogados y Gestores, an immigration law firm experienced in supporting international graduates in Spain.
A Note on Legal Advice
Spanish immigration procedures can change, and the specifics can vary depending on your nationality, your personal circumstances, and the autonomous community where you apply. This guide is intended as a general overview and a starting point for your research.
Before beginning any student visa modification process, it is strongly recommended that you consult with a qualified immigration lawyer who can advise on the correct procedure for your specific situation. You should also verify requirements directly with your institution, your prospective employer, and the relevant Spanish immigration authorities.
Planning Ahead Pays Off
The students who make a smooth transition from study to work in Spain are almost always the ones who started thinking about it early. Understanding your options before you graduate, speaking to employers while you are still studying, and getting your documents in order ahead of time puts you in a far stronger position than trying to navigate it all after the fact.
Barcelona and the wider Spanish job market offer genuine opportunities for international graduates. With the right preparation, staying on after your studies is absolutely achievable.
Explore ESEI’s Programmes
👉 If you’re considering starting your own journey in Barcelona, explore ESEI’s Bachelor’s and Master’s programmes and see how we can support you on your study abroad journey.
You may also like
Best Hiking Spots Around Barcelona (Easy to Reach)
How to Network in Barcelona’s Startup Scene as a Student