A thousand small decisions, turned into a plan.
Moving a life abroad is not one big decision. It’s a thousand small ones, each behind a form in a language you didn’t grow up with. With partners we’ve vetted, we turn them into a plan with dates on it.
Sound like you?
You’re moving as a family
School places have calendars and catchments. The move gets planned around them, not the other way round.
You’re retiring here
Healthcare, residency, the padrón, a home without stairs you’ll regret. A landing designed for the long, calm version of Spain.
You work remotely
Fast internet, a workable time zone, and the paperwork that makes it legal, sorted before the first video call drops.
What we take off your plate.
Step by step, no surprises.
Your move, mapped
Who’s coming, when, what can’t go wrong. The plan starts from your non-negotiables: school terms, health needs, work.
The essentials, in order
Paperwork, school applications, healthcare registration, removals: sequenced so each one feeds the next instead of blocking it.
Landing week
Keys, utilities live, appointments booked, a phone that works. The week that decides how the whole move feels.
Settling in
The questions keep coming for months: “which insurance”, “where do I object to this letter”. We’re still the number you call.
Asked every week.
Public or private healthcare?
Spain has both, and most movers end up using a mix. What you’re entitled to depends on your residency route and situation. The partners lay out your real options rather than a brochure answer.
When do we apply for schools?
State-school places run on official windows in spring, with late arrivals handled office by office; private and international schools set their own calendars. It’s the first thing we check, because it can set the date of your whole move.
Can I drive on my licence?
EU licences broadly keep working; many non-EU licences must be exchanged or retested after a grace period, and the rules differ by country. We’ll check yours specifically before the move. It’s a nasty one to discover late.
Do you handle visas?
Visas and permits are immigration-specialist work, and we treat them that way: vetted advisors, honestly introduced. And to say it plainly: buying a home does not by itself give you residency in Spain.
Ask us about your move. We’ll answer plainly.
No pressure, no obligation. And if we’re not the right people for it, we’ll say so and point you somewhere better.