Tourist and Visitor Visa
A Tourist and Visitor Visa (legally classified within the Schengen Zone as a Short-Stay Type C Visa) is an entry permit that allows non-citizens to enter a country for leisure, vacations, family visits, short-term medical treatments, or non-commercial business meetings.
Unlike residency visas that allow you to work or settle, a visitor visa is strictly temporary. Navigating this framework requires understanding the strict boundary between visa-required and visa-exempt travelers, alongside new European border control regulations.
The 90/180-Day Rule: The Golden Boundary
Whether you need a physical visa stamp or are eligible for visa-free entry, all tourists are bound by the exact same time restriction across the Schengen territory: The 90/180-Day Rule.
- How it works: You can stay in the region for a maximum of 90 days within any rolling 180-day window.
- The rolling calculation: This is not a fixed reset on January 1st. To check if you are legal, look back exactly 180 days from the current day and count the number of days you spent inside the zone. If that total hits 90, you must exit immediately or face overstay fines, deportation, and multi-year entry bans.
Visa-Exempt vs. Visa-Required Travel
The application process changes completely depending on the passport you hold:
1. For Visa-Exempt Passports (US, UK, Canada, Australia, etc.)
If you hold a passport from a visa-free nation, you do not need to visit a consulate before booking a flight. You simply present your passport at the border.
- The 2026 ETIAS Update: The European Union is introducing ETIAS (European Travel Information and Authorisation System). Visa-free travelers must complete a 10-minute online pre-screening form and pay a €20 fee (valid for 3 years) before boarding their flight.
2. For Visa-Required Passports (India, China, South Africa, etc.)
You must formally apply for a Schengen Tourist Visa via your home country’s designated consular processing center (such as BLS International or VFS Global) well in advance of your flight.
Standard Tourist Visa Document Checklist
If you must apply for a physical visa sticker, your application package must prove two things to consular officers: you can afford your holiday, and you have strong ties that force you to return home.
- Schengen Application Form: Fully completed and signed.
- Passport Validity: Must be issued within the last 10 years, contain at least two blank pages, and remain valid for at least 3 months after your intended departure date from Europe.
- Proof of Accommodation: Confirmed hotel bookings, rental agreements, or an official government-stamped Letter of Invitation (Carta de Invitación) generated by a legal resident host at their local police station.
- Verified Travel Itinerary: Round-trip flight reservations showing clear entry and exit dates. (Immigration lawyers strongly advise against purchasing non-refundable tickets before the visa is physically approved).
- Schengen Travel Insurance: A specialized certificate proving a minimum of €30,000 in emergency medical coverage, hospitalization, and medical repatriation, valid across all Schengen states.
Proving Financial Solvency: 2026 Daily Baselines
When applying for a visa or passing through border control checkpoints, travelers must prove they can support themselves out-of-pocket during their stay.
In Spain, these financial baselines are indexed directly to the national economic index (IPREM). For 2026, the strict minimum spending thresholds are:
| Metric | Minimum Financial Requirement (2026 Baseline) | Acceptable Verification Proof |
| Daily Spending Allowance | €122.10 per person / day | Liquid cash, traveler’s checks, or active international credit cards. |
| Absolute Minimum Balance | €1,098.90 per person | Original bank statements covering the last 3 consecutive months showing this minimum balance, regardless of whether your trip is only 2 or 3 days long. |
The Consular Application Blueprint
If you are a visa-required traveler, the application process follows a rigid, non-negotiable schedule:
1.Locate and Book Your Appointment: Step 1.
Identify the authorized processing partner (BLS/VFS) representing the consulate where you will spend the most days. Secure an appointment 4 to 6 weeks before your trip, as summer slots fill up fast.
2.Compile and Translate Documents: Step 2.
Gather your bank statements, travel insurance, and flight itineraries. Any document not issued in the host country’s language or English must be handled by an official certified Sworn Translator.
3.Biometric Interview & Fees: Step 3.
Attend the visa center in person. Submit your physical documents, complete a digital fingerprint scan, and pay the non-refundable standard adult visa fee of €90.
4.Processing and Passport Pickup: Step 4.
The consulate reviews your file, which typically takes 15 to 21 working days. Once a decision is logged, you collect your passport containing the physical visa vignette or receive it via courier.