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International Schools vs Public Schools in Barcelona [2026]

Choosing between international, public, and concertada schools in Barcelona. Costs, language immersion, enrollment timeline, and our family's experience.

Before You Move16 min readUpdated April 4, 2026by Kwadwo Adu

Quick Answer

Barcelona has three school types: public (free, Catalan immersion), concertada (semi-private, EUR 100-400/month), and international (private, EUR 5,000-20,000/year). Public schools teach primarily in Catalan with Spanish as a subject. International schools teach in English, French, or German. Enrollment for public schools opens in March for the following September. International schools accept rolling admissions.

Why We Wrote This Guide

When we moved to Barcelona with our two kids (ages 6 and 8 at the time), choosing a school was the single biggest decision we faced. Bigger than the apartment, bigger than the visa, bigger than anything else. Because the school determines your children's daily life, their social circle, the language they learn, and honestly, your entire family's experience of living in Barcelona.

We enrolled our kids mid-year in a public school. Catalan was not even on our radar before we arrived. We thought Barcelona meant Spanish. Within the first week, our kids came home speaking words we did not recognize. That is when we realized we needed to understand the school system properly, not just pick the first option available.

This guide covers everything we wish someone had told us before we started: the three types of schools, how language works in each, what they cost, when to apply, and what the actual experience is like for foreign families.

School Types Explained

Barcelona has three categories of schools, and the differences between them are significant.

Public Schools (Escoles Publiques)

Public schools in Catalonia are free and funded entirely by the Generalitat de Catalunya (the regional government). They follow the Catalan national curriculum, and the primary language of instruction is Catalan. Spanish is taught as a subject, typically starting with a few hours per week in primary school and increasing in secondary.

Key characteristics:

  • Cost: Free (small voluntary contributions for materials, EUR 50-150/year)
  • Language: Catalan immersion (70-80% Catalan, 20-30% Spanish, English as foreign language)
  • Curriculum: Catalan national curriculum (aligned with Spanish standards)
  • Class size: 25 students maximum per class
  • Hours: 9:00 AM - 4:30 PM (with a lunch break)
  • Lunch: Optional, EUR 120-160/month (catered, eaten at school)
  • Religion: Secular (optional religion classes available)
  • Quality: Varies by school and neighborhood, but generally good

Public schools in Barcelona have "aules d'acollida" (welcome classrooms) specifically designed for children who arrive without speaking Catalan. These are small-group sessions where a specialist teacher helps your child learn Catalan intensively during the first year. Your child still attends their regular class for most of the day but is pulled out for Catalan support sessions. The program is well-established and effective. Most foreign children reach functional Catalan within 6-12 months.

Concertada Schools (Escoles Concertades)

Concertada schools are the uniquely Spanish middle ground between public and private. They are privately owned (often by religious organizations or educational foundations) but receive significant public funding. In exchange for the funding, they must follow the public curriculum and accept students through the same enrollment process as public schools.

Key characteristics:

  • Cost: Officially free (publicly funded), but with "voluntary" contributions of EUR 100-400/month that are, in practice, expected
  • Language: Same Catalan immersion model as public schools, sometimes with more Spanish or English hours
  • Curriculum: Catalan national curriculum (same as public)
  • Class size: 25 students maximum (same as public)
  • Religious affiliation: Many are Catholic (Jesuits, Salesians, etc.), though some are secular
  • Extra activities: Often more extracurricular options than public schools
  • Quality: Generally perceived as slightly higher than average public schools, though this varies

The concertada system is huge in Catalonia. Roughly 35% of students in Barcelona attend concertada schools. Many local families view them as the sweet spot: better resourced than public schools, but a fraction of the cost of international schools.

International Schools (Escoles Internacionals)

International schools are fully private, independently funded, and follow international curricula. They teach primarily in English (British or American curriculum), French, German, or other languages. They are the most expensive option but offer the most familiar educational environment for expat families.

Key characteristics:

  • Cost: EUR 5,000-20,000 per year (plus registration fees, uniforms, and extras)
  • Language: English (most common), French, German, or multilingual
  • Curriculum: British (IGCSE, A-Levels), American (AP, SAT prep), International Baccalaureate (IB), French (Baccalaureat), or German (Abitur)
  • Class size: 15-22 students (smaller than public/concertada)
  • Hours: Vary by school, typically 8:30 AM - 4:00 PM or later
  • Admissions: Rolling admissions (mid-year entry possible)
  • Quality: Generally high, but varies significantly between schools
  • Community: International families, diplomats, corporate relocations

Language of Instruction: The Catalan Question

This is the part that surprises almost every expat family. Barcelona is in Catalonia, and Catalonia has its own language: Catalan. It is not a dialect of Spanish. It is a separate Romance language, closer to French and Italian in some ways than to Spanish.

In public and concertada schools, the language of instruction is Catalan. Not Spanish. Not bilingual. Catalan. This is the result of Catalonia's "linguistic immersion" policy, which has been in place since the 1980s. The goal is to ensure all children in Catalonia are fluent in Catalan, regardless of their home language.

What This Means for Your Kids

  • Math, science, history, art: Taught in Catalan
  • Spanish language and literature: Taught as a separate subject (in Spanish)
  • English: Taught as a foreign language (quality and hours vary by school)
  • Playground language: Mixed, often Catalan among local kids, Spanish in more diverse areas
  • Textbooks: In Catalan

How Foreign Children Adapt

The adaptation is faster than you expect, but the first months are intense:

  • Weeks 1-4: Confusion, frustration, reliance on gestures and visual cues
  • Months 2-3: Basic comprehension, starting to pick up common phrases
  • Months 4-6: Conversational Catalan for daily interactions, still struggling with academic language
  • Months 6-12: Functional fluency for classroom participation
  • Year 2: Near-native for most children under 10

The younger the child, the faster the adaptation. Children under 7 typically reach fluency in under a year. Children over 10 take longer and may find the academic gap more challenging.

From our experience:

Enrollment Timeline

Timing matters enormously for school enrollment in Barcelona. The public and concertada systems follow a strict annual calendar. International schools are more flexible.

Public and Concertada Schools

WhenWhat
January-FebruaryJornades de Portes Obertes (open days). Schools open their doors for visits. Attend as many as possible.
March (usually first two weeks)Pre-inscripcio (pre-enrollment) period opens. You submit your application through the Generalitat's online portal or at your preferred school.
March (end of month)Application deadline. Late applications go to the bottom of the list.
AprilPoints are calculated (based on proximity, siblings, income, disability).
MayProvisional allocation published. You can see which school your child is assigned to.
JuneDefinitive allocation. Final school assignments confirmed.
June (end)Matricula (formal enrollment). You go to the school to register and provide documentation.
SeptemberSchool year starts (usually second week of September).

Mid-Year Enrollment

If you arrive outside the enrollment window (which most expats do), you go through the Oficina Municipal d'Escolaritzacio (OME). This is the municipal office that handles out-of-cycle school placements.

The process:

  1. Visit the OME with your child's passport, Empadronamiento, and previous school records (translated and apostilled)
  2. They assess available spots in schools near your address
  3. You are offered a place at a school with availability (you may not get your first choice)
  4. Enrollment is typically processed within 1-2 weeks

International Schools

International schools accept rolling admissions year-round, subject to availability. The process:

  1. Contact the school directly (website application or email)
  2. Submit application with previous school records, passport copies, and a personal statement
  3. Assessment day (some schools require an entrance exam or interview)
  4. Offer and acceptance
  5. Payment of registration fee (typically EUR 500-2,000, non-refundable)
  6. Start date agreed (can be mid-year)

Costs Comparison

ExpensePublic SchoolConcertada SchoolInternational School
TuitionFreeFree (publicly funded)EUR 5,000-20,000/year
"Voluntary" contributionEUR 50-150/yearEUR 100-400/monthIncluded in tuition
Registration feeNoneNone or smallEUR 500-2,000 (one-time)
LunchEUR 120-160/monthEUR 120-170/monthEUR 150-250/month
UniformUsually noneOften required (EUR 100-200/year)Required (EUR 200-500/year)
Books and materialsEUR 50-200/yearEUR 100-300/yearOften included or EUR 200-500/year
ExtracurricularsEUR 0-100/monthEUR 0-150/monthOften included
School busNot availableSometimes (EUR 100-200/month)Often available (EUR 150-300/month)
Total annual cost (approx.)EUR 1,500-3,000EUR 3,000-7,000EUR 8,000-25,000

Note: The "voluntary" contributions at concertada schools are technically optional, but in practice, there is significant social pressure to pay. Some concertada schools bundle these contributions with materials, technology fees, and extracurricular activities in a way that makes them effectively mandatory.

Top 10 International Schools in Barcelona

Here are the most established international schools in Barcelona, listed alphabetically. Costs and curricula are subject to change; verify directly with each school.

1. American School of Barcelona (ASB)

  • Location: Esplugues de Llobregat
  • Curriculum: American (AP, SAT prep)
  • Language: English (Spanish and Catalan as subjects)
  • Ages: 3-18
  • Annual tuition: EUR 10,000-18,000
  • Notable: Strong STEM program, excellent university placement to US and European universities

2. Benjamin Franklin International School (BFIS)

  • Location: Ciutat Vella (central Barcelona)
  • Curriculum: American / International Baccalaureate (IB)
  • Language: English (Spanish and Catalan as subjects)
  • Ages: 3-18
  • Annual tuition: EUR 9,000-16,000
  • Notable: Urban campus, diverse student body, IB diploma program

3. British School of Barcelona (BSB)

  • Location: Castelldefels and Sitges
  • Curriculum: British (IGCSE, A-Levels)
  • Language: English (Spanish and Catalan as subjects)
  • Ages: 3-18
  • Annual tuition: EUR 8,000-15,000
  • Notable: Two campuses, strong sports facilities, British boarding school ethos

4. Deutsche Schule Barcelona (DSB)

  • Location: Esplugues de Llobregat
  • Curriculum: German (Abitur)
  • Language: German (Spanish, Catalan, and English as subjects)
  • Ages: 3-18
  • Annual tuition: EUR 5,000-8,000
  • Notable: One of the most affordable international options, strong academic reputation

5. Europa International School

  • Location: Sant Cugat del Valles
  • Curriculum: Spanish + International Baccalaureate (IB)
  • Language: Trilingual (English, Spanish, Catalan)
  • Ages: 1-18
  • Annual tuition: EUR 7,000-12,000
  • Notable: Trilingual approach, large campus with extensive sports facilities

6. Hamelin-Laie International School

  • Location: Montgat (coastal, north of Barcelona)
  • Curriculum: International Baccalaureate (IB)
  • Language: English (Spanish and Catalan as subjects)
  • Ages: 1-18
  • Annual tuition: EUR 7,000-13,000
  • Notable: Beautiful coastal location, strong arts and music program

7. International School of Barcelona (ISB) / Bogatell

  • Location: Poblenou (central Barcelona)
  • Curriculum: International Baccalaureate (IB)
  • Language: English (Spanish and Catalan as subjects)
  • Ages: 3-12 (primary only)
  • Annual tuition: EUR 10,000-14,000
  • Notable: Central location, small and personal, but primary only

8. Kensington School

  • Location: Pedralbes
  • Curriculum: British (IGCSE, A-Levels)
  • Language: English (Spanish and Catalan as subjects)
  • Ages: 3-18
  • Annual tuition: EUR 8,000-14,000
  • Notable: Established in 1966, one of the oldest international schools in Barcelona

9. Lycee Francais de Barcelone

  • Location: Pedralbes / Sarria
  • Curriculum: French (Baccalaureat)
  • Language: French (Spanish, Catalan, and English as subjects)
  • Ages: 3-18
  • Annual tuition: EUR 5,000-8,000
  • Notable: Part of the AEFE network, subsidized by the French government, very affordable for the quality

10. St. Peter's School

  • Location: Sarria
  • Curriculum: British (IGCSE, A-Levels) / International Baccalaureate (IB)
  • Language: English (Spanish and Catalan as subjects)
  • Ages: 1-18
  • Annual tuition: EUR 9,000-16,000
  • Notable: Central upscale location, excellent facilities, strong parent community

How to Choose the Right School

Choosing a school is deeply personal, but here are the factors that matter most for expat families:

1. How Long Are You Staying?

  • 1-2 years: International school is probably the right choice. Your kids keep learning in English, maintain continuity with their previous education, and can transition back to a school in your home country without academic gaps.
  • 3-5 years: Either option works. If you want your kids to integrate deeply into Barcelona life and become bilingual/trilingual, public or concertada. If you want educational continuity and an English-language environment, international.
  • Long-term / permanently: Seriously consider public or concertada. Your children will become fully trilingual, integrate into the local community, and have a social network rooted in Barcelona. International schools can create a "bubble" of transient expat families.

2. Your Budget

If cost is a factor, the decision becomes simpler:

  • Public school: EUR 1,500-3,000/year total
  • Concertada: EUR 3,000-7,000/year total
  • International: EUR 8,000-25,000/year per child

For a family with two children, the difference between public and international school is EUR 15,000-45,000 per year. Over the school years, that adds up fast.

3. Your Child's Age and Personality

Younger children (under 8) adapt to Catalan immersion remarkably fast. If your child is 5 or 6 and you are staying long-term, public school is a serious option. The language barrier resolves itself within months.

Older children (12+) face a harder transition. Academic demands are higher, social dynamics are more complex, and falling behind in a language you do not speak is genuinely distressing. For teenagers, an international school or at minimum a concertada with strong support for foreign students is usually the safer choice.

4. Language Goals

If you want your children to speak Catalan and Spanish fluently: public or concertada. There is no substitute for full immersion.

If you want your children to maintain strong English and follow an international curriculum: international school.

If you want both: some international schools offer trilingual programs, or you can supplement public school with English tutoring or Saturday school.

5. Location

Your school determines your daily commute. In Barcelona, traffic is manageable, but driving kids across the city twice a day gets old fast. Prioritize schools within 15-20 minutes of your home, or along your commute route. Public schools are assigned by proximity to your Empadronamiento address, which means your neighborhood choice and your school choice are linked.

Enrollment Process: Step by Step

For Public and Concertada Schools (Standard Enrollment)

Step 1: Attend open days (January-February)

Schools host jornades de portes obertes where you can visit, meet teachers, see the facilities, and ask questions. These are announced on each school's website and the Ajuntament de Barcelona's education portal. Attend several to compare.

Step 2: Prepare your documentation

You will need:

  • Child's passport or national ID
  • Empadronamiento (showing your Barcelona address)
  • Previous school records (translated and apostilled if from outside Spain)
  • Vaccination record
  • Family book (Libro de Familia) or equivalent
  • Income documentation (if claiming financial priority points)

Step 3: Submit your pre-inscripcio (March)

Through the Generalitat's online portal or in person at your preferred school. You list up to 10 schools in order of preference. Points are assigned based on:

  • Proximity: Living in the school's catchment area (30 points)
  • Siblings: Having a sibling already enrolled (50 points)
  • Family income: Below a threshold (15 points)
  • Disability: Child or parent with disability (15 points)

Step 4: Wait for allocation (April-May)

The system assigns students based on points. If you are in the catchment area and have a sibling at the school, you are virtually guaranteed a spot. Without these advantages, it becomes a lottery among applicants with equal points.

Step 5: Formal enrollment (June)

Once allocated, you go to the school to complete the matricula. Bring all original documents and sign the enrollment forms.

From our experience:

Frequently Asked Questions

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Drac reading the starter pack

Get everything in one place

  • Pre-move and first-month checklists
  • Document templates in Spanish and Catalan
  • Phone scripts for appointments
  • Lifetime updates
Download Free Starter Pack