Choosing a School in Madrid: Three Questions That Actually Help

Most expat parents arrive in Madrid having already spent hours on Facebook groups comparing school names, tuition fees, and waiting lists. What they haven’t done yet is answer the three questions that determine whether any of those schools make sense for their family. The school decision is also not separate from the housing decision. In Madrid, they are the same decision. Where you live determines which public schools you qualify for. Which international school you choose often determines which neighbourhoods are even viable, given commute times and traffic. Parents who start with the school and ignore the address, or start with the apartment and ignore the school, create problems for themselves that are expensive to fix later. Before you compare programmes or read another forum thread, answer these three questions. 1. What kind of childhood do you want your child to have? This question is more useful than it sounds. It forces you to picture your child’s daily life, not just their academic trajectory. A Spanish public school or concertado puts your child inside a local community. Their classmates are from the neighbourhood. Their Spanish develops fast, not because of formal instruction but because there is no other option. Birthday parties, after-school football, weekend plans: all of it happens in Spanish, with local kids, rooted in the barrio. Families who want genuine integration, or who want their children to grow up bilingual in the real sense, often choose this path and don’t regret it. What they do experience, especially with older children, is a hard first year. A nine-year-old dropped into a Spanish classroom in September with limited language is not having a smooth autumn. The adaptation period is real and it takes time. Parents who choose this path with clear eyes and good support in place tend to come out the other side with children who are genuinely bilingual and socially embedded. Parents who choose it hoping it will be easy sometimes struggle. Concertados are semi-private schools that follow the Spanish national curriculum, are significantly more affordable than full private schools, and are most often Catholic-run, though secular concertados exist, particularly in newer areas of the city. They are popular and frequently oversubscribed. Applications need to happen early, and the admissions system runs on a strict points-based criteria. Siblings already enrolled carry significant weight: one sibling gives you 15 points, two or more gives you 30. Address matters too, though Madrid’s Zone Unique system means you earn equal proximity points for any school within your municipal district, not just the ones three blocks away. That is a meaningful relief for families still deciding where to live. They are not simply available because you want them. International schools follow foreign systems: British, American, IB, French, German. The working language is usually English. The curriculum travels. If your family moves again in three years, your child’s academic record is legible to the next school in London or Toronto or Singapore. For families who relocate regularly, this continuity has real value and the premium makes sense. The trade-off is worth understanding clearly, because it is not what most people expect. Many of Madrid’s well-known international schools, Hastings, St. George’s, King’s, and others, have student bodies that are majority Spanish. These are high-income local families who want their children educated in English. Your child does not enter a community of fellow expats navigating the same transition. They enter a community where Spanish children have existing friendships and speak Spanish on the playground. The international label describes the curriculum, not the social environment. Some children adapt quickly and thrive. Others find it isolating in a way their parents did not anticipate. One practical note on curriculum: of the international options, the IB tends to give families the most flexibility long-term, as it is the pathway most widely accepted for both Spanish and global university applications, more so than a pure British or American diploma. Neither path is wrong. They lead to different childhoods. There is also a middle path worth knowing about. Madrid has expanded its bilingual school network significantly over the past decade. A number of public and concertado schools now teach a substantial portion of the curriculum in English, which gives families partial immersion without the cost of a full international school. The level of English instruction varies more than the label suggests: schools designated as a Bilingual Section typically deliver around 50 percent of classes in English, while those running a Bilingual Programme deliver closer to 30 percent. That distinction matters when you are weighing integration against language continuity. For families who want local roots but are not ready to commit to a fully Spanish-language environment, a strong bilingual público or concertado is worth researching early. Availability varies by district and demand is high, so the address question applies here too. 2. What is your real timeline in Spain? Timeline is probably the most underweighted factor in this decision, and it does most of the work once you’re honest about it. If you are here for one to three years, choose an international school. Full stop. Pulling a child out of the Spanish system just as they reach fluency disrupts their progress and creates an awkward re-entry into whatever curriculum comes next. The language investment doesn’t pay off in a short stay. An international school protects continuity and keeps the return home straightforward. If you are here for four years or more, or permanently, the calculation shifts. Longer stays give older children the time they need to reach genuine academic-level Spanish, which takes two to three years in practice. They give younger children a native-level foundation that lasts a lifetime. And they give your family access to social and professional networks that are simply not available from inside an international school. One specific detail that catches families off guard: if your child will eventually apply to a Spanish university, the school needs to prepare them for the university entrance exam, officially transitioning to PAU (Prueba de Acceso a la Universidad)