Choosing a school in Valencia is the single decision that shapes the rest of your family's move. It determines which neighborhood you can realistically live in, how quickly your children integrate, how much you spend each month, and whether your first year here feels like a fresh start or a slow recovery from a planning mistake.
This guide is written for international families who are looking at Valencia as a home, not a holiday. It covers what the system actually offers in 2026, which schools families like yours are choosing, what they cost, when to apply, and what the waitlists really look like. We have tried to keep the marketing language out and the practical reality in.
TL;DR: Quick answers for families in a hurry
- Valencia has roughly 30 schools that international families typically consider, split across British, American, IB, French, German, Montessori, bilingual, and concertado (semi-private) categories.
- Annual fees range from €0 (Spanish public) to around €15,000 per child at the top international schools. Most British and American schools sit between €7,000 and €10,500 per child per year.
- The main admissions window is March to May for the following September. Mid-year entry is possible but limited, especially in the early primary years.
- Waitlists are real. The most popular international schools, particularly British School of Valencia, Caxton College, and American School of Valencia, can require 6 to 18 months of advance planning for some year groups.
- Your neighborhood and your school are the same decision. Most international schools are clustered in specific zones (Rocafort, Puçol, La Cañada, El Plantío area). Spanish public schools are catchment-based, meaning your home address determines your options.
- The system rewards early planners and punishes late arrivals. Families who begin researching schools 9 to 12 months before their move have substantially more choice than those who arrive in August expecting a September start.
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The Valencia school landscape, simplified
Spain has three main types of school, and Valencia families navigate all three.
Public schools (colegios públicos) are free, fully funded by the state, and taught primarily in Spanish, with significant amounts of instruction in Valencian (the regional language, closely related to Catalan). They are catchment-based: your home address determines which schools your child can apply to. Quality varies by neighborhood. For families committed to integration, willing to embrace Valencian language exposure, and prepared for a fully Spanish-speaking environment, public schools are a credible choice.
Concertado schools are the often-overlooked middle path. These are privately operated but state-subsidized, meaning families pay only a "voluntary contribution" of roughly €50 to €250 per month, plus uniforms, lunches, and extras. Many concertados are Catholic-affiliated, though plenty are secular. Some are bilingual. They offer smaller class sizes, stronger discipline structures, and tighter community feel than most public schools, at a fraction of international school cost. They remain underused by international families largely because the application process is in Spanish and not well documented in English.
Private and international schools are fully fee-paying. They include British curriculum schools following the National Curriculum of England, American curriculum schools, International Baccalaureate (IB) schools, French and German national curriculum schools, and Montessori schools. Most international families default to this category, sometimes without realizing the concertado option exists.
The schools international families are actually choosing in 2026
We have grouped the main options by curriculum type. Fees are as accurate as we can verify for the 2025–2026 academic year and rise modestly each year. Always confirm directly with the school before committing.
British curriculum schools
British School of Valencia (BSV) sits in central Valencia (L'Eixample neighborhood) and follows the English National Curriculum from Early Years through Sixth Form (IGCSEs and A-Levels). It is one of the longest-established international schools in the city, and arguably the most sought-after among UK families. Annual fees run roughly €7,150 to €9,570 per child, with a one-time registration fee of around €3,250. Waitlists are common, particularly at Reception (age 4–5) and Year 7 (age 11–12) entry points.
Caxton College is a large British curriculum school in Puçol, north of Valencia city. It has its own campus, extensive grounds, and a strong reputation for academic results and extracurricular breadth. Fees are roughly €8,500 to €10,500 per year depending on year group. The Puçol location means most families either live in the surrounding northern suburbs or use the school's bus network.
Cambridge House Community College is in Rocafort, another northern Valencia suburb popular with international families. It follows the British curriculum and operates as part of a wider British International School network. Fees sit at roughly €6,950 to €8,750 per year. Cambridge House is often the answer for families who want British education without Caxton's price point.
El Plantío International School is in La Cañada (west of Valencia), British curriculum, and a well-established option among UK and Dutch families in the western suburbs. Annual fees are around €7,430 to €8,255 per year.
Shackleton British School is a newer entrant in Valencia, also British curriculum, with a smaller and more boutique feel. Fees are competitive with Cambridge House and El Plantío, and as a newer school they sometimes have availability when others are full.
American curriculum schools
American School of Valencia (ASV) is in Puçol and offers the American curriculum plus the International Baccalaureate Diploma in the upper years. Fees run roughly €7,246 to €9,545 per year. ASV is the default choice for American families and for families whose university plans involve the US system.
ACIL International High School (American International School in Valencia) is a smaller American-curriculum option with high school focus, often used by families with teenagers needing US transcript continuity for college admissions.
IB and multi-curriculum schools
Ausiàs March is one of Valencia's oldest international schools (50+ years), offering the International Baccalaureate from Primary Years through Diploma. It has a strong reputation for academic rigor and is often a quiet first choice for families committed to the IB pathway.
Mas Camarena is a large private school in Bétera (north of Valencia) offering Spanish curriculum with strong English bilingual programs and IB options. It is one of the few options that successfully bridges Spanish and international approaches.
Other curriculum options
Lycée Français de Valence serves French and Francophone families and offers the full French national curriculum.
Deutsche Schule Valencia offers the German curriculum and is the primary option for German-speaking families.
Mammolina Montessori and several other Montessori schools serve families looking for non-traditional pedagogy, primarily at early years and primary level.
Bilingual concertado schools (the option families miss)
Schools like Colegio Guadalaviar, Colegio Iale, and Colegio San José de Calasanz offer bilingual Spanish-English instruction at concertado prices. They are not international schools in the British or American sense, but for families willing to embrace a more Spanish school environment with strong English support, they offer real value. Fees are typically €100 to €300 per month rather than €7,000+ per year.
What it actually costs, all-in
Headline tuition fees are only part of the story. Families consistently underestimate the total annual cost of an international school. Here is a more realistic breakdown for a single child at a mid-tier British or American school in Valencia:
| Cost item | Annual range (€) |
|---|---|
| Tuition | 7,000 – 10,500 |
| Registration fee (one-time, often non-refundable) | 1,500 – 3,500 |
| School lunches (daily) | 900 – 1,400 |
| Uniform (initial outlay, then partial replacement) | 300 – 600 |
| School bus (if used) | 1,200 – 2,000 |
| Books, supplies, technology fees | 300 – 800 |
| Extracurricular activities | 500 – 1,500 |
| School trips | 300 – 1,000 |
| Insurance and miscellaneous | 100 – 300 |
| Realistic all-in annual total | €11,000 – €21,500 per child |
For a family of three children at international school, the realistic annual education spend in Valencia ranges from €33,000 to €65,000. For most international families, this is the single largest line item in their cost of living, often exceeding rent.
This is one of the reasons we encourage families to seriously evaluate bilingual concertado and well-rated public schools before defaulting to international. Sometimes the right answer is international. Sometimes it is not.
The admissions calendar reality
Valencia's school admissions cycle is rigid. Spanish public and concertado schools operate on a fixed regional calendar set by the Conselleria d'Educació. International schools have more flexibility but still cluster their main admissions windows around the public calendar.
The main admissions window: March to May
For the following September entry, the bulk of admissions activity happens between mid-March and mid-May. Public and concertado schools open their formal application periods, families submit forms, lists of accepted students are published, and waitlists are confirmed. Most international schools synchronize their main admissions decisions with this period to align with families' broader planning.
If you are targeting a September 2026 start, you should have begun school research by January 2026 at the latest. Families who start in June or July looking for a September placement are usually working with whatever is left rather than with their preferred options.
Mid-year entry (October to February)
Mid-year admissions are possible at most international schools, subject to availability. Spanish public and concertado schools are harder to enter mid-year because they are constrained by class size regulations and require formal regional approval for additions outside the standard cycle.
The reality of mid-year entry is that the most desirable schools are usually full. Families who arrive in November expecting to walk into BSV or ASV often discover they are on a waitlist for the following September.
The August trap
This deserves its own warning. August in Spain is administrative dead time. Schools are closed. Public administration runs on skeleton staffing. Most gestores and lawyers are on holiday. If you arrive in August expecting to enroll your children for September, you will be unable to get answers, sign paperwork, or visit schools for most of the month.
Families who plan their move with a July or early August arrival, intending to have everything in place for September, are setting themselves up for stress. A better plan: arrive in June (when offices are still open and schools can confirm acceptance), or arrive in late September (accepting that the children will start a few weeks late and managing the family's expectations accordingly).
What waitlists actually look like
Waitlist transparency is one of the weakest parts of the Valencia school market. Schools rarely publish their current waitlist length, and the information you get often depends on who you ask and how you ask.
Based on conversations with admissions staff, current families, and our own research as of early 2026:
- British School of Valencia has waitlists at most year groups. Reception (age 4–5) and Year 7 (age 11–12) entry are the tightest. Plan 12+ months ahead for these year groups. Year 9 onwards is sometimes more open.
- Caxton College has growing demand and active waitlists at primary level. Secondary entry tends to be more available.
- American School of Valencia has steady demand, with primary waitlists more pronounced than secondary. ASV's location in Puçol filters out families unwilling to commit to the northern suburbs.
- Cambridge House has typically had more availability than BSV or Caxton, making it a strong backup option.
- El Plantío has shorter waitlists due to its western location, but is excellent for families settling in La Cañada or surrounding areas.
- Shackleton as a newer school has the most availability and is worth considering on those grounds alone.
- Concertado schools often have local-priority admissions, meaning families with empadronamiento in the school's catchment have first claim. Without local priority, waitlists are common.
The honest summary: if your child is entering Reception, Year 1, Year 7, or any "key entry point," start your school research 9 to 12 months before your target arrival. If you are aiming at less competitive year groups (Years 3 to 6, Years 8 to 9), 6 months may be enough.
How neighborhood and school are the same decision
This is the single most important practical insight in this guide, and the one most families discover too late.
Your neighborhood determines your realistic school options. Once you have committed to an international school, you have effectively chosen a geographic zone. Once you have chosen a neighborhood with strong public or concertado schools, you have effectively chosen a school path.
Here is how the main school clusters map to neighborhoods:
Central Valencia (L'Eixample, Ruzafa, Pla del Real)
Families here typically attend British School of Valencia (central campus), or local public/concertado schools with strong reputations. This is the choice for families who want urban life, walkability, café culture, and central amenities. School commutes are short.
Northern suburbs (Rocafort, Bétera, Puçol)
This is the heartland of Valencia's international school cluster: Caxton College, Cambridge House, American School of Valencia, Mas Camarena. Families here usually drive or use school buses. The lifestyle is suburban, with larger homes, gardens, and easier parking. Less urban culture, more space.
Western area (La Cañada, Paterna, l'Eliana)
El Plantío International School anchors this zone. La Cañada in particular has a strong international family community. Suburban feel, good amenities, easy access to Valencia city by car.
Coastal areas (El Cabanyal, La Patacona, Alboraya)
Most families here use Valencia city schools (commuting in) or send children to schools in the northern suburbs. Beach lifestyle, walkable, popular with younger international families and digital nomad families with young children.
South and west periphery (Picanya, Torrent, Aldaia)
Spanish public and concertado schools dominate. Lower cost of living. Less international community concentration.
A common mistake families make is signing a rental contract in central Valencia, then discovering that their preferred school is in Puçol and the daily school run is 45 minutes each way. The reverse mistake is common too: families rent in Rocafort to be near Caxton College, then realize they wanted urban culture and end up frustrated.
Choose your school first, or at least your school category, then choose your neighborhood. Or, choose your neighborhood with full awareness of which schools it makes practical.
Schools for families with specific needs
Learning differences and special educational needs
This is a real gap in the Valencia school market and one of the most common pain points we hear from international families. Spanish schools, including most international ones, have significantly less developed support for learning differences (dyslexia, ADHD, autism spectrum, processing differences) than UK or US schools. Some international schools have strong learning support departments, others have almost none.
Families with children who have established learning support needs should approach school selection with extra care. Direct conversations with the learning support team (not just admissions) are essential before committing. Caxton College, ASV, and BSV all have learning support provision, with varying depth and capacity at any given time.
Bilingual or trilingual families
Families with multiple home languages have more options than is commonly understood. International schools handle English-medium learners well. Bilingual concertados serve families who want Spanish embedded into daily life. For trilingual or quadrilingual families (English plus Spanish plus another), the German School and French Lycée are credible options if your family's third language matches.
Mid-year arrivals
Families arriving in October, November, or January should adjust expectations. Most international schools will accommodate mid-year entry where space allows, but your top choice may not be available. Plan a backup. Sometimes a year at a more available school followed by transferring to the preferred school the following September is the right call.
Late teens (Years 11 to 13 / Grades 10 to 12)
Continuity of curriculum becomes critical for university admissions. UK families with children mid-IGCSE or mid-A-Level should prioritize schools that match the exact curriculum and exam board. American families with children mid-AP or mid-IB should prioritize schools that match those qualifications. Switching curricula mid-stream in the final years of secondary school is rarely a good outcome.
How Spainlander helps with school placement
Choosing the right school in Valencia is mostly a question of matching three things: your children's specific situation (ages, languages, needs, personalities), your family's logistics (budget, neighborhood, lifestyle), and the current reality of each school (waitlists, fees, fit). The market changes year to year, and current information matters more than older guides suggest.
School Placement Brief: €295
For families who have decided on Valencia and need expert help choosing the right school, our School Placement Brief delivers:
- One 60-minute consultation by video, focused entirely on your family's school decision
- Written school strategy document within 5 business days, including 5 to 8 schools matched specifically to your children, current admissions timing, application strategy, and backup plans
- Realistic waitlist and fee information as of the current admissions cycle
The Brief is a one-time engagement designed to give you clarity before you commit to a school path. It does not include application submission (you handle that), but it does include strategic coaching on how to approach each school's admissions process.
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