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The School Choice In Spain Most Expat Families Live To Regret

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A dynamic and supportive educational environment.Credit: International School Estepona.

Most families moving to the Costa del Sol make the school decision fast, usually based on proximity, what other expats have done, or a quick Google search. Three years later, many wish they had thought harder. The gap between a British and Spanish education is not just about language. It shapes your child’s academic foundation, their ability to transition if you move on, and the level of support they receive if they need it.

This is the honest comparison most school prospectuses will not give you.

What do British and Spanish schools in Spain actually offer?

British and Spanish schools in Spain operate under entirely different frameworks, and understanding that difference is the starting point for everything else.

Spanish state and private schools follow the Spanish national curriculum, the LOE/LOMLOE framework. Lessons are delivered in Spanish, with English taught as a subject. The structure runs from Infantil (age 3) through Primaria (6–12) into Secundaria and eventually Bachillerato. It is a broad, content-led system with a strong emphasis on the Spanish language and national identity.

British international schools follow the UK national curriculum, teaching through English with Spanish as a structured daily subject. The British primary phase covers roughly ages 2–11, focusing on strong foundations in reading, writing, numeracy, and language before children move into secondary education, whether that stays in Spain or moves back to the UK or another country.

The International School Estepona is a British primary school serving children from age 2 to 12 across the Costa del Sol. With small class sizes, Spanish lessons every day, and a curriculum built on strong English literacy and language, it offers what many families in the Estepona and Marbella area are looking for: a serious, structured start that travels with the child wherever life takes them next.

Key takeaway: These are not just different schools; they are different educational systems. Your choice in the primary years sets the academic foundation your child carries into everything that follows.

The reality nobody puts in the prospectus: life on the Costa del Sol is transient

Most people who move to the Costa del Sol do not stay for the entirety of their child’s academic journey from age 2 to 18. Expat life in Marbella, Estepona, Benahavís, and Fuengirola is transitional. Families arrive for work, lifestyle, or opportunity. Some stay five years. Some stay two. Some move on to Dubai, back to the UK, or to another European city. Very few decide at age 3 that this is where their child will complete all sixteen years of education.

If there is any meaningful chance your family will relocate, a British primary education is significantly lower risk. A child educated in English, following the British curriculum with Spanish as a strong secondary language, can step into a British, Irish, Australian, or international school and continue with minimal disruption. A child educated entirely through the Spanish system, who has built their academic identity in Spanish, faces a much steeper transition at age 9, 10, or 11.

Giving children a strong base in English reading, writing, and academic language during the primary years is not a rejection of Spain. It is a practical decision that keeps options open in a life that will likely involve more than one country.

Key takeaway: For families whose future plans are uncertain, a British primary education offers academic portability that a Spanish-only education cannot.

How does language of instruction affect development?

Language is the most contested factor in this decision, and the one most parents underestimate.

Younger children immersed in a Spanish school environment will often achieve conversational fluency in Spanish within 18–24 months. For very young children with no prior Spanish, immersion is often the fastest route to fluency, but it comes with a short-term academic cost. While a child is decoding a new language, maths concepts, reading comprehension, and core learning can lag behind.

For older children arriving at age 9, 10, or into secondary school, the challenge is greater. Conversational Spanish comes relatively quickly, but academic language – the vocabulary needed to understand science, history, or geography in Spanish – takes years to build. A child who joins a Spanish secondary school without strong prior Spanish may spend years working below their potential.

A British school environment addresses this by teaching the full curriculum in English while delivering Spanish as a structured daily subject. At The International School Estepona, Spanish is taught every day in a planned, measurable way rather than left to chance. Children develop real Spanish alongside their core subjects without sacrificing academic progress.

The result is not full bilingual immersion. It is something arguably more valuable for mobile families: a child who is academically strong in English and functionally capable in Spanish, able to integrate socially in Spain while remaining academically portable.

Key takeaway: Daily structured Spanish in a British school builds real language skills without derailing academic progress, a practical combination for families who may not stay on the Costa del Sol indefinitely.

British vs Spanish curriculum: why structure matters in the primary years

The British and Spanish curricula are built on different philosophies, and those differences show up in the classroom from the earliest years.

The Spanish primary curriculum offers broad subject coverage taught in Spanish, with a strong emphasis on content knowledge, written work, and national identity. Progression is largely teacher-led, with significant weight placed on tests and content recall.

The British primary curriculum is built around the Early Years Foundation Stage (EYFS) and Key Stages 1 and 2. It places early, explicit emphasis on phonics-based reading, structured writing, and mathematical reasoning. Assessment is regular and developmental, focused on where each child is and what they need next, rather than simply pass or fail thresholds.

For primary-age children, this structured approach to reading and writing tends to produce strong literacy foundations – skills that transfer across languages and subjects throughout a child’s academic life.

Key takeaway: The British primary curriculum’s emphasis on phonics, structured writing, and developmental assessment builds literacy skills that travel with your child, wherever they go next.

Learning difficulties and SEN: where the British system often serves children better

For families with a child who has a learning difficulty or special educational need, this may be the most important difference of all.

The British special educational needs (SEN) framework is one of the most developed in the world. In well-run British international schools, the identification, assessment, and support process for dyslexia, ADHD, processing difficulties, autism spectrum conditions, and other needs is structured and documented. Staff are trained to spot early signs. Referral pathways exist. Support plans are written and reviewed.

In Spain’s school system, particularly in private and international schools, provision is more variable. State schools have increased SEN provision, but assessment can be slow, waiting lists long, and the framework for documenting and following an individual child’s needs is less consistently applied. A bright child with dyslexia, or a child on the autism spectrum without obvious behavioural issues, can go unidentified for years.

A British primary school with an active SEN process means that if your child is struggling, there is a structure in place to identify it and respond. Early identification in the primary years often determines whether a child’s secondary school experience is a success or a struggle.

Key takeaway: For any family where learning difficulties are diagnosed or suspected, a British primary school’s SEN framework typically offers earlier identification and better-structured support than most Spanish options.

Social integration and life in Spain

School choice does affect your child’s social life in Spain, but not always in the way parents assume.

Children at British schools in Spain tend to form friendships within an English-speaking international community – British, Irish, Scandinavian, South African, and others. It is a stable, familiar environment, especially for children who have just relocated and need grounding quickly.

Children at Spanish schools often integrate into local Spanish life faster. They develop Spanish friendships, local cultural fluency, and a social identity rooted in Spain. For families who are certain they are staying long-term and want their children to grow up as fully Spanish, that matters.

However, most Costa del Sol families are not certain how long they will stay. For these families, the risk of some social isolation at a British school is usually easier to manage than the academic disruption of uprooting a child from a Spanish-medium education at age 9 or 11 and switching them into an English-speaking secondary school.

Many families manage this balance by supplementing a British education with intentional Spanish life: local football clubs, Spanish-speaking playdates, and community activities. This produces children who are academically secure in English and genuinely comfortable socially in Spain.

Key takeaway: British schools provide social stability and academic portability; Spanish integration works best when families actively build Spanish life outside school hours.

What should you do next?

The decision comes down to three questions: How long are you likely to stay in Spain? Where do you want your child’s secondary education to take place? And does your child have any learning needs that require specialist support?

If your answers lean towards uncertainty, possible relocation, and a desire for a solid, transferable foundation, a British primary school is the lower-risk choice for ages 2 to 12.

For families on the western Costa del Sol, in Estepona, Marbella, Benahavís, and surrounding areas, The International School Estepona offers exactly that: a British primary education from age 2 to 12, small class sizes, daily Spanish lessons, and a clear focus on giving every child the strongest possible academic foundation before they transition to secondary school, wherever in the world that may be.

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Murcia Golf Society Raises Vital Funds For Rescue Dog’s Life-Changing Surgery

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Golf fundraiser funds surgery, giving rescue dog Greta new life Photo Credit: PAPS

A local golf club fundraiser in Murcia has helped to change the life of a 12-year-old rescue dog, after raising enough money to cover her vital surgery. Greta is a long-time shelter resident at the PAPS animal shelter in San Javier, Murcia, and is deeply beloved by the workers at the shelter.

A gentle dog, beloved by the friends at the shelter

Greta, a gentle and affectionate dog, has been at the PAPS (Protectora de Animales Perros del Sol) animal shelter since 2018, and needed a vital surgery. “Unfortunately, she needed extensive surgery on her elbow. This involved many trips to the vets and weeks of staying with one of our volunteers. Greta made herself very comfortable on their sofa!” stated the animal shelter in a post about the donation.

After local golf society, the El Valle Golf Club, hosted a fundraiser, an astounding €500 was collected and donated to PAPS. The cheque was presented to the animal shelter by former club treasurer Sandy Clare.

“Huge thank you to Sandy Clare for his donation of €500,” stated PAPS.

Greta has made a full recovery following her surgery

The animal shelter stated that the funds went directly towards Greta’s surgery and offers her a better quality of life in her later years. The shelter even offered an update through a Facebook post thanking the golf society for its generous donation.

“I’m pleased to report that Greta has made a full recovery and is now back at PAPS,” the shelter stated.

How to help Greta and the other pups at PAPS

Shelters like PAPS heavily rely on donations to help cover veterinary costs, food, and daily care for abandoned and rescued animals. Those who are interested in donating to Greta or any of the other shelter dogs can get in contact with the shelter through email at animalesperrosdelsol@hotmail.com

“Let’s hope this surgery helps Greta find her forever home,” stated the PAPS animal shelter.

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1-Minute Bottle Trick For Clearing Of Flies

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A Spanish summer is hard to beat. Long, late hot evenings, gorgeous sunsets with cocktails and al fresco dining. Its what makes life in Spain so special. But you have to take the rough with the smooth, as the heat also invites one of the country’s most frustrating and unhygienic seasonal pests. The common housefly.

The hotter it is, the faster food spoils, creating a breeding paradise for insects. Not only are they unbelievably annoying, they are also a health hazard, acting as vectors for diseases like salmonella, dysentery, and cholera.

To tackle the problem early on you can use a classic home remedy. It takes less than a minute to assemble, costs next to nothing, and offers a chemical-free way to protect your living spaces all season long.

How to build the classic plastic bottle fly trap

The plastic bottle fly trap works on a basic mechanical principle. Flies are drawn down into the structure by an enticing scent but are naturally unable to find the small opening to fly back out. To build, follow these three quick steps –

Take a clean plastic bottle and cut it roughly 10 centimetres below the cap, right where the plastic begins to widen.
Turn the top section upside down so the neck points downward like a funnel, and place it directly inside the bottom base. Leave a small gap of clear space between the mouth of the inverted funnel and the bottom of the bottle.
Secure the two pieces together by wrapping adhesive tape completely around the top rim. This keeps the structure stable and seals any tiny side gaps that a fly could use to crawl out.

Homemade fly trap
Homemade trap
Credit:Zîî Noôu/FB

The right indoor and outdoor bait recipes for success

While many online guides suggest a blanket mixture of water, sugar, and vinegar, using the wrong recipe inside your home can backfire. Large houseflies have entirely different preferences than tiny fruit flies, so matching your bait to the location is key.

Best bait for outdoor terraces and gardens

If you are placing your trap out on a patio, courtyard, or balcony, use a mixture of water, sugar, and vinegar. The sweet, fermenting aroma is incredibly effective at pulling pests away from your outdoor dining table. Because of the sharp, pungent scent, this specific mixture is strictly recommended for well-ventilated outdoor areas.

Best bait for kitchens and indoor spaces

Avoid using vinegar indoors. Large houseflies are often naturally repelled by it, and the smell can quickly become overwhelming inside a house. Instead, fill your indoor trap with warm water and plenty of dissolved sugar. To supercharge this indoor mix, drop in a small piece of overripe fruit (like a slice of banana or melon) or a pinch of baking yeast. This creates a mild, low-odour fermentation process that houseflies find irresistible.

Easy natural alternatives using everyday items

Sticky homemade fly paper

You can easily create your own chemical-free fly ribbons. Cut strips out of a brown paper bag, punch a hole at the top of each, and thread a string through for hanging. In a saucepan over medium heat, warm equal parts water and sugar with three tablespoons of honey, stirring until it forms a thick, sticky glaze. Coat the paper strips in the mixture and hang them up in problem areas where insects tend to gather.

The diluted vinegar barrier spray

Because houseflies actively avoid the scent of vinegar, it makes a terrible trap bait, but an exceptional defensive barrier. To use it indoors without creating an overwhelming smell in your living areas, mix equal parts vinegar and water in a spray bottle. Instead of misting the air, spray it strictly onto targeted entry points—like exterior window frames, door tracks, and the inside base of household bins. The scent quickly fades for humans as it dries, but it remains strong enough to disorient flies and stop them from crossing into your home.

Potted aromatic plants that act as natural deterrents

Utilizing the power of aromatic plants is a stylish way to help move them along. These plants add beautiful decorative value to Spanish windowsills and balconies and also have natural essential oils doubling up as insect repellents.

Citronella and mintCitronella is the ultimate defender for outdoor terraces. Indoors, potted peppermint is incredibly hardy, easy to maintain on a windowsill, and releases a sharp mentholated fragrance that flies actively avoid.
Basil and sage – Broad-leaved basil varieties are perfect for kitchen counters, producing an aroma that disrupts a fly’s sensitive sense of smell. Sage releases strong essential oils that create a highly unattractive environment for flying insects.
Bay leavesBay leaves naturally contain organic compounds called cineole and eugenol, which are scientifically proven insect deterrents. You can place dried bay leaves inside your pantry cupboards or scatter them on windowsills to amplify the protective effect.

Top tip. To make your live plants work effectively as natural deterrents, remember to gently rustle or brush their leaves occasionally. This physical action breaks the plant’s oil glands and releases the defensive aromas into the air.

Combined with daily kitchen hygiene, wiping surfaces down, and emptying your household bins frequently, these natural tricks will help your Spanish summer stay peaceful and fly-free.

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EU Launches Legal Action Against Spain Over ‘excessive’ Traveller Data Collection

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EU investigates Spain over excessive passenger data collection and retention. Photo Credit: Deniz Demirci / Unsplash

The European Union announced that it has launched infringement proceedings against Spain for failing to comply with its regulations on passenger data protection. The proceedings claim that the categories of data about passengers, as well as the time for which the authorities keep them, are excessive.

Spain’s data privacy issue: Too much data, held for too much time

To be specific, Spain requires travel accommodation providers, online booking platforms, and car rental companies to collect and store travellers’ personal data in a government database. However, the amount of data collected, as well as the categories, including payment information and GPS data, is the main point of contention. Additionally, Brussels alleges that law enforcement authorities have too broad access to this data without limitations.

Spanish authorities also retain the information for a period of three years, which Brussels states is “disproportionate.”

Brussels launches formal proceedings: What will happen if Spain does not correct the problem within 2 months

Brussels announced the proceedings on Thursday, June 4, having sent a formal notice letter to Spanish representatives. Spain now has two months to correct the system for collecting traveller data. If the issue is not resolved, Brussels can negotiate more time with Spanish authorities, but if an agreement is not reached, Spain could be denounced before the Court of Justice of the European Union (CJEU). 

If this occurs, and the CJEU rules that Spain has not complied with EU regulations, they could legally obligate the member state to comply, and in more extreme cases, impose strict fines on the country.

Travel organisations: Vindicated, but urging for immediate change

Following the announcement of the proceedings, FETAVE (the Spanish Federation of Territorial Associations of Travel Agencies), and UNAV (the Union of Travel Agencies), have put in a request for the Ministry of the Interior to suspend the application of the Royal Decree 933/2021, which obligates these agencies to collect, store, and send the data.

FETAVE, which is currently in the process of merging with UNAV, highlighted that it was the only Spanish tourism sector organisation that challenged the Royal Decree 933/2021 with European Union law, in January 2023. Since then, the organisation has consistently opposed the regulation.

Now, the two organisations state that the European Commission’s decision to impose sanctions on Spain confirms their suspicions about the “disproportionate” nature, “legal uncertainty” and “practical unfeasibility” of the obligations of the decree.

Carlos Garrido, President of the Spanish Confederation of Travel Agencies, stated, “the obligation to collect and communicate tens of thousands of personal data points from millions of travellers has placed a disproportionate administrative burden on travel agencies and other tour operators, without a convincing explanation for the necessity of much of this data.”

But what will change for travellers if Spain is forced to comply?

The review and change of this royal decree will not have a broad, obvious impact for travellers checking in to hotels or renting cars, but the new compliance may see holidaymakers with slightly less paperwork to do upon arrival (or less fields to fill on an online form), and more transparency from travel agencies and booking companies in Spain.

Could the Entry/Exit System be impacted by the decision?

The EES can be reviewed, examined by the CJEU, and changed, but only through an EU legislative process. As it stands, the data collected from the EES across the whole of Europe and the data collected specifically in Spain function as two separate systems, and changing the EES would be a Europe-wide review of the framework, not on a national level.

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