Hi there, great website you have here.
I’m a 26 year-old American who has lived in Barcelona for the last 2 years as a graduate student at the Universitat de Barcelona (escribo “Universitat” en Catalan porque he hecho este error antes y quiero vivir en paz con mis compa?eros de piso, son de Terragona y Mallorca).
The Master’s program officially ends in September, and I’m trying desperately to find a solution to the infamous “Catch 22” of non-EU immigration…. as all of you already know: the employers demand that you already have a work permit/visa before applying for the position, and the government demands that you have a job offer before you apply for the work permit/visa.
Part of my problem is that I don’t know any Americans in Spain…you can always see a bunch of study abroad students from California roaming the streets of Barcelona, but I’ve never met an American who is there on a work visa.
In October, I’m almost definitely going to move from Barcelona to Madrid to do the search over there, because I’ve heard from many immigrants (and espa?oles) that finding a job in Barcelona can even be more complicated than the normal visa problems because in many cases one needs to be fluent in Catalan…y “no parlo catal?”, perd?name mucho.
My Bachelor?s in the U.S. and post-graduate stuff in Spain was along the lines of Political Science / International Relations and Development….but I’m looking for ANYTHING. I understand that a job willing to sponsor you for a work permit is a needle in a haystack, so I really would jump at just about anything.
I’ve asked so many people about this, but nobody has had the same experience. I understand completely: I wouldn’t know the first thing to advise a person wanting to immigrate to the U.S. I usually get one of the following responses from my Spanish friends, in this order:
1. The humor version:
“Jajaja, Jim, tienes que casarte con una espa?ola.”
2. The overly optimistic version:
“Ay, Jim, te preocupas demasaido / todo va a pasar bien / no te preocupes / tranquilo”
3. The “surprised at how difficult it is” response:
“Bueno, eres americano, puedes marchar al consulado americano aqu? y trabajar para ellos, ?no?”
4. The overly pessimistic version:
“joooooooo, guiri, est?s jodido”
5. The “what was once humor is now a real suggestion” version:
“En serio, Jim, tienes que castarte con una espa?ola.”
One more thing: is it true that there is no way to get around applying for a work visa in person at a Spanish consulate in the U.S.? It just seems like a nail in the coffin: you have to be in Spain to find the job, but then convince the job to wait for you while you return to the U.S. and apply and wait for your visa.
It’s very frustrating, because this is a permanent move for me, and it seems that even if by a miracle I’m able to pull it off and find a work permit I have the feeling that I’ll have to be dealing with this every year or so. Didn’t have this problem in Indiana, I’ll tell ya…
Thanks for reading my mess of a post, and a huge thanks for any advice that you can give. I?m trying to find a way without enlisting myself into a foreign army.