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-   -   Traveling without a visa but with a Spain Residency Card (https://www.fodors.com/community/europe/traveling-without-a-visa-but-with-a-spain-residency-card-1130241/)

nicolegriffin Sep 13th, 2016 05:42 AM

Traveling without a visa but with a Spain Residency Card
 
I am American and I am studying abroad in Spain or 89 days. I am not eligible for a visa but I am looking into getting a Spain Residency card. My family wants to meet me in Italy after my program is over. Will I be able to get into Italy with a Spain Residency card? What are the restrictions/what am I allowed to do with the residency card?

sparkchaser Sep 13th, 2016 05:46 AM

Are you even eligible for a Spain Residency card?

As an American arriving on a tourist visa (which is what you are doing) you are allowed in the Schengen Zone for 90 days out of 180 days. BAsed on that, you cannot legally go to Italy.

jamikins Sep 13th, 2016 05:50 AM

Can you apply for a residency permit after 89 days?

This is the info required based on a google search:

Non-EU citizens will need:

the visa or visado de residencia obtained from the Spanish consulate in your home country;
proof of financial means;
certificado de antecedentes penales showing you have no criminal record;
medical certificate - necessary for obtaining the visa;
consular inscription;
medical insurance with a company which has offices in Spain;
passport plus photocopy;
three passport-size photos;
payment of fee (not high);
Spanish bank statement showing income arriving from abroad;
deeds to Spanish property or a rental contract, plus photocopy;
completed application form.

The process can take up to 6 mnnths to complete.

I don't think this is a way to get around the 90 day rule for visiting the Schengen zone...

nicolegriffin Sep 13th, 2016 06:06 AM

What if I get the Spanish residency card before I go abroad?

Alec Sep 13th, 2016 06:38 AM

Basically, you need a long-term visa (type D), obtained in US before going to Spain, to get any kind of residence permit (residencia). The only other way is if you are a family member of an EEA citizen.

janisj Sep 13th, 2016 07:10 AM

The OP's other thread

http://www.fodors.com/community/euro...is-90-days.cfm


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