Autism Support in Spain: Getting an ASD Diagnosis and School Placement as an Expat
Moving to Spain with an autistic child involves navigating a system that is more committed to inclusion than its reputation suggests — but that operates on different assumptions, uses different language, and distributes resources in ways that are not self-evident to families from the UK, US, or Australia. The good news is that autism spectrum disorder (ASD) occupies the most legally protected tier of Spain's special education framework. The challenge is knowing how to activate that protection.
ASD Is NEE: What That Means
Under LOMLOE — Spain's current organic education law — autism spectrum disorders are explicitly named as a category qualifying for NEE status (Necesidades Educativas Especiales). NEE is the legally protected subcategory within Spain's broader NEAE umbrella, reserved for students with recognised disabilities and severe disorders.
This matters enormously in practice. NEE designation triggers:
- The right to a Dictamen de Escolarización — the state document that specifies what your child is legally entitled to receive
- State-funded access to a PT teacher (Maestro de Pedagogía Terapéutica) for direct small-group or individual academic support
- State-funded access to an AL specialist (Audición y Lenguaje) for communication and language support
- The right to significant curriculum adaptations if the child's profile requires them
- Possible access to an ATE (Auxiliar Técnico Educativo — educational support assistant) for children with severe profiles requiring personal care support or intensive behavioural management
Approximately 85.7% of students with special educational needs — including autistic students — are educated in mainstream schools (centros ordinarios) in Spain, not in segregated special schools. Spain's system is genuinely committed to inclusion as the default. Placement in a Centro de Educación Especial (CEE) requires documented justification through the EOEP process and is reserved for children with the most significant support needs.
Getting an Autism Diagnosis in Spain
If your child arrives with a foreign ASD diagnosis, that diagnosis has no automatic legal standing in the Spanish education system — though it is valuable supporting evidence. Spain requires its own psychopedagogical evaluation through the EOEP (Equipo de Orientación Educativa y Psicopedagógica) to issue a formal Dictamen.
To make your existing documentation usable:
- Apostille all original psychological and medical reports from the country of origin
- Have them sworn-translated by a Traductor Jurado (a translator officially certified by Spain's Ministry of Foreign Affairs — ordinary bilingual translators are not sufficient)
If your child has not yet been diagnosed and you are seeking a diagnosis in Spain:
Public health route: Paediatric psychiatry and neurodevelopment evaluations are available through the public health system (sanidad pública) once registered. In practice, wait times for public autism assessments are severe in major cities — families commonly report waits of six months to over two years for a full diagnostic workup through the public system.
Private route: Private diagnostic evaluations at clinical psychology or neuropsychology centres in Spain typically cost €400–€600 and can be completed far more quickly. Clinics in Madrid and Barcelona with experience supporting expat families include SINEWS Multilingual Therapy Institute (Madrid) and various private neurodevelopment centres in Barcelona. A bilingual private evaluation that explicitly maps findings to LOMLOE's NEE criteria is the fastest route to getting the Spanish school system to act.
School Placement for Autistic Children
Most autistic children are placed in mainstream schools with support. The EOEP assessment and Dictamen determine the appropriate modality.
Mainstream schools (centros ordinarios): The majority of autistic students in Spain attend mainstream public or concerted schools. Within these schools, the supports typically specified in the Dictamen include PT teacher sessions (often pull-out), AL teacher sessions, classroom methodology adaptations, and for students with more complex profiles, ATE support for personal care or behavioural management.
Specialized units within mainstream schools (Aulas de Educación Especial): Some mainstream schools contain dedicated specialist units for autistic students or those with severe communication disorders. Students spend part of the day in the specialist unit and part in the mainstream classroom, varying by individual profile. These units are not in every school — placement requires the EOEP to identify an appropriate school with a unit.
Centros de Educación Especial (CEE): For autistic children with the most severe support needs — profound communication difficulties, significant medical or behavioural needs, or curriculum requirements so different from the standard that mainstream cannot safely provide them — the EOEP may recommend a CEE. Parents have the right to challenge this recommendation within one month of formal notification if they believe a mainstream placement is more appropriate.
International schools: Private international schools vary significantly in their capacity to support autistic students. They are not bound by LOMLOE's inclusion mandates in the same way as public and concertado schools. Some international schools — such as the Judy Sharp International School in Madrid, which specifically focuses on students who learn differently including ADHD, dyslexia, and ASD — have built genuine specialist capacity. Others have very limited provision. Always ask specific, direct questions about staffing, caseload, and what happens if needs escalate.
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Regional Variations That Matter
Madrid
Madrid processes assessments through centralised EOEP teams. Wait times are long but the system is well-established. The city has a strong network of bilingual private specialists and English-language support organisations. Students with ASD in Madrid commonly wait six months or more for a formal public EOEP assessment — private assessment is almost always necessary to bridge the gap.
Barcelona / Catalonia
Catalonia uses EAP teams (Equip d'Assessorament i Orientació Psicopedagògica) rather than EOEP. The region's strict Catalan-medium instruction policy in public and concertado schools creates a significant additional barrier for autistic children with communication difficulties. Autistic children who struggle with language processing face a double barrier: acquiring Spanish and navigating Catalan simultaneously. Expatriate families in Barcelona disproportionately turn to fully private international schools because of this.
SINEWS Multilingual Therapy Institute and other English-language clinical services do operate in Barcelona, and bilingual private assessors can be found.
Costa del Sol / Andalusia
Andalusia manages its NEAE system through the Séneca digital platform. The region has substantial British expat concentration on the Costa del Sol, and private bilingual specialists are available in larger towns. Rural and coastal areas outside main urban centres may have less AL and PT specialist capacity — a child with complex ASD support needs may need a school in a larger town rather than a small coastal village.
Communication: AL Support and What It Covers
For autistic children with communication difficulties, the AL teacher (Audición y Lenguaje) is a critical part of the support team. AL teachers in Spain's school system work specifically on communication barriers in the academic context — speech development, alternative and augmentative communication (AAC), functional communication for non-verbal or minimally verbal students.
What AL in Spanish schools does not cover: intensive ABA (Applied Behaviour Analysis) therapy. ABA is not part of Spain's standard school-based offer. Families seeking ABA-based intervention will need to access this privately, which is available in major cities but at significant cost.
The distinction between school-based AL support and clinical speech therapy is important: the school's AL teacher provides educational communication support, while clinical speech therapy through Spain's public health system (logopedia in the public CDIAT centres for children under 6, or via the health system for older children) provides therapeutic intervention. Both are worth pursuing if your child needs intensive communication support.
Key Organisations for English-Speaking Families
- SINEWS Multilingual Therapy Institute (Madrid and Barcelona): Psychiatry, speech therapy, educational psychology in English
- Judy Sharp International School (Madrid): Specifically focused on students with ADHD, dyslexia, and ASD who learn differently
- MumAbroad: Directory of bilingual therapists, autism specialists, and educational psychologists across Spain
- Plena Inclusión: Spain's national federation for intellectual and developmental disabilities — primarily Spanish-language resources but useful legal advocacy framework
The Spain Special Education Blueprint covers the complete process for securing ASD support through Spain's EOEP system, what the Dictamen should specify for an autistic child, how to navigate the Catalonia and Madrid systems specifically, and the meeting preparation framework for working with the Orientador and school team.
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