As you may know, I live in Spain now, and I must say I haven’t been great at picking up the language. So I put the question to my community in Thread and their replies genuinely shocked me.
I asked for 6 months and I got replies that 1 month is even possible!
I am also embarrassed as I have been here for awhile and I couldn’t actually form paragraphs. What I know is too basic. Too basic to just give surface level convo in a restaurant.
But let’s change that.
The First Thing You Need to Understand About Spain
If you’ve traveled through the Balkans or other Western EU countries like the Netherlands, you’ve been spoiled.
Many people there speak English, not just because they learned it at university, but out of necessity.
Economic necessity. Geographic necessity.
The kind of necessity that makes you fluent because the alternative is being left behind.
Spain is different.
Spain doesn’t need you. And honestly? That’s kind of beautiful, but it will absolutely humble you if you arrive unprepared.
The economy works. The culture is rich. People live full, thriving lives entirely within the Spanish language and they have zero reason to switch to English just because you showed up with a laptop and a Digital Nomad Visa.
Babe, they’re not going to adjust to you.
That’s not hostility. That’s just reality. You moved here.
The adjustment is yours to make.
I say this as someone who moved from the Philippines and had to figure this out the hard way.
The Strategic Asset Most Filipinos Are Sleeping On
There’s a two-year fast-track to Spanish citizenship available to Filipinos.
Most nationalities wait 10 years. We wait 2.
That’s not a perk. That’s a passport arbitrage most people with our background don’t get, and the only gate between you and that outcome is an A2 language exam.
Miss it and you don’t just delay a certificate. You delay a decade of optionality. EU mobility.
The ability to live and work anywhere in 28 countries+ without asking permission. I’d say even before getting the DNV Visa, start learning Spanish as EARLY AS NOW like you are taking an exam soon.
The A2 exam isn’t a bureaucratic hoop. It’s the cheapest high-leverage move available to you right now once you are in Spain.
So why are you treating your Spanish practice like a casual hobby?
Living Here Without Spanish Is Like Running a SaaS With No Backend
The UI looks fine. You can demo it. You can get through a coffee order, navigate a supermarket, even charm your way through small talk.
But the moment someone pushes on anything real, a lease, a tax office, a networking event that actually matters, the whole thing collapses.
I got my residency approved on January 8th. And within weeks I understood something most nomads figure out too late:
Getting by is not a strategy. Getting by is slow failure with good aesthetics.
Stop Measuring Hours. Start Measuring Decisions.
Here’s how most people track language progress:
- Days on Duolingo ✓
- Flashcards completed ✓
- Episodes of a Spanish show watched ✓
None of that helps you when someone is trying to extort you.
True fluency isn’t measured in vocabulary. It’s measured in decision reliability, your ability to protect yourself, advocate for yourself, and operate with full agency in the environment you chose to build your life in.
Can you argue with the driver who asked you for more than the metered cab?
Can you navigate the Hacienda without paying someone €200 to hold your hand?
Can you walk into a room of Madrid founders and hold your own?
That’s the bar. Everything else is vanity metrics.
My 180-day build to Functional Spanish (A2 level)
Here’s my proposed architecture, built from community input and tested against my own experience:
Months 1–2: Infrastructure Layer
Core verbs. Survival vocabulary. The language of Spanish bureaucracy, because your first battles aren’t at dinner parties, they’re at the Padrón office and the bank.
Focus on the 20% of grammar that covers 80% of real conversations.
Pareto your input. Everything else is noise until this layer is stable.
Months 3–4: Stress Testing
Get into friction. Markets. Cafés. Networking events where you have no safety net.
This is where you find out what you actually retained versus what you just recognized in a controlled environment. Uncomfortable is the signal that learning is happening. Comfortable means you’re coasting.
Months 5–6: Production Audit
DELE A2 prep. Gap analysis. Integrate the language into professional contexts.
Not “surviving Madrid”. Operating in Madrid. There’s a difference, and founders who can’t make that distinction stay tourists forever.
If you’re one of those people who contributed, I thank you and I will take your advice to heart.
The Uncomfortable Truth
Most people reading this will nod, close the tab, and keep doing what they were doing.
They’ll spend another 6 months “meaning to get serious” about Spanish. They’ll keep hiring translators for things they could handle themselves. They’ll keep losing ground in rooms where the language barrier is the only thing separating them from the connection or the deal.
And in 2 years, when the citizenship window closes, they’ll wonder why they didn’t move faster when it was still easy.
You already did the hard part. You got the visa. You moved. You built the life.
The language is just the final plugin. And unlike everything else you’ve had to figure out, this one has a syllabus.
A2 isn’t fluency. It’s the first stable release.
The version of you that can function independently in this country. That can protect your legal timeline. That stops hemorrhaging energy every time you don’t understand what’s happening around you.
Ship it!
Love,
Abie
Abie
