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Sourced for families researching a move — informational only, not immigration or legal advice. Disclaimer

Lanzarote

Canary Islands · ES · pop. 156,112

Language(s): Spanish (official); English in resort towns

Airports: Lanzarote Airport (ACE)

Ferry links: Gran Canaria (~8 hr (overnight) or flight ~45 min)

Moving with kids — Lanzarote

Schools, healthcare, housing, and daily logistics — sourced, in plain language.

Early years (preschool / nursery / kindergarten)
None documented on island
Schools (K–12)
Colegio Arenas International School; Colegio La Candelaria (Arrecife)
Ages 3–18; Ages 3–16. Tuition approx $5,500–$11,000/yr.
verified 2026-06-11
Higher education
None documented on island
Healthcare
Yes — full hospital on island
Single main hospital (Dr. Molina Orosa, Arrecife). Complex cases typically airlifted or ferried to Gran Canaria or Tenerife.
Top income tax
45% combined marginal ceiling (state + Canarias regional, 2025)
See full bands on island profile.
Typical rent (family)
€750–€1,400/mo (2BR; Arrecife vs Puerto del Carmen)
2BR band; verify listings for school catchment areas.
Getting around with kids
Essential — spread-out resorts; limited bus network outside Arrecife corridor
Language(s)
Spanish (official); English in resort towns
Storm exposure
Very low — arid volcanic island; strong winds possible; minimal tropical cyclone exposure

Demographics

Census and official statistics — age, ethnicity, religion, and language breakdowns where published. Useful for understanding community fit; verify before relocating.

Age · 2023 census
  • 0–1415.1%
    15.1%
  • 15–6465.8%
    65.8%
  • 65+19.1%
    19.1%

INE Spain — Canarias population structure (2023) (opens in new tab) · verified 2026-06-11

Ethnicity · 2023 census
  • Born in Spain81.2%
    81.2%
  • Born abroad (EU)8.6%
    8.6%
  • Born abroad (non-EU)10.2%
    10.2%

INE Spain — Canarias foreign-born (opens in new tab) · verified 2026-06-11

Religion
  • Roman Catholic55%
    55%
  • No religion31%
    31%
  • Other14%
    14%

Centro de Investigaciones Sociológicas — Spain (opens in new tab) · verified 2026-06-11

Language · 2023 census
  • Spanish only88%
    88%
  • Spanish + other10%
    10%
  • Other primary2%
    2%

INE Spain — Canarias language use (opens in new tab) · verified 2026-06-11

Narrative summary

Plain-language context behind the charts — with per-field sources.

Demographics summary for Lanzarote
Age profileMedian age ~45+ (Spain); Tenerife and Gran Canaria younger in coastal cities, smaller isles older.Instituto Nacional de Estadística (Spain) (opens in new tab)· verified 2026-06-11 · researched
Ethnic / cultural backgroundSpanish majority with Canarian identity; substantial Latin American, African, and EU migrant communities in tourism and services.Instituto Nacional de Estadística (Spain) (opens in new tab)· verified 2026-06-11 · researched
ReligionRoman Catholic tradition remains culturally dominant; rising share with no religious affiliation, especially in urban south.Centro de Investigaciones Sociológicas (Spain) (opens in new tab)· verified 2026-06-11 · researched

Income tax

Top rate and band thresholds for the jurisdiction governing this island. Indicative only — not tax advice. National Insurance, social security, VAT/GST, and property taxes are separate.

Income tax for Lanzarote
Top income tax rate45% combined marginal ceiling (state + Canarias regional, 2025)Agencia Tributaria — Spanish IRPF (opens in new tab)· verified 2026-06-11 · official
Income tax bandsSame Spanish state IRPF scale as mainland (9.5%–23.5% slices). Canarias autonomic rates are lower than most regions — roughly 8.5%–23% regional surcharge. Special IGIC (VAT) rate 7% and ZEC corporate incentives do not replace personal income tax. Personal minimum and deductions per Agencia Tributaria rules.Agencia Tributaria — Spanish IRPF (opens in new tab)· verified 2026-06-11 · official

Education

Early years, K–12 schools, and higher education — confirm enrollment, waitlists, and tuition directly before planning a move. Off-island options show typical ferry or hub access where documented.

Early years (preschool / nursery / kindergarten)

None documented on island.

Schools (K–12)

  • Colegio Arenas International School

    British, Spanish, International · ages 3–18

    Tuition: $5,500–$11,000/yr

    Website (opens in new tab)

    verified 2026-06-11

  • Colegio La Candelaria (Arrecife)

    Spanish national curriculum · ages 3–16

    Website (opens in new tab)

    verified 2026-06-11

Higher education

None documented on island.

Family essentials

Healthcare, housing costs, transport, and storm exposure — the fields families ask about first.

Family essentials for Lanzarote
Hospital on islandYes — full hospital on islandHospital Universitario Doctor José Molina Orosa (opens in new tab)· verified 2026-06-11 · official
Evacuation notesSingle main hospital (Dr. Molina Orosa, Arrecife). Complex cases typically airlifted or ferried to Gran Canaria or Tenerife.Servicio Canario de la Salud — Lanzarote (opens in new tab)· verified 2026-06-11 · official
Rent band (monthly, USD)€750–€1,400/mo (2BR; Arrecife vs Puerto del Carmen)Idealista — Lanzarote rentals (opens in new tab)· verified 2026-06-11 · researched
Groceries vs mainland USSimilar to other Canaries — IGIC-exempt; import freight adds modest premiumGobierno de Canarias — IGIC (opens in new tab)· verified 2026-06-11 · official
Island cost premiumModerate — smaller market than Tenerife/GC; tourism demand in coastal zonesNumbeo — Arrecife (opens in new tab)· verified 2026-06-11 · researched
Car necessityEssential — spread-out resorts; limited bus network outside Arrecife corridorAyuntamiento de Arrecife — transport (opens in new tab)· verified 2026-06-11 · researched
Language(s)Spanish (official); English in resort townsCIA World Factbook — Spain (opens in new tab)· verified 2026-06-11 · official
Hurricane / cyclone exposureVery low — arid volcanic island; strong winds possible; minimal tropical cyclone exposureAEMET — Canarias (opens in new tab)· verified 2026-06-11 · official

Residency paths

  • USSchengen short-stay (90/180)

    U.S. citizens may enter Spain visa-free for up to 90 days in any 180-day Schengen period. Longer stays require a national visa (e.g. non-lucrative, digital nomad, work, or family reunification) before arrival. Canaries are part of Spain and the EU — same immigration rules as mainland.

    Official source · verified 2026-06-11 (opens in new tab)
  • UKSchengen short-stay or post-Brexit national visa

    U.K. citizens are visa-exempt for short Schengen stays (90/180). Relocation requires a Spanish national visa or residency permit (non-lucrative, work, digital nomad, etc.) applied through the consulate. Canaries count as Spain for immigration purposes.

    Official source · verified 2026-06-11 (opens in new tab)
  • EUEU freedom of movement

    E.U. citizens may live in the Canary Islands under EU free-movement rules. Register as a resident (empadronamiento) and obtain a green certificate or TIE card if staying beyond three months. Work rights generally follow EU/EEA status.

    Official source · verified 2026-06-11 (opens in new tab)

Full relocation profile

Connectivity, language, timezone, and property rules.

Full relocation profile for Lanzarote
Population156,112INE — Lanzarote 2024 (opens in new tab)· verified 2026-06-11 · official
Main townArrecife (capital); Puerto del Carmen; Playa BlancaCabildo de Lanzarote (opens in new tab)· verified 2026-06-11 · official
Fiber availableYesMovistar — fibre coverage Spain (opens in new tab)· verified 2026-06-11 · researched
Typical internet speed100–300 Mbps fibre in Arrecife and main resorts; rural Timanfaya area slowerOokla Speedtest — Lanzarote (opens in new tab)· verified 2026-06-11 · researched
Language(s)Spanish (official); English in resort townsCIA World Factbook — Spain (opens in new tab)· verified 2026-06-11 · official
TimezoneWET/WEST (UTC+0 / +1 DST)timeanddate.com — Lanzarote (opens in new tab)· verified 2026-06-11 · researched
Foreign property ownershipUNESCO biosphere reserve rules restrict some development — verify Cabildo planning before purchaseCabildo de Lanzarote — biosphere reserve (opens in new tab)· verified 2026-06-11 · official

Common questions about Lanzarote

Answers from sourced island profiles — verify dates and official rules before relocating.

What is the cost of living in Lanzarote?#

Cost of living on Lanzarote — Typical rent: €750–€1,400/mo (2BR; Arrecife vs Puerto del Carmen). Groceries: Similar to other Canaries — IGIC-exempt; import freight adds modest premium. Island premium: Moderate — smaller market than Tenerife/GC; tourism demand in coastal zones. Figures are sourced bands, not personal budgets — confirm current listings locally.

What are rent prices in Lanzarote?#

Documented rent band for Lanzarote: €750–€1,400/mo (2BR; Arrecife vs Puerto del Carmen). Island listings change seasonally — treat as a planning range, not a quote.

Are there schools in Lanzarote?#

Yes — 2 on-island options documented. K–12: Colegio Arenas International School; Colegio La Candelaria (Arrecife)

Is there a hospital on Lanzarote?#

Yes — full hospital on island

What is the population of Lanzarote?#

Lanzarote has about 156,112 residents; main town: Arrecife (Canary Islands).

What language is spoken in Lanzarote?#

Spanish (official); English in resort towns.

Do you need a car on Lanzarote?#

Essential — spread-out resorts; limited bus network outside Arrecife corridor.

Can foreigners buy property in Lanzarote?#

UNESCO biosphere reserve rules restrict some development — verify Cabildo planning before purchase.

What is the hurricane risk in Lanzarote?#

Very low — arid volcanic island; strong winds possible; minimal tropical cyclone exposure.

How fast is the internet in Lanzarote?#

On Lanzarote, Fiber broadband is available; typical speeds around 100–300 Mbps fibre in Arrecife and main resorts; rural Timanfaya area slower. Remote-work viability varies by address — verify with local ISPs.

How do you move to Lanzarote?#

Residency rules depend on your passport. Documented paths for Lanzarote: US (Schengen short-stay (90/180)): U.S. citizens may enter Spain visa-free for up to 90 days in any 180-day Schengen period. Longer stays require a national visa (e.g. non-lucrative, digital nomad, work, or family reunification) before arrival. Canaries are part of Spain and the EU — same immigration rules as mainland. UK (Schengen short-stay or post-Brexit national visa): U.K. citizens are visa-exempt for short Schengen stays (90/180). Relocation requires a Spanish national visa or residency permit (non-lucrative, work, digital nomad, etc.) applied through the consulate. Canaries count as Spain for immigration purposes. EU (EU freedom of movement): E.U. citizens may live in the Canary Islands under EU free-movement rules. Register as a resident (empadronamiento) and obtain a green certificate or TIE card if staying beyond three months. Work rights generally follow EU/EEA status. Confirm with official immigration sources before moving.

How do you get to Lanzarote?#

Lanzarote is reachable via Lanzarote Airport (ACE) and ferry links to neighbouring islands.

Informational only — not immigration or legal advice. Disclaimer