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Family Life on the Costa del Sol: Kids Activities, Schools and Making Friends

Family Life on the Costa del Sol: Kids Activities, Schools and Making Friends

Moving to the Costa del Sol with children brings unique rewards and challenges. This guide covers schools, after-school activities, making friends (for kids and parents), holiday camps, and the day-to-day reality of raising a family on the Spanish coast.

Last updated: February 2026

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MUNDO Research Team · Vetted by Costa del Sol property professionals

Published February 2026 · Updated February 2026 · 9 min read

Raising children on the Costa del Sol is fundamentally different from raising them in the UK — in ways that are overwhelmingly positive, but with real challenges that families need to prepare for. The outdoor lifestyle, the safety, the health benefits of Mediterranean living, and the bilingual opportunity are genuine advantages. But social integration, school choices, and maintaining connections with the UK require thought and effort.

This guide covers the practical realities of family life — from choosing schools to finding activities, making friends, and building a social life for both children and parents. For the school-specific basics, see our international schools guide.

The Daily Reality: What Family Life Looks Like

A typical family day on the Costa del Sol differs from the UK in several important ways:

  • School hours: Spanish schools typically run 9am-2pm (no lunch at school) or 9am-5pm with a long lunch break (comedor). International schools follow 8:30am/9am-3:30pm/4pm schedules similar to the UK. The midday finish at Spanish schools is a significant lifestyle adjustment — one parent may need to be available at 2pm daily
  • Outdoor time: Children play outside far more than in the UK. Parks, beaches, and public spaces are used year-round. The evening paseo (stroll) is a family activity — town centres fill with families walking, children playing, and grandparents socialising from 6-9pm
  • Later evenings: Spanish children stay up later than UK children. It is completely normal to see 6-year-olds in restaurants at 10pm. Playgrounds are busy at 8pm in summer. This takes adjustment for British families accustomed to 7pm bedtimes
  • Weekend culture: Weekends are family-centred. Sunday lunch with extended family is a tradition. Children are genuinely welcome everywhere — restaurants, bars, events. Spain is one of the most child-friendly countries in Europe

Schools: Making the Right Choice

Spanish State Schools (Colegios Públicos)

Free and open to all resident children regardless of nationality. Teaching is in Spanish (with some English-medium classes in bilingual programme schools). Quality varies by school but is generally good — Spain's state education system consistently performs at or above the OECD average.

Advantages:

  • Free (small charges for materials and excursions)
  • Complete linguistic and cultural immersion — children become truly bilingual
  • Local friendships that integrate the family into Spanish community life
  • Spanish qualifications (Bachillerato) are recognised across Europe

Challenges:

  • All instruction in Spanish from day one — no transition support for non-Spanish speakers in most schools (though some municipalities offer aula de enlace bridging classes)
  • Homework communication and parent meetings are in Spanish
  • Curriculum does not align with UK GCSEs/A-Levels — difficult to transfer back mid-stream
  • Textbook-heavy teaching style that may feel different from UK methods

Spanish Concertado Schools (Semi-Private)

Government-subsidised private schools. Mostly Catholic-run. Low fees (EUR 100-300/month for extras like lunch, transport, and materials). Better resourced than some state schools with smaller class sizes. Same curriculum as state schools. A popular middle-ground option.

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International Schools (British Curriculum)

The main British-curriculum schools on the Costa del Sol:

SchoolLocationAge RangeAnnual Fees (approx)
Aloha CollegeNueva Andalucía3-18EUR 6,000 – 11,000
English International CollegeMarbella3-18EUR 6,500 – 12,000
Laude San Pedro InternationalSan Pedro3-18EUR 5,000 – 10,000
Mayfair AcademyEstepona3-18EUR 4,500 – 9,000
Sunny View SchoolTorremolinos3-18EUR 4,000 – 8,000
The British College BenalmádenaBenalmádena3-18EUR 4,000 – 7,500

All offer GCSEs and A-Levels (or International Baccalaureate). Most have English as the primary language with Spanish as a compulsory subject. Class sizes are typically 15-22 students — smaller than most UK state schools.

Which School Type? A Decision Framework

  • Under 7 and staying long-term: Spanish state school. Young children absorb languages naturally and will be fluent within a year. The immersion experience is irreplaceable
  • Ages 7-11 and staying long-term: Either option works. Spanish school if you prioritise integration; international school if you want curriculum continuity and an easier transition
  • Ages 11+ or uncertain about staying: International school. Transferring back to the UK mid-GCSEs from a Spanish curriculum is disruptive and potentially damaging to outcomes
  • Planning to return to UK within 2-3 years: International school almost always. The curriculum continuity outweighs the integration benefits

Kids Activities: What Is Available

Sports

  • Football: The number one sport. Every town has at least one club with youth teams from age 5 upwards. Municipal clubs charge EUR 30-60/month. Private academies cost more but offer better coaching and facilities
  • Padel: Massively popular in Spain and growing fast among expat families. Easier to learn than tennis, social, and played by all ages. Courts are everywhere — most urbanisations and sports clubs have them. Youth coaching from EUR 30-50/month
  • Swimming: Year-round in heated pools or the sea. Competitive swimming clubs, learn-to-swim programmes, and water polo. Many urbanisation pools offer children's swimming lessons in summer
  • Tennis: The Costa del Sol has excellent tennis infrastructure — the region produces professional players. Clubs and academies at all levels from EUR 40-80/month
  • Water sports: Sailing, kayaking, surfing, paddleboarding, and wakeboarding — all available for children from age 6-8 depending on the activity. Summer programmes are popular and affordable
  • Horse riding: Several equestrian centres along the coast offering lessons from EUR 25-40/hour. Particularly popular with children aged 8-14
  • Martial arts: Judo, karate, taekwondo, and jiu-jitsu clubs are widespread. Often available at municipal polideportivos for EUR 20-40/month

Creative and Cultural

  • Music schools: Both municipal (conservatorio — free or very low cost, but competitive entry) and private. Guitar, piano, violin, and drums are most popular
  • Drama/theatre: English-language drama groups exist in most larger towns. Some international schools offer after-school drama. Spanish-language theatre workshops are available at cultural centres
  • Art: Drawing, painting, ceramics, and craft workshops through municipal culture centres and private studios. Typically EUR 30-50/month
  • Dance: Ballet, contemporary, flamenco (obviously), hip-hop, and gymnastics. Flamenco classes for children are widely available and a wonderful cultural experience

Scouts and Youth Groups

Both Spanish scouts (Scouts de España) and English-speaking scout groups operate on the Costa del Sol. There are also British-style Brownies, Cubs, and Guides groups in the larger expat communities. These are excellent for building friendships and community connections.

Making Friends: Children and Parents

For Children

Children in Spanish schools make friends quickly through daily immersion. For children in international schools, the friend-making process is also natural — shared experiences as expat kids create bonds. Where it gets harder is building friendships outside school, particularly with Spanish families:

  • Join local sports clubs (not international ones) — this puts your child in a Spanish-speaking environment and builds friendships through shared activity
  • Use the parks: Spanish children play in public parks every evening. Regular visits to the same park at the same time build familiarity with local families
  • Birthday parties: Say yes to every invitation. Birthday parties in Spain are social events for parents too — they are key friendship-building occasions
  • Summer camps (campamentos): Day camps and residential camps are popular in Spain during the long summer holiday (mid-June to mid-September). They are excellent for friendships and language practice

For Parents

Adult friendships are harder to build, particularly with Spanish locals (see our culture shock guide for why). Strategies that work:

  • School gate socialising: The school pickup is a social event in Spain. Parents chat, arrange playdates, and organise group activities. Be present and open
  • AMPA (parent-teacher association): Joining your school's AMPA gives you automatic access to a parent community and a reason to interact regularly
  • Adult activities: Padel groups, running clubs, yoga classes, book clubs, and language exchanges all create social connections. The activity provides structure; the friendships develop naturally
  • Expat parent groups: Facebook groups like "British Families Costa del Sol" and local WhatsApp groups are useful for practical support and social planning. Do not rely on these exclusively — branch out into mixed and Spanish communities too

Summer Holidays: The Long Stretch

Spanish school summer holidays run from mid-June to mid-September — nearly 3 months. This is significantly longer than UK school holidays and requires planning:

  • Day camps (campamentos urbanos): Most municipal and private sports centres run day camps with activities, sports, and excursions. EUR 80-200/week. Available in English and Spanish
  • Beach clubs: Some beach clubs and resorts offer children's programmes during summer. Good for older children who want independence
  • Residential camps: Week or two-week residential camps in the mountains or countryside. Multi-activity, adventure, or language-focused. EUR 400-800/week
  • UK visits: Many families use 2-3 weeks of summer for UK visits to grandparents. This maintains family connections and gives children time with UK cousins and friends
  • Self-directed time: Spanish children are comfortable with unstructured time — playing in the street, visiting neighbours, spending days at the beach with friends. This level of outdoor independence can feel unfamiliar to UK parents but is normal and healthy here

Teenage Life

Teenagers on the Costa del Sol have specific considerations:

  • Social life: Spanish teenagers socialise in groups, meeting at paseos, plazas, and beach bars (non-alcoholic — the drinking age is 18 and generally respected). This group-based, outdoor social culture is very different from the UK pattern and often healthier
  • Transport: In urban areas, teenagers have good bus connections and can get around independently from age 14-15. In urbanisations or rural areas, they are dependent on parents for transport until they can drive (18 in Spain)
  • Academic pressure: The Selectividad (university entrance exam) for Spanish schools or A-Levels at international schools create the same academic pressure as in the UK. Tutoring is widely available in both systems
  • University options: UK A-Levels from international schools are accepted by Spanish universities and vice versa. Some families choose UK universities; others opt for Spanish or European options (often significantly cheaper than UK tuition fees)

The Bottom Line

Family life on the Costa del Sol offers children something increasingly rare in the UK: outdoor freedom, physical activity as a default rather than an organised event, genuine bilingualism, cultural awareness, and a childhood punctuated by sunshine, sea, and community. The trade-offs — school transitions, social integration effort, the long summer logistical puzzle — are real but manageable.

The families who thrive are those who commit to integration rather than isolation, who invest in their children's Spanish language skills, and who see the cultural differences as opportunities rather than obstacles. Your children will not just adapt — they will gain a perspective and resilience that stays with them for life.

Considering a family move? Join MUNDO to explore family-friendly property options across Spain's coastal regions.

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Disclaimer

This guide is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal, tax, or financial advice. Property laws and tax regulations change frequently — always consult a qualified Spanish lawyer and tax advisor before making any property purchase decisions. Data sourced from Spanish Land Registry, Idealista, and MUNDO partner network. Last verified: March 2026.

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Family Life on the Costa del Sol: Kids Activities, Schools and Making Friends | MUNDO Blog