Andorra – Education and Schools

Andorra provides a superb, trilingual public education system available at no cost to all resident children between the ages of 6 and 16. Three separate state systems — Andorran, French, and Spanish — run in parallel, each using a different

Andorra – Driving Licenses

Getting behind the wheel in Andorra as a visitor from abroad is relatively uncomplicated, but those who establish residency in the Principality face a specific legal requirement: your foreign driving licence must be swapped for an Andorran one within twelve

Andorra – Driving

Andorra’s road network is compact, well-kept, and generally easy to navigate, with right-hand traffic, speed limits reaching up to 90 km/h, and a firm 0.05% BAC drink-drive threshold. The principality has no motorways and virtually no road tolls — the

Andorra – Doctors

Andorra’s healthcare model blends public and private provision under a single social security authority, the Caixa Andorrana de Seguretat Social (CASS). Expats who are employed or self-employed in Andorra must enrol with CASS and are entitled to subsidised medical services,

Andorra – Disability

Andorra extends a basic layer of legal protection to people with disabilities through national legislation passed in 2002, supplemented by the UN Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities, which the principality ratified in 2014. Although the country offers

Andorra – Dentists and Dental Treatment

Dental care in Andorra is delivered through a mixed public-private framework overseen by the national social security institution, CASS. Contributing residents are eligible for subsidised dental treatment — covering standard check-ups and hygiene appointments — with CASS typically reimbursing roughly

Andorra – Cycling

Andorra punches well above its weight as a cycling destination, with a sporting culture that revolves around both road riding and mountain biking. Although the steep gradients and high altitude make it unrealistic as a daily commuting mode for most

Andorra – Cost of Living

Andorra occupies a pleasant middle ground in terms of Western European living expenses — meaningfully less costly than major urban centres like Paris, London, or Geneva, and roughly on par with medium-sized Spanish cities, while offering the additional benefit of

Andorra – Citizenship

Andorran citizenship ranks among the most challenging to acquire anywhere in Europe. The primary route available to foreign nationals is naturalisation following 20 years of legal residency — a period that shortens to 10 years for those who received their