Valencian: should you learn it when you live in Valencia?
In Valencia you'll soon spot signs in a language that isn't quite the Spanish you know: Valencian. Don't panic — here's what it really means for your daily life.
Two official languages
Castilian (Spanish) and Valencian are co-official across the Valencian Community. In the street, at work, in shops, Castilian is more than enough. Valencian shows up mainly in schools, public administration, signage and place names: you'll read Ajuntament (town hall), carrer (street), platja (beach), eixida (exit).
Where you actually hear it
It depends on the area. In the city, Spanish dominates; in the villages of the Huerta and inland, Valencian is far more alive. Many locals switch between the two without thinking. Nobody expects you to speak it — but knowing a few words saves you hunting for the "exit" on a sign that only says eixida.
Should you learn it?
To get by, no. To integrate deeply and win people over, a few words always land well: bon dia (good morning), gràcies (thanks), bona vesprada (good afternoon). If your kids are in school here, they'll pick it up fast — it's compulsory in state schools, and they often become trilingual without noticing.
Where to learn it, if you want to go further
Start with Spanish — that's the absolute priority. For Valencian, the Escoles Oficials d'Idiomes (EOI) run very affordable public courses, and plenty of associations offer workshops. The Acadèmia Valenciana de la Llengua also has free resources online.
Sources
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