tenerife winter :: tenerife summer :: tenerife weather :: tenerife jobs :: about tenerife :: tenerife property for sale :: tenerife rentals
home tenerife property tenerife rentals tenerife hotels tenerife car hire tenerife maps tenerife weather contact us
问我
Tenerife map
Sponsored Links
Quick Links
Tenerife Property
Tenerife Property For Sale
Los Cristianos
Property For Sale In Tenerife
Playa de Las Americas
Apartment For Sale In Tenerife
Adeje
tenerife flights tenerife jobs tenerife reviews tenerife news tenerife insurance
tenerife web cams photo album online games books and maps

Tenerife employment

 
 

Within the next 12 months over 13,000 foreign nationals will move to Tenerife to work.

If you're a good salesman with experience of any kind and you're British, Dutch, German, Italian, French, Russian or Scandinavian, or speak any of those languages, you'll get a job as a PR (public relations).

To be a PR you need to be able to stop tourists on the street and in whatever seconds or minutes you have with them, convince them to try your product or service.

Tenerife vacancies


Restaurants and bars are often looking for waiting staff, entertainment staff/professional acts and especially promotion staff to work at the door and "pull in the punters".

Tour operators are another option but normally you'll need to apply and train with them in your own country, before coming to Tenerife.

If you have previous experience and knowledge of the Spanish language, it's worth contacting them direct once you're here for casual work, maybe doing airport runs or helping out with the bigger, busier excursions.

Summer jobs in Tenerife


If you speak fluent Spanish then you have a huge advantage as very few of the foreign nationals working here do; you have more choice of jobs to go for such as office/admin work, reception work in an apartment complex maybe.

Much of Tenerife's employment is around the holiday resorts and most businesses are of the type that caters to tourists.

Preference to locals is given if a job vacancy arises in other areas of business.If you're a resident of the EEC/Europe, then you won't need any special work permit, otherwise check with your local Spanish embassy for requirements.

European nationals do need to register with the police here if living here for three months or longer. Take out an insurance policy to cover you for medical treatment as that can be difficult to get and expensive without cover, unless in cases of emergency.