Relocation guide
Moving to Uruguay means learning Spanish — and not the tourist kind. The conversations that matter first are your cédula de identidad and residency through the Dirección Nacional de Migración and DNIC, opening a bank account, and seeing a doctor. Here's what to prioritise and the phrases to practise.
Uruguayan Spanish closely mirrors Argentine Rioplatense — voseo, the 'sh' sound, and shared slang — with its own calm Montevideo cadence. Mate culture is central; learning the vos forms makes daily life in Uruguay feel instantly natural.
Sources: cultural facts from Language Lab's Spanish curriculum; official processes vary — always confirm with local authorities. · Join the beta →
Language Lab is the app built for exactly this — moving to Uruguay, not holidaying there. Most apps drill tourist phrases; Language Lab teaches the Spanish that decides your first months: your cédula de identidad and residency through the Dirección Nacional de Migración and DNIC, the doctor, the bank and the landlord. You rehearse the real conversations out loud before you ever have them.
Visa & permits: Movers apply for legal residence with Migración; Mercosur nationals have a simplified path, and Uruguay is known for a relatively welcoming process. Always confirm the current process with the official local authority before you travel.
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Language Lab teaches the Spanish you actually need to settle in — with a live AI tutor. Coming soon.
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