Certificate of municipal registration: what it is and how to get it
The town hall integration report is one of the most important documents when you apply for social rootedness (arraigo social). Many people spend months waiting for that document without really knowing what will be assessed or how to prepare.
Here's everything you need to know before you sit down with the social worker.
What is the town hall integration report
It's an official report written by a social worker from your town hall's Social Services department. It certifies how long you've been in Spain, what ties you have with the community, and whether you're integrated into Spanish society.
You need it for arraigo social: a residence permit for people who have been in Spain for more than 3 years without legal status. Without proven integration, there's no arraigo.
It's not mandatory, but it's the most widely accepted option. Since the 2022 reform, you can prove integration with other documents: employment contracts, Spanish language certificates, participation in associations. But in practice, the social worker's report is still what works best at the Immigration Office. It cuts through red tape like nothing else.
The most expensive mistake: showing up unprepared
Here's what nobody tells you: the report isn't automatic. The social worker writes what you prove to them. If you show up with few documents and vague answers, the report can come back negative even if you've been in Spain for years.
The most common trap is assuming that being on the municipal register (empadronamiento) is enough. It isn't. Registration proves you're registered — not that you're integrated.
Watch out for this: In many town halls, if you receive a negative report, you can't apply for another one for 6 months. One poorly prepared interview can set your process back half a year.
What the social worker evaluates
There's no single scoring system across Spain. Each municipality has its own criteria. But these are the elements that are almost always assessed:
- Time in the municipality: How many years you've been registered there. They ask for the full history, not just your current registration.
- Knowledge of Spanish: You don't need to speak perfectly, but you do need to communicate. A language course certificate goes a long way in the interview.
- Social and family ties: Family in Spain, friends, participation in associations or volunteering, community activities.
- Employment history: Whether you've worked, even informally. Contracts, payslips, letters from employers.
- Stable housing: It doesn't have to be yours, but you need to show you have somewhere stable to live.
- Children enrolled in school: If you have children in Spanish schools, that's a very positive factor. Bring the certificate from the school.
Documents you need to bring
Bring everything you have. More documentation means a better chance of a positive report.
- Valid passport or ID document
- Historical municipal registration certificate (ask for it specifically as "histórico")
- Employment contracts, payslips, or a letter from your employer
- Certificates from Spanish or other co-official language courses
- Certificate of participation in associations, volunteering, or community activities
- School certificate for your children, if you have any
- Rental contract or bills in your name proving your address
The historical registration certificate is different from the standard one. Ask for it using that exact word: "histórico." It shows all the dates you've been registered in that municipality. In most town halls it's free or costs very little.
How to apply for the report, step by step
- Find your town hall's Social Services department. Look on the municipal website or call the main switchboard. This is the department that handles the report — not the registration office or the local immigration office.
- Book an appointment. Almost all town halls require one. You can book online, by phone, or in person. In large cities the wait can be several weeks.
- Attend the interview with all your documentation. The social worker will ask you about your life in Spain. Answer in detail and bring evidence for everything you mention.
- Wait for the report. The timeframe varies widely depending on the municipality. You can ask for an approximate date when you'll receive it.
- Pick up or receive the report. Some town halls hand it to you in person, others send it by post or through the electronic registry.
Timeframes you need to know
| Step | Approximate time |
|---|---|
| Wait for a Social Services appointment | 1 week to 2 months (large cities) |
| Interview with the social worker | 30 to 60 minutes |
| Report issuance | 2 weeks to 3 months |
| Report validity for Immigration | 3 months from the date of issue |
The report expires after 3 months. If you take too long to submit your arraigo social application after receiving it, you'll need to request a new one. Plan your timeline carefully so you don't waste the document.
If you're denied: you have options
A negative report doesn't close your process. There are real alternatives:
- Request the decision in writing. You have the right to know exactly why the report is negative. With that information you can prepare a stronger second application.
- File a reconsideration appeal. Pu