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2026 Regularization without registration — Can you apply for it?

16 de April de 2026 6 Min. Lesezeit
En resumen: Guía específica: Regularización 2026 sin empadronamiento — ¿Puedes solicitarla?. Plazo hasta el 30 de junio de 2026. Tasa 38.28€.

2026 Regularization Without Registration — Can You Apply?

The short answer is yes. You can apply for regularization even if you don't have a padrón (municipal registration) or you've only had one for a short time. But there's one condition: you need to prove you've been in Spain for at least 5 months using other documents. And this is where a lot of people give up too soon.

What nobody tells you: The decree does not require municipal registration as the only form of proof. It accepts any official document that has your name and a date. You have more options than you think.

The number you need to keep in mind: 5 months

That's the minimum residency requirement. Not 6, not a year: 5 months. And you can prove those 5 months by combining different types of documents, as long as it's clear you were on Spanish territory on those dates.

You don't need one document for every single day. You need the set of papers you provide to cover that period in a credible and coherent way.

What documents count? The complete list

The decree accepts any document with a name and a date. Here are the most common ones and the easiest to get:

  • Electricity, water, or gas bills in your name or where you appear as a user
  • Mobile phone bills — even prepaid ones if they have your name on them
  • Transport card top-ups from Madrid or any other city
  • Transfers or remittances from Western Union, Ria, or similar services — the receipt includes your name, date, and location
  • Medical appointments or reports from your health center — any document from the healthcare system
  • School enrollment records for your children or your own
  • Employment or rental contracts
  • Rent receipts that are signed or stamped
  • Proof of social assistance or attendance at social services
  • Bank documents: statements, transaction history, account opening records
Practical tip: Look for documents from different months. If you have a bill from February, a medical appointment from March, a receipt from April, and a money transfer from May, you're already covering the period solidly.

The most common trap: going straight to the Madrid Consortium

A lot of people living in Madrid think the only way to prove residency is through the certificate from the Regional Transport Consortium or the municipal register. Wrong.

The Consortium is completely overwhelmed. Appointment wait times have skyrocketed and people have been going weeks without getting a slot. If you build your whole strategy around that one document, you could run out of time.

The solution is straightforward: use other documents. The decree doesn't give the padrón any priority over other documents. A utility bill or a medical receipt carries the same legal weight for these purposes.

What if I only have a recent registration?

That doesn't shut the door on you either. If you registered recently, that document proves you were here on that specific date. For the rest of the period, you fill in the gaps with the other documents from the list above.

What matters is that the full set of documents you provide covers the required 5 months. A recent registration can be one document in the package — it doesn't have to be the only one.

What you do need: several documents covering the period

One single piece of paper isn't enough. The authorities want to see a coherent paper trail. The more documents from different dates you can gather, the stronger your application will be.

Organize them by date before you submit them. Put them in chronological order and make sure the continuity is clear: that you were here in January, in February, in March… until you've completed the 5 months.

Watch out: Don't submit documents you don't understand or that contain incorrect information. If a receipt has your name spelled wrong or shows an address that isn't yours, it can raise doubts. Better to leave it out.

The two financial figures you need to know

€38.28. That's the fee you have to pay when you submit your application. It's paid using form 790, code 052. It's non-negotiable and without that payment, nothing gets processed.

June 30, 2026. That's the final deadline to submit your application. Don't wait until the last minute because offices get overwhelmed in the final weeks and you may find no appointments available.

Where do you submit the application?

The application is submitted at the Immigration Office (Oficina de Extranjería) in your province. You need to book an appointment through the Ministry of the Interior's appointment system. In some provinces you can also submit it at authorized police stations.

The form you need is the EX-10, which is the official form for the residence authorization on exceptional grounds provided for in the decree.

Remember: When you book your appointment, make sure you select the right procedure. If you choose the wrong category, the appointment won't be valid and you'll lose time. The correct procedure is the one linked to the Extraordinary Regularization Royal Decree.

A summary of what you need to gather

Before booking your appointment, make sure you have the following ready:

  • Valid passport or identity document (or expired, if that's what you have)
  • Completed EX-10 form
  • Proof of payment of €38.28 (form 790, code 052)
  • At least 4 or 5 documents with your name and a date covering the 5 months
  • A recent passport-size photo

If you have a criminal record in Spain or in your home country, consult a professional first, because that point can genuinely complicate your application.

Your next step

This week, open a drawer, a folder, or your email and look for every document you can find with your name and a Spanish date. Bills, receipts, appointments, official letters. Put them in a spreadsheet or a simple list: document, date, what it proves.

Once you're sure you cover the 5 months, download form 790 code 052, pay the €38.28 at any participating bank, and book your appointment at the Immigration Office. Don't leave it until June. Do it now.

Aviso: Este articulo es informativo y no constituye asesoramiento legal. La normativa puede cambiar. Consulta siempre fuentes oficiales y, si tu caso es complejo, busca un abogado de extranjeria.

ℹ️ La información de esta web es orientativa y de carácter general. No constituye asesoramiento jurídico. Para tu caso concreto, consulta con un abogado especializado en extranjería o con la oficina oficial correspondiente. Emigra España nunca aconseja actuar fuera de la legalidad.