The First Month in Spain — The Correct Order of All the Procedures (2026)
Watch Out for This Before You Start
The most common trap is doing the paperwork in the wrong order. Without your empadronamiento (municipal registration) you can't apply for your NIE. Without your NIE you can't open a bank account. Without your TIE you can't activate Cl@ve. If you skip a step, you're back to square one and you've lost weeks.
What nobody tells you is that some deadlines start running from the day you cross the border — not from the day you find out about them. That little detail has cost a lot of people fines and renewal headaches.
Here's something most people don't know and it ends up costing them money: you have 30 days to apply for your TIE. Leave it for later and you'll be out of time and in trouble.
Why Does the Order Matter?
Each step depends on the one before it. There are no shortcuts. This is the exact sequence you need to follow — the same one that thousands of people who came before you have used.
Step 1: Municipal Registration — Empadronamiento (Days 1–3)
Free. Without this document, you can't do anything that comes next.
Getting your empadronamiento means registering on your local council's municipal register (the padrón municipal) where you live. It's the most important step because everything else depends on it.
- Where: The citizen services office (oficina de atención al ciudadano) at your local council. Book an appointment online through your council's website.
- Documents you'll need: passport, rental contract (or a signed declaration from your landlord), and the empadronamiento form.
- Cost: Free.
- What you get: the volante de empadronamiento (proof of registration). Keep it safe — you're going to need it for almost every step that follows.
Step 2: NIE — Foreigner Identity Number (Week 1–4)
€12.00. This number is your tax identity in Spain. Without it you can't work, sign contracts, or open a bank account.
You'll need to book an appointment well in advance because the offices are packed. Don't wait until week 3 to start looking for a slot.
- Where: The Oficina de Extranjería (Immigration Office) or your local Policía Nacional station. An advance appointment is mandatory — book at sede.administracionespublicas.gob.es.
- Documents you'll need: passport, volante de empadronamiento, form EX-15, and proof of your reason for applying (employment contract, university enrollment, etc.).
- Cost: Fee 012 — €12.00. Pay it at the bank before your appointment, not on the day of.
Step 3: Bank Account (Once You Have Your NIE)
Varies by bank. With your NIE in hand, you can open a Spanish bank account with an ES IBAN, access to Bizum, and the ability to set up direct deposit for your salary.
- Banks you can go to: CaixaBank HolaBank, BBVA, Santander.
- Documents you'll need: passport, NIE, volante de empadronamiento, proof of income or employment contract.
- Cost: Many banks offer fee-free accounts for the first year. Compare your options before you choose.
Step 4: TIE — Foreigner Identity Card (Month 1, 30-Day Deadline)
€16.08. This is the physical card that proves your situation in Spain is legal. It's mandatory if you're going to stay for more than 6 months.
You have 30 days from your entry into the country — or from the date your visa was approved — to apply for it. Don't put it off.
- Where: Oficina de Extranjería. Advance appointment is mandatory.
- Documents you'll need: passport, NIE, volante de empadronamiento, 3 passport-sized photos, and proof of payment of the fee.
- Cost: Fee 790-012 — €16.08.
Step 5: Cl@ve and Carpeta Ciudadana (Urgent — the 10-Day Rule)
Free. Without Cl@ve you can't do any online paperwork with Spanish government services — not Social Security, not the Tax Agency, not Immigration.
- Where: Social Security registration offices, the Tax Agency (Agencia Tributaria), or some post offices (Correos).
- Documents you'll need: TIE or NIE + passport, and a Spanish mobile phone number.
- Cost: Free.
Step 6: Health Card (After Registration + Social Security Sign-Up)
Free. With this card you can access your GP, specialists, the emergency room, and public hospitals.
- Where: The health center assigned to you based on your empadronamiento. Go in person.
- Documents you'll need: volante de empadronamiento, TIE or passport + NIE, and your Social Security affiliation number (NUSS).
- Cost: Free.
Summary: Timelines and Costs
| Step | Process | When to Do It | Cost |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Municipal Registration (Empadronamiento) | Days 1–3 | Free |
| 2 | NIE | Weeks 1–4 | €12.00 |
| 3 | Bank Account | After getting your NIE | Varies |
| 4 | TIE | Month 1 (maximum 30-day deadline) | €16.08 |
| 5 | Cl@ve | After your TIE (urgent) | Free |
| 6 | Health Card | After registration + Social Security sign-up | Free |
Official Sources
- Electronic Government Hub — Immigration Appointments
- Cl@ve — Digital Identification System
- Social Security — Sign-Up and NUSS
Your Next Step
Tomorrow morning, go to your local council's website, search for "cita previa empadronamiento" (registration appointment), and book a slot for this week. All you need is your passport and your rental contract. It's free and takes less than 20 minutes at the office. Without that volante de empadronamiento in your hands, none of the other steps can move forward.