Foreigner Identity Card (TIE) in Spain
Your official residence card.

What is the TIE?
The TIE (Tarjeta de Identidad de Extranjero) is the physical residence card issued to non-EU nationals who are authorized to stay in Spain for more than 180 days.
It contains your NIE (Foreigner Identification Number), your personal data, and details about your residence authorization.
The TIE does not grant residence by itself. It is the document that certifies that your residence permit has already been approved.
When is it required?
If your stay in Spain exceeds 180 days, you must apply for a TIE.
In most cases (work permits, study visas, non-lucrative residence, highly qualified permits, etc.), the visa issued to enter Spain is valid for 90 days. Within one month of arrival, you must apply for your TIE.
If your stay does not exceed 180 days, obtaining a TIE is generally not required.
What does it certify?
The TIE certifies:
- Your legal residence in Spain
- Your identity as a foreign resident
- The type and duration of your authorized stay
It is the document you will use as your official identification in Spain during your residency period.
How does the process work?
After receiving your residence authorization and entering Spain, you must:
- Book an appointment at the Immigration Office or Police Station
- Apply for your Foreigner Identity Card within one month of arrival
Appointments may be scheduled several weeks after the request, depending on availability.
FAQ
ExpatPlanner is a relocation coordination platform designed for all people moving to Spain.
Rather than focusing on isolated administrative tasks, it structures the entire relocation process - identifying the correct legal pathway, sequencing the required procedures, and coordinating the professionals who execute them.
In practical terms, it turns a fragmented administrative journey into a clear, manageable roadmap.
ExpatPlanner was developed by a team of professionals with experience in international mobility, legal immigration services, and digital platforms.
The goal was straightforward: simplify Spain's administrative complexity for international professionals, entrepreneurs and remote workers by combining technology with specialized human expertise.
Legal and immigration services are handled by licensed immigration lawyers and regulated professionals in Spain.
ExpatPlanner coordinates these specialists so that the legal strategy, documentation preparation and administrative procedures remain consistent throughout the process.
This ensures that decisions taken early in the relocation do not create legal or tax complications later.
No. ExpatPlanner is not a law firm.
It is a coordination platform that organizes the relocation process and connects clients with the appropriate legal, administrative and tax specialists when needed.
This structure allows clients to access the right expertise while maintaining a single point of coordination.
The process typically follows three stages.
- First, we analyze your situation - nationality, professional activity, relocation plans and timeline.
- Second, we design a relocation roadmap that identifies the correct visa pathway and the administrative steps required.
- Finally, we coordinate the execution of those steps with the appropriate specialists while keeping you informed at each stage.
The objective is simple: clarity and control throughout the relocation.
Moving to Spain is rarely difficult because of a single procedure.
It becomes complicated because multiple procedures must be done in the correct order, often across different institutions.
A misplaced step - for example obtaining the wrong type of NIE or triggering tax residency too early - can create months of delay or unnecessary fiscal consequences.
ExpatPlanner reduces those risks by structuring the process from the beginning.
Costs depend on the services required and the complexity of the relocation.
Some clients use ExpatPlanner primarily for strategic planning and guidance, while others ask us to coordinate the full relocation process including legal filings and administrative procedures.
Pricing is transparent and defined before work begins so that clients understand the scope and expected costs.
Depending on the situation, services may include:
- Visa and residence strategy
- Coordination of immigration procedures
- NIE and administrative registrations
- Fiscal planning related to relocation
- Guidance on housing, banking and practical setup
- Coordination of legal and administrative specialists
The objective is not simply to complete paperwork, but to ensure that each step fits into a coherent relocation strategy.
Quality is ensured through two mechanisms.
First, by working with licensed professionals in each domain - immigration lawyers, tax advisors and administrative specialists.
Second, by coordinating the process through a structured roadmap so that each step is reviewed and executed in the correct order.
This combination of professional expertise and process coordination significantly reduces the likelihood of errors.
Yes.
Many clients arrive after beginning the relocation independently and encountering administrative obstacles.
In these cases, the first step is reviewing the current situation and identifying what has already been completed, what needs correction, and how to realign the process with the appropriate legal pathway.
No.
While many clients are remote professionals relocating under the Digital Nomad Visa, ExpatPlanner also supports:
- Highly qualified professionals relocating for employment
- Entrepreneurs establishing businesses in Spain
- International professionals seeking tax-efficient relocation
- Families relocating for long-term residence
Yes.
All personal data is handled in accordance with the European General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR).
Documentation is stored securely and shared only with the professionals or institutions necessary to complete each administrative step.