MUNDO Research Team · Vetted by Costa del Sol property professionals
Published May 2025 · Updated February 2026 · 9 min read
What Is the Padron?
The padron municipal (also called the empadronamiento) is the official register of all people living in a Spanish municipality. Every person who lives in Spain — whether Spanish, EU citizen, or third-country national — is legally required to register on the padron of the municipality where they reside. This is enshrined in Spanish law (Ley 7/1985 de Bases del Regimen Local).
Think of it as the council knowing you live in their area. In the UK, there is no exact equivalent, although the electoral register serves a somewhat similar purpose. The padron is used by the Spanish government for census data, resource allocation, and public service planning. The number of people registered on a town's padron directly affects its government funding — so municipalities actively want you to register.
Registration on the padron is free and is done at your local ayuntamiento (town hall). It is one of the first administrative tasks you should complete when moving to Spain, ideally within the first few weeks of arrival.
Why You Must Register on the Padron
Registering on the padron is not just a legal requirement — it is practically essential for life in Spain. Here is what you need it for:
Access to Public Healthcare
To register with the Spanish public health system, whether through an S1 form or the convenio especial, you need a padron certificate. Without it, you cannot get a tarjeta sanitaria (health card) and cannot access public healthcare.
School Enrollment
If you have children, registering them in a Spanish school (whether public, concertado, or private) requires proof of residence via the padron. In popular areas, the padron address determines which school zone you fall into, and places are allocated based on proximity to the school.
Residency Applications
When applying for your TIE card or renewing residency permits, the padron certificate is a required document. It proves that you actually live in Spain, in a specific municipality.
Driving Licence Exchange
As discussed in our guide to driving in Spain, exchanging your UK licence for a Spanish one requires a padron certificate dated within the last 3 months.
Municipal Services and Voting
Being registered on the padron gives you access to municipal services including local libraries, sports facilities, and cultural programmes. EU citizens registered on the padron can vote in local elections (though this no longer applies to UK citizens post-Brexit, some bilateral agreements may restore limited voting rights — check current rules).
Social Services and Benefits
Any application for social services, local benefits, or support programmes requires padron registration. This includes subsidised transport passes for pensioners and access to municipal employment services.
Proof of Residence Duration
Your padron registration date creates an official record of when you started living in your municipality. This is important when applying for permanent residency (which requires 5 years of continuous legal residence) and eventually Spanish nationality (10 years). The padron certificate showing your registration date is accepted as evidence.
Documents Needed for Padron Registration
The exact requirements can vary slightly between municipalities, but the standard documents needed are:
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For All Applicants
- Valid passport (original plus photocopy)
- NIE or TIE card if you have one (not always required for initial padron registration, but bring it if you have it)
- Proof of address — this is the most important document and can be one of the following:
Proof of Address Options
- If you own the property: Your escritura (title deed) or a recent property tax receipt (IBI — Impuesto sobre Bienes Inmuebles)
- If you are renting: Your rental contract (contrato de alquiler). The contract should be registered with the regional housing authority, but many municipalities accept unregistered contracts too
- If you are staying with someone: The property owner must either accompany you to the ayuntamiento with their ID and property documents, or provide a written authorisation (autorizacion) allowing you to register at their address. Some municipalities require this authorisation to be notarised
For Families
If registering a family, you will also need the libro de familia (family book) or equivalent documents showing family relationships. For UK families, this means birth certificates and marriage certificates, ideally with apostilles and sworn translations into Spanish.
How to Register at Your Local Ayuntamiento
The process is straightforward but varies by municipality:
Step 1: Check If You Need an Appointment
Some ayuntamientos operate on a walk-in basis, others require a cita previa (prior appointment). Larger towns like Marbella, Malaga, and Estepona generally require appointments booked through their websites or by phone. Smaller villages often allow walk-ins.
Step 2: Go to the Padron Office
At the ayuntamiento, look for the oficina de padron or atencion al ciudadano (citizen services). In smaller towns, it is just the main reception desk. Take a ticket and wait for your number to be called.
Step 3: Submit Your Documents
The clerk will check your documents, enter your details into the system, and give you a volante de empadronamiento (padron receipt) or a certificado de empadronamiento (padron certificate) on the spot. Some ayuntamientos issue the certificate immediately; others give you the volante and you must request the official certificate separately (sometimes for a small fee of €1-€3).
Step 4: Check Your Details
Make sure your name is spelled correctly, your passport number is right, and the address is accurate. Errors on the padron can cause problems with other applications later. Spanish clerks sometimes struggle with British names and may enter them incorrectly.
The Padron Certificate: When You Need It
A certificado de empadronamiento is the document you get from the padron — it confirms your name, address, and registration date. Many government processes require a padron certificate dated within the last 3 months. This means you may need to request a fresh copy multiple times during your first year in Spain as you complete various bureaucratic processes.
You can usually request new copies at the ayuntamiento in person, and many municipalities now allow you to download them through their website or the Sede Electronica (online government portal) if you have a digital certificate or Cl@ve PIN.
When You Will Need a Fresh Padron Certificate
- TIE card application and renewals
- Driving licence exchange at the DGT
- Public healthcare registration at the INSS
- Opening a bank account (some banks require it)
- Enrolling children in school
- Applying for the convenio especial
- Applying for permanent residency or nationality
Important: The Padron Does NOT Make You Tax Resident
This is a common misconception. Registering on the padron does not make you a Spanish tax resident. Tax residency in Spain is determined by spending more than 183 days per year in the country, or having your centre of economic or vital interests in Spain. The padron is a municipal registration, not a tax declaration.
However, the padron date can be used as evidence by the Spanish tax authorities (Hacienda) to argue that you have been resident in Spain since a particular date. If you register on the padron on 1st February but claim you only became tax resident on 1st July, the tax authorities might question this discrepancy.
If you are spending significant time in Spain but are not yet ready to become tax resident (for example, you are using the 90-day tourist allowance), think carefully about when you register on the padron. Some expats delay padron registration until they formally take up residency, though technically you should register as soon as you are living in the municipality.
Changing Your Padron Address
If you move to a different address within the same municipality, you need to update your padron. This is called a cambio de domicilio. The process is the same as the initial registration — go to the ayuntamiento with your new proof of address and they will update your record.
If you move to a different municipality entirely, you need to register on the padron of your new town. Your old padron registration will be automatically cancelled when the new municipality registers you (there is a system called the padron continuo that syncs between municipalities).
Deregistering from the Padron
If you leave Spain permanently, you should deregister from the padron. This is called baja del padron. In practice, many expats who leave Spain forget to do this, and eventually the municipality will remove inactive registrations. However, formally deregistering is good practice, especially if it could affect your tax status — being registered on a Spanish padron while claiming to be non-resident in Spain is a red flag for tax authorities.
Related Reading
Common Issues and Tips
Property Owners Who Rent Out
If you own a Spanish property and rent it out, your tenants should register on the padron at your property address. As the property owner, you may need to provide authorisation. Be aware that having tenants registered on the padron at your property does not give them any ownership rights — it is simply a residency registration.
Multiple People at One Address
There is no limit to how many people can be registered at one address. A family of five can all register at the same apartment. The padron simply records who lives where.
Holiday Homeowners
If you own a holiday home in Spain but are not resident (you spend less than 183 days per year and have your primary home in the UK), you are technically not required to register on the padron, though some holiday homeowners do register for practical reasons like accessing municipal services. Be aware of the tax implications mentioned above.
Language Barrier
Padron offices in expat areas usually have staff who speak some English, but this is not guaranteed. Bringing a Spanish-speaking friend or having your documents clearly prepared can smooth the process. The registration form itself is simple and the clerk typically fills it in for you based on your documents.
The padron is one of those bureaucratic tasks that seems minor but underpins almost everything else you do in Spain. Get it done early, keep your address updated, and store your padron certificate somewhere safe — you will need it repeatedly in your first year as a Spanish resident.
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Disclaimer
This guide is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal, tax, or financial advice. Property laws and tax regulations change frequently — always consult a qualified Spanish lawyer and tax advisor before making any property purchase decisions. Data sourced from Spanish Land Registry, Idealista, and MUNDO partner network. Last verified: March 2026.