How to Call Emergency Services in Spain — 112, 061, 091, 080 | 247 Expat Insurance

How to Call Emergency Services in Spain — 112, 061, 091, 080

A complete expat guide to Spain's emergency numbers — when to call 112 versus a specialist line, what to say in Spanish, how language support works, and the exact information that gets an ambulance, the police or the fire brigade to you in the shortest possible time.

Updated June 2026 22 min read British English

In a real emergency in Spain — a chest-pain episode, a car crash on the AP-7, a break-in at 3am, a kitchen fire — the seconds it takes to remember the right number and the right words can change the outcome.

Spain has a unified European emergency number, 112, but it also keeps specialist lines — 061 for medical emergencies in some regions, 091 for the Policía Nacional, 062 for the Guardia Civil, 080 for the fire brigade, and 092 for the local police. Knowing which one to dial, and what to say first, is one of the most important pieces of practical knowledge any expat in Spain can have.

This guide walks you through every number, how each service is organised regionally, what English-language support to expect, and how to use your health card or private policy when the ambulance arrives.

1Why Spain's Emergency System Is Different

Coming from the UK with 999, Ireland with 112/999, the USA with 911 or Australia with 000, Spain's multi-number, multi-region setup will catch you out if you don't plan for it.

The single most important fact is that 112 works everywhere in Spain, 24 hours a day, from any phone — landline, Spanish mobile, foreign mobile on roaming, locked SIM or no SIM at all — completely free of charge. If you remember only one number, remember 112. The call centre will triage your situation and dispatch the correct service. The official 112 España portal publishes the full directory and regional variations.

Three other things to know up front:

  • 112 is run by the regional governments (Comunidades Autónomas), not the national government. Each region operates its own 112 centre — 112 Madrid, 112 Andalucía, 112 Catalunya, Emergències Illes Balears, 112 Canarias. Language support varies slightly but the number is identical everywhere.
  • Medical emergencies route differently in each region. Some communities use 061 directly (Andalucía, Galicia, Asturias, La Rioja); others fold them into 112 (Madrid uses SUMMA 112 and SAMUR-PC, Cataluña uses SEM).
  • You don't need to speak Spanish. All 112 centres offer English-language operators or rapid translation. Catalan, Basque, Galician and Valencian are handled in their respective regions. French and German are commonly available in tourist areas.

2The 6 Numbers You Must Know

Here are the six emergency numbers every expat in Spain should have saved in their phone and stuck on the fridge.

All-in-one

112 — Unified Emergencies

The pan-European number for any life-threatening or serious emergency. Connects to your regional emergency centre which dispatches medical, police, fire and rescue services. Free, 24/7, works from any phone, with English-language support across Spain.

Medical

061 — Medical Emergencies

The direct medical emergency line in several regions, including Andalucía (EPES 061), Galicia (061 Galicia), Asturias, La Rioja and Ceuta/Melilla. In Madrid the medical service is SUMMA 112. Use 112 if you're unsure which one your region runs.

National Police

091 — Policía Nacional

The Policía Nacional handles serious urban crime, identity documents, terrorism and organised crime. Dial 091 for break-ins, robberies, assaults, missing persons and ID document theft anywhere in Spain's cities and provincial capitals.

Rural Police

062 — Guardia Civil

The Guardia Civil polices smaller towns, rural areas, motorways, ports and borders. Dial 062 for road accidents on inter-urban roads, rural break-ins, coast or border issues, and incidents away from major cities.

Fire

080 / 085 — Bomberos

The fire brigade has two direct numbers: 080 for municipal fire services in most cities and 085 for forest fires and rural fire emergencies. 112 will route to the same service. Use these for any fire, smoke, gas leak or rescue from a confined space.

Local Police

092 — Policía Local

The local police (also called Policía Municipal) handle traffic, parking, ordinances, neighbour disputes, lost property and minor public-order incidents within their municipality. Dial 092 for non-urgent street-level matters in your own town.

3Who This Guide Is For

Whether you're a tourist on a two-week break or you've lived in Spain for 20 years, this guide is built for the moment you genuinely need help.

  • Tourists and short-term visitors who want to programme the right numbers into their phone before stepping off the plane.
  • New residents who need to understand which emergency service matches which kind of incident in their region.
  • Parents and grandparents who want a fridge-magnet reference so children and visiting grandchildren know who to call.
  • Drivers on Spanish roads — autopistas, mountain passes, rural backroads — who need the right number for a crash, breakdown or wildfire on the verge.
  • Hikers, climbers and cyclists heading into the Picos de Europa, Sierra Nevada or Pyrenees who need rescue contacts that work where signal is patchy.
  • Boaters, sailors and divers who may need Salvamento Marítimo (900 202 202) as well as 112.
  • Pensioners with long-term conditions who want to know how SUMMA, SAMUR, SEM or EPES 061 will respond to a stroke or cardiac event at home.
  • Holiday-home owners who need to leave clear instructions for guests, cleaners and property managers.

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4112 — How the Unified Number Actually Works

112 isn't just a phone number — it's a coordinated regional dispatch system. Understanding how it works helps you give the right information first.

When you dial 112 anywhere in Spain, your call routes to the regional 112 centre. A triage operator (gestor de demanda) asks four critical questions in order:

  1. ¿Qué le ocurre? — "What's happening?" Describe the emergency in one sentence.
  2. ¿Dónde está? — "Where are you?" Address, road and kilometre marker, or nearest landmark.
  3. ¿Cuántas personas están afectadas? — "How many people are affected?"
  4. ¿Desde qué número llama? — "What number are you calling from?" — in case the call drops.

While they're asking, they're already alerting the relevant service in parallel. Stay on the line; the operator will give you instructions (CPR, recovery position, isolating a gas leak, where to wait) until help arrives. Each regional 112 centre dispatches differently:

RegionMedical serviceOperating body
MadridSUMMA 112 + SAMUR-PCComunidad / Ayuntamiento
CataluñaSEM (Sistema d'Emergències Mèdiques)Generalitat de Catalunya
AndalucíaEPES 061Empresa Pública de Emergencias Sanitarias
Comunidad ValencianaSAMUConselleria de Sanitat
Galicia061 Galicia (Urxencias Sanitarias)Sergas
País VascoEmergencias 112 / Emergencias OsakidetzaGobierno Vasco
BalearesSAMU 061 Illes BalearsIB-Salut
CanariasSUC (Servicio de Urgencias Canario)Servicio Canario de Salud

Insider tip

If you're in a rural area with patchy signal, install the regional 112 app for your community — they auto-share GPS coordinates the moment you connect, and most support SMS as a backup when voice fails.

5061 — Medical Emergencies and the Regional Services

For a life-threatening medical situation, the fastest route to an ambulance with a doctor on board depends on where you are.

The historic medical number 061 still works in many regions but has been partially absorbed into 112 in others:

  • 061 direct to medical service — Andalucía, Galicia, Asturias, La Rioja, Murcia, Ceuta, Melilla. Goes straight to a medically-trained call-taker (médico regulador).
  • 061 routes through 112 — Madrid, Cataluña, Valencia, Castilla y León, Canaries. In those regions 112 is the recommended primary number.
  • 061 not active — Aragón, Cantabria, Extremadura, Navarra, País Vasco. Use 112.

The major regional medical emergency services:

SUMMA 112 (Madrid) — The Servicio de Urgencia Médica de la Comunidad de Madrid operates the regional ambulance fleet, running basic and advanced life-support units (UVI-móvil) and coordinating with hospital A&E for stroke and STEMI protocols.

SAMUR-PC (Madrid) — The municipal emergency and rescue service handles street-level emergencies inside the City of Madrid. Jointly dispatched with SUMMA via 112.

SEM (Cataluña) — Sistema d'Emergències Mèdiques covers Barcelona, Tarragona, Lleida and Girona via 112. EPES 061 (Andalucía) runs one of Spain's most robust pre-hospital systems with strong helicopter coverage of Sierra Nevada and the Costa del Sol.

For any of these, the key Spanish phrase is: "Necesito una ambulancia, urgente". Follow with location, number affected and what's happening. The Sistema Nacional de Salud (Ministerio de Sanidad) coordinates national stroke, heart-attack and trauma protocols, so the chain is the same across regions.

The hospital part doesn't stop at the ambulance

Public ambulances take you to the nearest public hospital. With private health insurance you can request transfer to your insurer's hospital once stabilised — but the first stop is always the closest A&E that can save your life. Travel insurance handles repatriation costs if you need to return home for follow-up.

6091, 062 and 092 — The Three Police Forces

Spain has three police forces operating in parallel. Knowing which one polices your situation matters because they'll take the denuncia (police report) and the report governs everything afterwards.

For any insurance claim — stolen passport, mugging, car break-in — you'll need an official denuncia. The right force depends on where the crime happened.

091 — Policía Nacional (CNP). National force in every city and provincial capital. Handles serious urban crime, robberies, assaults, terrorism, immigration, ID documents (NIE/TIE/DNI) and passport theft. Runs the foreign tourist help line (SATE).

062 — Guardia Civil. Military-style police covering rural areas, smaller towns, motorways (Agrupación de Tráfico), coasts, borders, environment (SEPRONA) and mountain rescue (GREIM). If you crash on the AP-7 or N-340, Guardia Civil de Tráfico responds.

092 — Policía Local. Town-hall police: parking, in-town traffic, by-laws, noise complaints, lost property and drunk-and-disorderly calls. In Catalunya the regional force is the Mossos d'Esquadra (112/088); in the País Vasco the Ertzaintza; in Navarra the Policía Foral.

SituationNumber to dialForce responding
Break-in to your flat in Madrid091 or 112Policía Nacional
Break-in to your villa in a small Pueblo062 or 112Guardia Civil
Car crash on the AP-7112 (or 062)Guardia Civil de Tráfico
Mugged in a city centre091 or 112Policía Nacional
Noisy neighbours at 3am092Policía Local
Lost passport in Barcelona088 / 112 (Mossos)Mossos d'Esquadra
Wildfire near a country road112 or 085Bomberos + Guardia Civil
Drowning at a beach112Salvamento Marítimo + Policía

If in doubt, dial 112 and let the operator route you. The cost of a wrong choice is at most a 30-second transfer to the correct dispatcher.

7Fire, Sea, Mountain and Civil Protection

Beyond the main numbers, Spain has specialist services for fires, water rescues, mountain incidents and civil protection emergencies.

080 — Municipal Bomberos. Fire brigade for cities and large municipalities. Dial 080 for house and flat fires, smoke, gas leaks, lift entrapment, road traffic extrications, and water leaks above your ceiling.

085 — Forest fires. Operated by the regional fire and rural agents service. Spain's summer fire season (June–October) is increasingly severe; if you spot smoke in the countryside, dial 085 or 112. They coordinate with the central Dirección General de Protección Civil y Emergencias.

900 202 202 — Salvamento Marítimo. Spain's coastguard. Free national number for any sea rescue, vessel in distress, or swimmer in trouble offshore. Also reachable via VHF channel 16 from a boat, or 112 from a phone.

Mountain rescue. The Guardia Civil's GREIM handle alpine emergencies in the Pyrenees, Sierra Nevada, Picos de Europa and the Sistema Central. Dial 112 and ask for "rescate de montaña".

Protección Civil and Cruz Roja. Protección Civil coordinates large-scale civil emergencies — floods, earthquakes, evacuations — and runs the ES-Alert SMS system that broadcasts warnings to every mobile in a defined area. The Spanish Red Cross runs beach lifeguards, ambulance reserves and humanitarian response, and is dispatched as part of any 112 response when needed.

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7BWhat to Say in Spanish — The Phrases That Save Time

English-language operators are widely available, but the call is faster if you can deliver the first three sentences in Spanish.

Memorise (or screenshot to your lock screen) these phrases. They're the exact sentences trained Spanish call-takers expect to hear first.

To open the call: "Hola, necesito ayuda" (I need help) — "¿Habla inglés, por favor?" (Do you speak English?) — "Es una emergencia" (It's an emergency).

For medical: "Necesito una ambulancia, urgente" (I need an ambulance) — "No respira" (He/she is not breathing) — "Tiene dolor en el pecho" (chest pain) — "Ha tenido un accidente" (has had an accident) — "Está inconsciente" (is unconscious).

For police: "Necesito la policía" (I need the police) — "Me han robado" (I've been robbed) — "Han entrado en mi casa" (someone has broken in) — "Hay un accidente de tráfico" (there's a road accident).

For fire: "Hay un incendio" (there's a fire) — "Huele a gas" (it smells of gas) — "Hay mucho humo" (there's a lot of smoke).

Giving location: "Estoy en [calle, número, ciudad]" (I'm at street X, city Y) — "Estoy en la carretera [N-340/AP-7], kilómetro [X]" (I'm on road X at km Y) — "Estoy en el [primer] piso" (I'm on the [first] floor).

If you don't know any of these and the operator can't switch to English immediately, the magic word is "inglés" — say it once and the system will transfer you within seconds.

8What the Ambulance Will Want to See

When the ambulance arrives, the paramedics need a small amount of information to triage you correctly. Have it ready.

Identification. They'll ask for DNI, NIE, TIE or passport. If you can't speak, they'll search for a wallet card or phone medical-ID screen.

Spanish health card (Tarjeta Sanitaria Individual, TSI). If you're registered in the public system, your TSI gives the receiving hospital instant access to your medical history, allergies and current medications. If you don't have one yet, your EHIC/GHIC provides emergency cover under EU reciprocal arrangements; the hospital will note the card number and bill the issuing country, not you.

Private health insurance policy. If you hold cover with Sanitas, Caser Salud or another DGSFP-regulated insurer, paramedics can transfer you to your insurer's preferred hospital once stabilised. Keep your insurer's 24-hour emergency line in your phone — most also operate a "second-opinion" doctor service that can guide the home decision before you even dial 112.

Medication and allergies. Have a list of anticoagulants, insulin, beta-blockers and any recent chemotherapy or transplant medication. Allergies to penicillin, contrast dye, latex and shellfish are especially important. A medical-alert bracelet or phone wallpaper can save minutes.

Next of kin. Have one Spanish contact and one home-country contact written somewhere accessible. The hospital will call them once you're admitted.

The 24-hour private hospital trick

If you have private health insurance and the situation is serious but not immediately life-threatening, call your insurer's 24-hour line instead of 112. They'll arrange an ambulance to their own network hospital and you'll skip the public urgencias queue. Save that number to favourites today.

9Out-of-Hours and Non-Emergency Health Numbers

Not every health issue is a 112 call. Spain has well-organised non-emergency routes too.

If you have a fever at 3am, a wound that needs stitches but you can walk, a child with an ear infection, or you've run out of essential medication, you have several options before dialling 112.

Puntos de atención continuada (PAC) or centros de salud de urgencias. Every Spanish town has at least one centro de salud open 24 hours for urgent but not life-threatening cases. Drive or taxi yourself; you'll be seen by a GP and referred to A&E only if necessary. Locate yours on the Ministerio de Sanidad portal.

Pharmacies (farmacias de guardia). Every district has at least one 24-hour duty pharmacy, with the rota posted on every pharmacy's front door. Spanish pharmacists can dispense some medications without prescription, assess minor injuries and advise on next steps.

Insurer 24-hour medical helplines. Private insurers all operate free 24-hour video or phone-consultation services. A doctor will assess you within minutes and either reassure, prescribe (via electronic receta) or send an ambulance.

Other key numbers. 91 562 04 20 — Instituto Nacional de Toxicología, 24-hour line for poisonings, snake bites, mushroom ingestion and overdoses. 024 — national mental health and suicide prevention line, run by the Ministry of Health, 24/7, free and confidential. 900 107 917 — Cruz Roja Te Escucha emotional support line.

10Language Support — What to Expect by Region

Spanish, Catalan, Basque, Galician, Valencian, English, French and German are all available in 112 centres. Here's how the regions actually handle it.

Each regional 112 centre runs its own multilingual roster:

  • Spanish (Castellano) — Universal, always available.
  • Co-official languages — Catalan in Cataluña, Baleares and Valencia; Basque in País Vasco and Navarra; Galician in Galicia.
  • English — Available in every region 24/7, either through direct operators or rapid three-way interpreter calls. Major tourist regions have English-fluent operators on every shift.
  • French and German — Available 24/7 in tourist-heavy regions through interpreter services.
  • Arabic, Romanian, Chinese, Russian — Available through Spain's national interpreter line, accessed by 112 operators via a hot key. Adds 30–60 seconds to setup.

Two practical tools cut through any language worry:

  • 112 app. Every regional 112 centre offers a free smartphone app ("Mi112", "112 Andalucía", "GenCat Mòbils"). The app auto-shares your GPS location, lets you specify language and submits the basic incident type before you even speak. Invaluable for hearing-impaired users.
  • AML (Advanced Mobile Location). Modern smartphones automatically send precise GPS coordinates to 112 when you dial. No app required — it's built into iOS and Android.

11Mistakes to Avoid

After helping thousands of expats navigate Spanish emergencies, here are the six errors we see most often.

The six most expensive emergency-call mistakes expats make

  1. Dialling the wrong country's number out of habit. 999, 911 and 000 do nothing in Spain. Only 112 (and 061/091/062/080/092) connect to Spanish emergency services. Programme 112 as a favourite contact today, before you need it.
  2. Hanging up before the operator says you can. The triage operator will tell you when to end the call. Hanging up early can mean the wrong service is dispatched, or none if the operator didn't get the location.
  3. Refusing to give the address because you don't know the Spanish word. Read the street sign verbatim. Give the postcode, the nearest bar, the kilometre marker. The operator will work with whatever you can give them.
  4. Calling a private insurer first when you're alone with a collapse. If someone is unconscious or not breathing, dial 112 first. Then call your insurer once help is en route. The two-minute delay can be fatal in a cardiac arrest.
  5. Not filing a denuncia for theft. Without a police report, your travel insurance and contents insurance won't pay out. Even if the police can't catch the thief, the piece of paper is mandatory for any claim.
  6. Assuming an EHIC/GHIC is enough for repatriation. It pays for emergency public-hospital treatment in Spain — it does not pay to fly you home, transfer you to a private clinic, or repatriate a body. Travel insurance fills that gap and is usually €30–€80 per trip.

12Frequently Asked Questions

The questions expats ask us most often about Spanish emergency calls and emergency cover.

Does 112 work from a foreign phone roaming in Spain?

Yes. 112 works from any mobile connected to any Spanish network — UK, US, Australian SIMs on roaming — and even from a phone with no SIM. The call is free everywhere in the EU. AML auto-location works on most modern smartphones too, sending your exact GPS to the dispatcher.

Will the ambulance charge me?

Public ambulances dispatched by 112 / SUMMA / SEM / EPES 061 are free at the point of use for anyone they treat in Spain — residents, tourists, undocumented persons. The cost is recovered from your home country (via EHIC/GHIC) or your private insurer. You'll never be asked to pay the crew directly.

Can I dial 112 if I only speak English?

Yes. Every regional 112 centre provides English-language support, either via direct English-speaking operators or rapid three-way interpreter calls. Say "English, please" at the start. In tourist regions (Costa del Sol, Costa Blanca, Mallorca, Canaries) an English-speaking primary operator is very likely.

Should I call my insurer or 112 first?

For anything immediately life-threatening — chest pain, severe bleeding, unconsciousness, suspected stroke — dial 112 first, then your insurer. For urgent but not life-threatening issues (high fever, possible fracture, severe abdominal pain), call your private insurer's 24-hour line first; they'll dispatch their own ambulance to a network hospital and you'll skip the public A&E queue.

What's the difference between SUMMA and SAMUR?

Both work in Madrid, both arrive in an ambulance, both are dispatched via 112. SUMMA 112 belongs to the Comunidad de Madrid and covers the entire region. SAMUR-PC belongs to the Ayuntamiento de Madrid and covers the city itself, focused on street-level incidents. The 112 dispatcher decides who's nearest.

Do I need to give my NIE or DNI when I call?

No. The 112 operator does not need your ID number to dispatch help. You'll be asked for it later by the ambulance crew or at hospital reception, but never as a condition of help arriving. Spanish emergency services do not check immigration status before treating you.

How does the denuncia (police report) work for insurance?

For any theft, lost item or assault you want to claim, you must file a denuncia within 24–72 hours. The simplest route is online via the Policía Nacional portal (confirm in person within 72 hours) or directly at any commissariat. Bring ID and a list of stolen items with values. Your insurer will not pay without this document.

How does this affect my travel and health insurance?

A 112 call gets help to you, but it doesn't pay the bills. Travel insurance covers repatriation, emergency dental, evacuation, missed flights, hospital top-up and a family member flying out. Spanish health insurance handles private hospital networks, scheduled care and routine cover. Together they form the full safety net — calling 112 is just step one.

Cover the Costs a Phone Call Can't

Dialling 112 gets an ambulance to your door. It doesn't pay for repatriation, a private hospital room, a relative's emergency flight, or the cost of an air ambulance back to the UK, Ireland or Australia. 247 Expat Insurance arranges Spanish travel and health insurance with DGSFP-regulated insurers, so you have the full safety net — emergency services on one end, full financial cover on the other.

Get a Travel Insurance Quote

Why 247 Expat Insurance?

We arrange Spanish travel, health, home, car and life insurance for British, Irish, American, Australian, Canadian and South African expats living in or visiting Spain. Every policy is issued by an insurer regulated by the Dirección General de Seguros y Fondos de Pensiones — Spain's national insurance regulator — so claims are paid under Spanish law, in Spain, by a Spanish entity. No grey-area UK policies that may not respond to a Spanish medical emergency.

All policies arranged with DGSFP-regulated Spanish insurers