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NIE Renewal in Spain — Process, Timing and the Card That Actually Expires 2026

The NIE itself never expires — it is your foreigner's identity number for life. What does expire is the document or card that proves it: the NIE blanco certificate, the Certificado de Registro for EU citizens, and the TIE residency card for non-EU nationals. Here is exactly what each one is, when it renews, and how to do it without losing your residency.

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NIE, Certificado, TIE — Three Documents Most Expats Confuse

The NIE (Número de Identidad de Extranjero) is a permanent tax and identity number. Once it is issued, it is yours forever — it never expires, never changes, and you only ever have one. You will see it on tax returns, payslips, your bank account, your padrón, every utility contract and your residency documents. There is nothing to "renew" about the number itself.

What people actually mean by "NIE renewal" is renewing the document that proves their NIE and residency. The three documents are the NIE blanco (a white A4 certificate for non-residents needing only a tax number), the Certificado de Registro de Ciudadano de la Unión (a green A4 or credit-card document for EU/EEA/Swiss citizens), and the TIE — Tarjeta de Identidad de Extranjero (a biometric photo card for non-EU residents, including post-Brexit UK nationals). Each has its own renewal cycle and appointment route through cita previa Policía Nacional .

The framework sits in the Reglamento de Extranjería (RD 557/2011) and is administered by extranjeros.inclusion.gob.es .

For LifeThe NIE number itself never expires — only the document or card that proves it does
5 YearsStandard TIE renewal cycle for non-EU residents moving from temporary to long-term residency
10 YearsLong-term (residencia de larga duración) TIE card validity — five years for the card, but status is permanent once granted
Brexit SpecialUK nationals under the Withdrawal Agreement hold a distinct TIE with "Artículo 50 TUE" inscribed — separate renewal rules apply (see UK Gov living in Spain )

The 6 Documents and Renewal Cycles Every Expat Needs to Understand

"NIE renewal" can mean six different things depending on who you are and when you arrived. Each has its own timeline — and missing the window can void your residency status.

NIE Blanco (Non-Resident Certificate)

The classic white A4 certificate issued to non-residents who need a Spanish tax number — typically property buyers, investors, or non-resident bank account holders. The number is permanent; the certificate itself has no fixed expiry date but is widely treated by banks and notaries as "expired" after 3 months for tax-evidence purposes. Re-issue is straightforward via cita previa .

Certificado de Registro (EU Citizens)

The green Certificado de Registro de Ciudadano de la Unión — issued to EU/EEA/Swiss citizens who register as Spanish residents. It includes the NIE number and contains no expiry date on its face. After 5 years of continuous legal residence, EU citizens are entitled to apply for the Certificado de Residencia Permanente, also a green document with no expiry. There is no renewal in the traditional sense — only data updates.

TIE — First Issue (Initial Authorisation)

Non-EU residents (NLV holders, students, family reunification, work permit, Digital Nomad Visa) receive a TIE valid for 1 year on first issue, matching the initial residency authorisation. Fingerprints (huellas) and a 9.45€ tasa (modelo 790-012) are required at a Policía Nacional Extranjería office. The card itself is biometric and is collected approximately 30–45 days after fingerprinting.

TIE — First and Second Renewals

The first renewal of most non-EU residency authorisations extends the TIE for 2 years. The second renewal extends it for another 2 years. By the end of year 5 you are eligible to apply for residencia de larga duración (long-term residency), provided you have been continuously legally resident throughout. Each renewal must be lodged within the window of 60 days before expiry to 90 days after.

Long-Term Residency (Residencia de Larga Duración)

After 5 years of continuous legal residency, non-EU nationals may apply for long-term residency. The status is effectively permanent — but the TIE card itself renews every 5 years as a simple document refresh. The underlying residency right does not need to be re-proven, only the photo and biometrics are refreshed. Lose the card abroad and you may need a return visa from the Spanish consulate.

TIE Brexit (Artículo 50 TUE)

UK nationals legally resident in Spain before 1 January 2021 hold a distinct TIE marked "Artículo 50 TUE" under the Withdrawal Agreement. The card runs for 5 years initially, then renews for 10 years once permanent residency is reached. The underlying residency right is permanent and cannot be lost through normal renewal — see gov.uk living in Spain .

Eight Real-World Expat Renewal Scenarios

The rules sound abstract until you map them to an actual family. These are the scenarios we see most often — and how the NIE/TIE/Certificado renewal cycle plays out for each.

  • British retiree, post-Brexit NLV holder, year 1 to year 2: A British couple arrived in 2025 on a Non-Lucrative Visa. Their initial TIE expires after 12 months. They must apply for renewal between 60 days before expiry and 90 days after, proving the same passive income (currently around €30,000 IPREM ×4 for the main applicant), valid private health insurance with no co-payments, and a clean criminal record. First renewal grants 2 more years.
  • EU citizen with a green Certificado from 2010: A Dutch retiree has held a green A4 Certificado de Registro since 2010. Her name is unchanged, her address is in the padrón, and she has been continuously resident. She does not need to "renew" the document — but if she moves to a TIE-style residence card (now possible in some provinces for EU citizens as the older green paper deteriorates), she goes through a separate actualización process, not a renewal.
  • American Digital Nomad Visa holder reaching year 3: A US software engineer arrived in 2024 on the Digital Nomad Visa. The initial TIE was issued for 3 years; the renewal at year 3 will take her to year 5, after which she becomes eligible for long-term residency. She must show that her employment or freelance contracts remain compliant with the Ley 28/2022 startup law conditions throughout.
  • British national pre-Brexit, year 5 to year 15: A British national resident in Spain since 2018 holds a Withdrawal Agreement TIE. At her 5-year mark in 2023 the card was renewed for 10 years and her status confirmed as permanent. She does not need to re-prove income, insurance or anything else at the next renewal in 2033 — it is a card refresh, not a residency review.
  • NLV family reunification renewal: A French couple in Valencia hold NLV residency with two minor children on family reunification. All four TIEs renew together. The parents must continue to show sufficient passive income for the whole family unit and private health insurance covering all four — Spanish public healthcare without co-payments is the standard required by RD 557/2011 .
  • Long-term resident living abroad temporarily: An Argentine national with 12 years' long-term residency in Spain spends 14 months back in Buenos Aires for family reasons. She returns to find her TIE expired and is told her residency may be at risk because absences exceeding 12 consecutive months (or 30 months over 5 years) can extinguish long-term status. She must apply for recuperación before her absence rights are lost permanently.
  • NIE blanco needed again three years later: A British investor obtained a non-resident NIE blanco in 2022 to buy a holiday flat. In 2026 he wants to sell. The notary asks for a "current" NIE certificate. The number is unchanged but a fresh certificate is needed — he books a cita previa, pays the 9.84€ tasa, and walks out with a new white certificate the same week. No renewal, just re-issue.
  • Lost TIE card while travelling: A Canadian resident in Málaga loses her wallet — including her TIE — while on holiday in Greece. The Spanish consulate in Athens can issue a cédula de inscripción or return visa to let her fly back to Spain. Once home, she reports the loss to the Policía Nacional and applies for a duplicate TIE under modelo EX-17. The underlying residency status is unchanged.

6 Costly Mistakes Expats Make With NIE and Residency Renewals

Most renewal disasters come from one of these six errors — not from the law itself but from a misunderstanding of how the documents and timelines actually work.

  • Assuming "NIE expires" and panicking: The NIE number is permanent. What expires is the document or TIE card. Confusing the two leads expats to fly home for unnecessary consulate appointments or pay for new NIE applications they do not need. Read your card: the fecha de caducidad on a TIE refers to the card, not your number.
  • Missing the renewal window: Non-EU TIE renewals can be lodged from 60 days before expiry to 90 days after. Apply earlier and the application is rejected. Apply later than 90 days and you can lose your authorisation entirely. Diary it now, not the week before expiry.
  • Letting private health insurance lapse before renewal: The single most common cause of NLV renewal refusals is a health insurance policy that ended, lapsed, was substituted by a travel policy, or contains copagos. The renewal officer wants to see a current Spanish private policy with no co-payments and full equivalence to public healthcare. Always have this in place before the appointment.
  • Confusing NLV income with residency criteria for renewal: The income requirement does not go away after year one. Each renewal requires evidence that you continue to meet the IPREM ×4 main-applicant and ×1 per dependant thresholds. Bank statements, pension confirmations, dividend statements — all of them have to be current and translated where required.
  • Travelling on an expired TIE without renewing: Even with the renewal lodged and confirmation slip in hand, a TIE in prórroga (extension) can cause issues at non-Schengen borders and even some Schengen ones. Keep your physical card valid — and where renewal is delayed, request the resguardo de solicitud stamped at the police station to evidence your status.
  • Forgetting to update padrón and address with Policía: If you have moved within Spain, your TIE renewal will be slotted to your old address's province. Update the padrón and notify the Policía Nacional of your address change before applying — otherwise your appointment is in the wrong city and your file may be lost between provincial systems.

Why Expats Take Out Health Insurance Through 247 Expat Insurance

Every NLV renewal — and most other non-EU residency renewals — requires proof of current Spanish private health insurance with no co-payments and full equivalence to public cover. Lose or change the wrong policy and your renewal can be refused. We make sure the policy you hold is the one the Extranjería officer expects to see.

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NIE, Certificado and TIE Renewal Frequently Asked Questions

Does the NIE expire in Spain?
No. The NIE number itself is permanent — once you have it, it is yours for life and never changes. What does expire is the document that proves it: the NIE blanco certificate (which banks and notaries treat as "current" only for around 3 months), the EU citizen Certificado (no expiry), and the non-EU TIE card (1, 2, 5 or 10 years depending on stage). Read your card: the fecha de caducidad refers to the card, not your NIE.
How often do I need to renew my TIE card?
For most non-EU residencies (NLV, work permit, family reunification): first card is valid for 1 year, then renewed for 2 years, then renewed for another 2 years. At year 5 you can apply for long-term residency (residencia de larga duración), after which the TIE card renews every 5 years as a simple refresh. Digital Nomad Visa holders typically get a 3-year first card, then 2-year renewals. Apply within 60 days before to 90 days after expiry through cita previa Policía Nacional .
What is the difference between the NIE blanco, the green Certificado and the TIE?
The NIE blanco is a white A4 certificate for non-residents who only need a tax number (typically property buyers). The Certificado de Registro is a green A4 or credit-card document issued to EU/EEA/Swiss citizens registering as Spanish residents — no expiry. The TIE is a biometric photo card issued to non-EU nationals (including post-Brexit UK), with a real expiry date. All three contain or reference the same NIE number, but they are completely different documents with different renewal rules under the Reglamento de Extranjería .
What happens to my Brexit TIE under "Artículo 50 TUE"?
UK nationals who were legally resident in Spain before 1 January 2021 hold a distinct TIE marked "Artículo 50 TUE" under the EU-UK Withdrawal Agreement. The initial card runs for 5 years, then renews for 10 years once permanent status is reached. Crucially, the underlying residency right is permanent and lifelong — the renewal is a card refresh, not a status review. You cannot lose it through normal renewals, only through prolonged absence (over 5 years for permanent holders, fewer for non-permanent). See the UK government's Living in Spain guidance and Spain's extranjeros.inclusion.gob.es .
Do I need private health insurance to renew my TIE?
If you hold an NLV (Non-Lucrative Visa) or most other non-EU residency authorisations that do not give you automatic access to Spanish public healthcare, then yes — at every renewal. The policy must be from a DGSFP-registered Spanish insurer, must have no co-payments (sin copagos), must be valid for at least the full renewal period being requested, and must offer cover at least equivalent to Spanish public healthcare. Travel insurance, expat international policies with deductibles, and lapsed-then-restarted policies are routinely rejected. Long-term residents and Brexit-protected residents with public-system access (S1 or convenio especial) do not need private cover for renewal.
What happens if I miss the TIE renewal window?
If you apply within 90 days after expiry you are normally still inside the renewal pathway, but you may face a 100€ administrative fine. If you apply later than 90 days after expiry your application can be rejected outright and your residency may lapse — you would then need to start a fresh initial residency application, potentially from your country of origin. For long-term residents, prolonged absence (more than 12 consecutive months outside Spain, or 30 months over 5 years) can extinguish even permanent status. Always diary your renewal window — and if you are travelling, leave time before you go.

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