Every British buyer who purchases property in Spain needs one document above all others: the NIE number. Without it, you cannot sign at the notary, open a Spanish bank account, pay Spanish taxes, or complete virtually any official transaction in Spain. Yet it is one of the most misunderstood parts of the buying process. Buyers frequently leave it too late, go to the wrong consulate, or arrive without the right documents.
This guide covers exactly how to get your NIE number from the UK in 2026: the three routes available, what each costs, how long each takes, and which one to use depending on your situation.
What Is an NIE Number?
NIE stands for Número de Identidad de Extranjero, meaning Foreign Identity Number. It is a unique tax identification number issued by the Spanish government to non-Spanish nationals. It is not a residency permit and does not give you any right to live in Spain. It is purely a fiscal identifier, the Spanish equivalent of a National Insurance number for tax purposes.
You will need your NIE for:
- Signing the property purchase deed at the notary
- Opening a Spanish bank account
- Paying property purchase taxes (ITP or IVA+AJD)
- Setting up utilities in your name
- Any future Spanish tax filings (including the annual Form 210 non-resident income tax)
- Applying for a Spanish mortgage
When to apply: Do not leave this until the week before completion. Apply as soon as you have made an offer and your lawyer has confirmed the property is clean. Allow a minimum of four weeks if applying from the UK; more if applying through the consulate in peak season (June to August).
The Three Routes to Getting Your NIE
Route 1: Apply at a Spanish Consulate in the UK (Direct)
British residents can apply for an NIE at a Spanish consulate in the UK. This is the most straightforward route if you are not planning a trip to Spain before exchange.
Which consulate covers you:
- London: covers England (south of Birmingham), Wales, and Northern Ireland
- Manchester: covers England north of Birmingham
- Edinburgh: covers Scotland
All three consulates require an appointment booked in advance through the Spanish Consulate online appointment system. Appointments in London are typically booked out 4 to 8 weeks in advance; Manchester and Edinburgh are usually faster.
Documents required:
- Completed EX-15 form (NIE application form, available on the consulate website)
- Valid UK passport (original plus a photocopy of the photo page)
- Evidence of the reason for your NIE application (for property purchase, this means a letter from your Spanish lawyer confirming the intended purchase, or a signed reservation contract)
- One passport-sized photograph
- Fee payment: currently £8.22 (subject to change; check the consulate website for current rates)
Timeline: The NIE is typically issued the same day at the appointment, or within 1 to 2 weeks by post depending on the consulate and current demand.
Practical tips:
– Book your appointment the moment you have an accepted offer, as slots in London fill weeks in advance
– Bring originals and photocopies of everything; consulates will not make copies for you
– The EX-15 form must be completed in Spanish; your lawyer can provide a pre-completed version
Route 2: Apply in Person at a Spanish National Police Station
If you are travelling to Spain before exchange (for a second viewing, surveys, or simply because the timing works), you can apply for your NIE directly at a Comisaría (National Police station) in the province where you are buying.
For Costa del Sol buyers, the relevant offices are:
– Málaga city: Comisaría of the Policía Nacional, Avenida de la Rosaleda
– Marbella: Comisaría on Avenida Arias Maldonado
– Estepona: Local police office (smaller, some NIE capacity)
– Fuengirola: Comisaría on Calle Larga
Documents required (same as the consulate route):
– Completed EX-15 form
– Passport original and photocopy
– Evidence of reason for application (reservation contract or lawyer’s letter)
– Passport photo
– Fee (Tasa 790 Código 012): currently approximately €10.70, paid at a Spanish bank before your appointment
Important: You must book an appointment (cita previa) in advance through the Spanish government’s appointment system (sede.administraciones.gob.es). Walk-ins are not accepted. In Marbella and Málaga, appointments can be 3 to 6 weeks out in peak season.
Timeline: NIE is typically collected the same day or issued within a few days.
Route 3: Through Your Spanish Lawyer via Power of Attorney (Recommended)
The most practical route for most British buyers (and the one most experienced property lawyers recommend) is to grant your Spanish lawyer a poder notarial (power of attorney) to obtain the NIE on your behalf.
This means you do not need to attend a consulate or travel to Spain specifically for the NIE. Your lawyer handles the entire process, including:
- Preparing the power of attorney (you sign this in front of a UK notary public, who then apostilles it)
- Submitting the NIE application in Spain
- Collecting the NIE and sending it to you
Cost: Your lawyer’s fee for this service typically runs 150 to 300 euros above their standard legal fee. The UK notary public and apostille costs an additional 80 to 150 pounds. Total additional cost: approximately 250 to 400 pounds.
Timeline: Allow 3 to 6 weeks from the time you instruct your lawyer to when you receive your NIE number.
Why most buyers choose this route: It removes one logistical step from what is already a complex process. If you are working with a good independent Spanish property lawyer (which you should be), they will likely recommend this approach and manage it as part of their standard service.
Which Route Should You Choose?
| Your situation | Best route |
|---|---|
| You have a Spanish trip planned before exchange | Apply in person in Spain |
| You want full control and lowest cost | Apply at UK consulate directly |
| You want minimum hassle and have a lawyer | Power of attorney via lawyer |
| You are in a hurry (exchange in under 4 weeks) | In-person in Spain is fastest |
| You cannot travel to a consulate | Power of attorney via lawyer |
Common Mistakes British Buyers Make
Leaving it too late. The NIE is required at completion. If you apply with two weeks to go and the appointment system is backed up, you could delay your entire purchase. Apply the moment you have an accepted offer.
Going to the wrong consulate. If you live in Manchester and book a London appointment, you may be turned away. Consulates cover specific geographic regions.
Arriving without the right evidence. The consulate or police station will ask why you need the NIE. A reservation contract or a letter from your Spanish lawyer confirming an intended property purchase is the cleanest evidence. “I’m thinking about buying” is not sufficient.
Confusing the NIE with residency. The NIE is a tax number only. It does not register you as a Spanish resident, does not give you access to the Spanish health system, and does not affect your 90-day Schengen limit as a British national post-Brexit.
Using an unvetted lawyer to obtain the power of attorney. If you are granting power of attorney to a lawyer to obtain your NIE, ensure that lawyer is properly qualified (registered with the Spanish Colegio de Abogados) and independently verified, not someone recommended by the agent or developer.
How Long Is an NIE Valid?
An NIE number is permanent. Once issued, the number is yours for life and does not expire. However, the physical NIE certificate (the green A4 document you receive) is only valid for three months for its stated purpose. If you do not use it within three months of issue, you will need to apply for a new certificate (the number stays the same; you just need a fresh document).
This is another reason not to apply too early. If you apply the moment you start viewing properties and then spend four months searching before making an offer, your certificate may have expired by exchange.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I buy property in Spain without an NIE number?
No. The notary will not complete a property purchase without a valid NIE from every buyer. If you are buying jointly with a partner, both of you need separate NIEs.
Does my NIE number stay the same if I become a Spanish resident?
Yes. Your NIE number is permanent. When you register as a Spanish resident you will be issued a TIE card (Tarjeta de Identidad de Extranjero), but your NIE number on it is the same number you received as a non-resident.
Can I get an NIE number without a reason, just in case?
Technically the application requires a stated reason. In practice, many consulates and police stations accept a statement that you intend to purchase property. Your lawyer can draft an appropriate supporting letter.
I’m buying with my spouse. Do we each need an NIE?
Yes. Each person on the title deed needs their own NIE. Apply for both at the same time using the same route; it adds minimal extra effort.
What if my NIE certificate expires before completion?
You need to apply for a new certificate. The number stays the same; you are not starting from scratch. Your lawyer can handle this if you have granted power of attorney.
