# Spain Entry Declaration > Declaración de entrada is an entry declaration for arrivals to Spain from Schengen without a border stamp. When required, deadlines, and what matters for residents. Author: Мария Плотникова — юрист, Family Office (https://wiki.private.law/authors/plotnikova) Last modified: 2026-07-14T09:27:00.000Z Canonical: https://wiki.private.law/en/spain-entry-declaration Topics: migration Jurisdictions: spain Functional tags: residence-permit Semantic tags: residence-permit --- ## Concept Declaración de entrada is the administrative step by which a foreigner records their arrival in Spain after entering from another Schengen country without receiving a Spanish border stamp. It is a brief, in-person formality before the police, and it carries weight out of all proportion to its simplicity: it is often the only clean evidence of when you actually set foot in the country. > 🍓 The entry declaration is not a visa, not a residence permit, and not confirmation of approval of a migration application. It is only a way to prove the fact and date of entry into Spain when there is no border stamp in the passport. ## When the declaration is required The duty lives in Spain's immigration regulation. Until 2025 it was Article 13 of Real Decreto 557/2011; that text was replaced by the Reglamento approved under [Real Decreto 1155/2024](https://www.boe.es/buscar/act.php?id=BOE-A-2024-24099), in force since 20 May 2025 and later amended by Real Decreto 316/2026. The rule came through the overhaul intact. A third-country national who enters Spain from a state that has abolished border controls with it — any Schengen country — and who does not already hold a Spanish residence authorisation must declare that entry in person to the Policía Nacional. Miss the moment of entry and you have three days to put it right at any Policía Nacional station. The older regulation said three working days; the current wording drops the qualifier, so the safe reading is seventy-two hours from arrival. The obligation is not a Spanish peculiarity. It descends from Article 22 of the 1990 Convention Implementing the Schengen Agreement, which lets a member state require third-country nationals to report their presence when they cross an internal border. Spain has kept its own version of that reporting duty even as the rest of the border-control machinery shifted to EU regulations. ## Why it is needed for the migration file > 🔗 **Related** > [Digital Nomad Visa](https://wiki.private.law/en/digital-nomad-visas) · [tax residence](https://wiki.private.law/en/tax-residency-basics) · [general income tax regime and the wealth t](https://wiki.private.law/en/spain-tax-residency) · [Beckham Law](/en/beckham-law) For applying for the Tarjeta de Identidad de Extranjero (TIE) — the residence card — the Spanish Ministry of the Interior specifies: - for the initial application, a passport with a border control stamp is submitted; - **in the absence of a stamp** — a passport or travel document **plus an entry declaration**, made in person at a police station or foreigners' office within the deadline. The trap is geographic. If a holder of the Digital Nomad Visa enters the EU through, say, Germany or France rather than Spain, the passport picks up a German or French entry record and no Spanish one. When that same person later applies for the TIE, Spain has nothing of its own to rely on, and the entry declaration becomes the missing link. Clearing the migration hurdle has a tax tail. Once the TIE is in hand and enough of the calendar year is spent in the country, tax residence tends to follow residence for immigration purposes, which pulls the general income tax regime and the wealth tax into scope. New arrivals who qualify can soften the landing through the special expatriate regime, the Beckham Law, but the clock and the paperwork both start at entry. ## How to obtain the declaration Basic scenario: 1. **Within 3 working days** after entering Spain, visit any Comisaría de Policía Nacional or Oficina de Extranjería; 2. Bring your passport, boarding documents (tickets, boarding pass) — to prove the date of entry; 3. Fill out the declaration modelo; 4. Receive a stamp or official certificate. At airports in major cities (Madrid Barajas, Barcelona El Prat), you can make the declaration on-site upon arrival — but not at all terminals and not always; it depends on the current organization of police operations. The declaration runs on an official form annexed to the 2025 regulation. It is free, filed in person, and in many comisarías taken without a prior appointment, though availability varies by city and by day. Bring the original passport and whatever pins down the arrival date — boarding passes, tickets, a travel itinerary. > 💡 What you leave with — a stamped or registered copy of the declaration — is the document that goes into the TIE file. Keep the original; to a caseworker a photocopy is not the same thing. ## What matters for the migration file - the declaration **does not in itself prove** the right to residence — only the date of entry; - keep the original declaration until submitting the TIE application; - for family members, each separate declaration (or a joint family one — depends on the region); - if the declaration is not made on time — there may be administrative fines, plus complications when applying for TIE. The cost of skipping it is asymmetric. The declaration itself is trivial, but its absence tends to surface months later, when a TIE or renewal file is short of a provable entry date and the case stalls or draws an administrative penalty. Spending three days on the formality is cheaper than reconstructing the date after the fact. ## Where the declaration is not needed - if there is a Spanish border stamp in the passport (first country of entry — Spain); - if the applicant is an EU / EEA / Switzerland citizen (different rules apply to them); - if there are other official documents confirming the date of entry (boarding pass with timestamp + customs receipt in some cases). ## From passport stamps to the Entry/Exit System > 🔗 **Related** > [Spain — general tax regime and wealth tax](https://wiki.private.law/en/spain-tax-residency) · [Digital Nomad Visas 2026](https://wiki.private.law/en/digital-nomad-visas) · [Tax residency and the 183-day rule](https://wiki.private.law/en/tax-residency-basics) · [Beckham Law and foreign assets](/en/beckham-law) · [Modelo 149 — applying for the Beckham regi](https://wiki.private.law/en/beckham-law-modelo-149) The evidentiary backdrop is moving. On 12 October 2025 the EU began rolling out its Entry/Exit System, which logs each third-country crossing of an external Schengen border electronically and with biometrics and is meant to retire the ink passport stamp; the ETIAS travel authorisation follows. None of this touches the entry declaration for someone who reaches Spain overland or by air from another Schengen state, because an internal crossing generates no external-border record at all. Through the transition the declaration stays the cleanest proof of a Spanish entry date. > 🧭 Until EES data is fully wired into immigration files, a traveller arriving from inside Schengen still has no electronic Spanish entry to point to. The declaration fills that gap, and it will keep doing so until the systems talk to each other. > 🍓 A small formality with outsized consequences: skip it, and a residence file can stall for want of a single date. Declare within three days of arriving from another Schengen country, keep the original, and the rest of the migration paperwork has firm ground to stand on. *This material is provided for general information and is free to copy. It is not legal advice; deadlines and procedures change, and individual cases differ.* --- ## Factual claims - The duty lives in Spain's immigration regulation. - The declaration runs on an official form annexed to the 2025 regulation.