American residents in Spain can sponsor their spouse, children, and parents through the reagrupación familiar procedure once they hold valid residencia for at least one year. The process demands IPREM-based income proof, an approved housing report, apostilled US documents, and FBI background checks for adult dependents. Our team of bar-registered solicitors, legal specialists, and immigration specialists manages the full application from document preparation through to the family TIE card.
Family reunification in Spain for US citizens is governed by the same national-regime immigration framework that applies to all non-EU residents. Unlike EU citizens who can bring family members under the freedom-of-movement regime with minimal documentation, American residents must navigate the full reagrupación familiar procedure administered through the Oficina de Extranjería in their province of residence. This is one of the most document-intensive applications in Spanish immigration law, and the requirements are enforced strictly. The sponsoring US citizen must demonstrate lawful residence, financial sufficiency, adequate housing, and a genuine family relationship — each element verified through a separate documentary chain that intersects both Spanish bureaucracy and US federal and state authentication systems.
The starting position is clear: you must have held your own valid Spanish residence permit (tarjeta de identidad de extranjero, or TIE) for at least one year before you are eligible to sponsor family members. This one-year rule applies regardless of whether you hold a digital nomad visa, a non-lucrative visa, a work permit, or an investor visa. The clock runs from the date your initial TIE was issued, not from the date you entered Spain or the date your visa was granted at the consulate. Once that year has passed and your permit has been renewed or is in renewal, you become eligible to file the reagrupación application as the sponsoring family member.
For American families, the process carries several US-specific layers that do not apply to sponsors from countries with simpler documentation systems. US vital records — birth certificates, marriage certificates, divorce decrees — must be apostilled under the Hague Convention through the relevant Secretary of State office in the issuing US state, then sworn-translated into Spanish. Adult dependents aged 16 and over require FBI Identity History Summary checks (commonly called FBI background checks), which must themselves be apostilled by the US Department of State in Washington, DC. And the IRS dimension — often overlooked — can create ongoing US tax filing obligations for sponsored family members who are themselves US citizens or green card holders. This page sets out every element of the process, from eligibility through to the final TIE card for your family member, with the US-specific requirements highlighted at each stage. If you are an American resident in Spain ready to bring your family over, open a file with us and we will have your eligibility assessment completed within days.
Six core requirements that every US citizen sponsor must satisfy before the Oficina de Extranjería will approve a reagrupación familiar application.
You must have held a valid TIE card for at least 12 months at the date of application. Any permit type qualifies — work, non-lucrative, digital nomad, investor, or student converted to work. The permit must be current or in active renewal.
Core eligibility thresholdMonthly income must meet 150% IPREM for a spouse, plus 50% IPREM for each additional family member. For 2026, this translates to approximately €900/month for a spouse and €300/month per additional dependent, verified through payslips, tax returns, or bank statements.
Income proof is criticalYour local town hall or autonomous community issues a report confirming your accommodation is adequate for the family size. A municipal inspector physically visits the property. The informe must be current — most provinces require it dated within three months of the application.
Municipal inspection requiredEvery adult dependent (16+) must obtain an FBI background check, apostilled by the US Department of State. Processing time for the FBI check alone is 12–18 weeks. This is typically the longest single bottleneck in the US-specific document chain.
Start this earlyMarriage certificates, birth certificates, and any divorce decrees must be apostilled by the Secretary of State in the US state that issued the document, then sworn-translated into Spanish by a certified translator registered in Spain.
Hague Convention apostilleEach sponsored family member requires health insurance coverage valid in Spain with no co-pays, no waiting periods, and no exclusions for pre-existing conditions. Our insurance partner at spanish-healthinsurance.com provides Sanitas policies that meet all consular and immigration requirements.
Sanitas via our partnerThe reagrupación familiar framework is codified in Articles 16–19 of the Ley Orgánica 4/2000 (Spain's primary immigration law) and its implementing regulation, Royal Decree 557/2011. For US citizens, the route is identical to any non-EU sponsor: you are sponsoring your family members to join you in Spain as dependents of your existing residence permit. The application is filed by you (the sponsor) at the Oficina de Extranjería in your province, not by the family member from abroad. Once approved, the family member receives an authorisation that they present at the Spanish consulate in the United States to obtain their entry visa. After arriving in Spain, they attend a fingerprinting appointment to receive their own TIE card as a family member of a resident.
The eligible family members under the national regime are: your legally married spouse (or registered pareja de hecho in some communities), your children under 18 (or under 21 if economically dependent on you), and your parents if they are over 65 or can demonstrate dependency. Step-children qualify if you hold legal guardianship. Siblings, cousins, and adult children over 21 who are not economically dependent fall outside the scope of the family reunification procedure. For unmarried partners who are not registered as pareja de hecho, the process is not available — you would need to marry first or register the partnership in a community that permits it before filing.
The income requirement is pegged to the IPREM (Indicador Público de Renta de Efectos Múltiples), an annual reference figure set by the Spanish government. For 2026, the monthly IPREM is approximately €600. The standard formula requires:
Income can be demonstrated through Spanish payslips (nóminas), your annual IRPF tax return (Modelo 100), a trabajo por cuenta propia certificate for self-employed income, or bank statements showing regular deposits. For US citizens on a digital nomad visa, remote employment income from a US employer is accepted provided it is documented through pay stubs and a letter from the employer confirming the ongoing employment relationship. Savings alone are generally insufficient unless they are accompanied by regular income — the Oficina de Extranjería wants to see recurrent monthly revenue, not a lump-sum balance.
The housing report is one of the most practically challenging requirements for American sponsors. You must request the informe de adecuación de vivienda from your local town hall (ayuntamiento) or, in some autonomous communities, from the regional housing authority. A municipal inspector visits your property and verifies that it meets minimum habitability standards for the stated number of occupants: adequate square footage per person, proper ventilation, a functioning bathroom and kitchen, heating or cooling as required by the region, and no structural deficiencies. The report must confirm that the property is suitable for the sponsor plus all family members being reunified.
Processing times for the informe vary dramatically by municipality. In Madrid and Barcelona, expect 6–12 weeks. In smaller Andalusian towns, it can sometimes be issued in 2–4 weeks. Rental properties require a valid rental contract (contrato de alquiler) registered with the tax office. If you own the property, you need a nota simple from the Land Registry. The informe typically expires after three months, so timing the request relative to the rest of the document preparation is important — request it too early and it may expire before you are ready to file; request it too late and the processing delay pushes your entire timeline out.
The United States ratified the Hague Apostille Convention in 1981, and Spain is a fellow member state. This means US-issued documents can be authenticated for Spanish use through apostille rather than the older, slower consular legalisation chain. However, the US apostille system is decentralised in a way that catches many Americans off guard: the apostille authority depends on which entity issued the original document.
After apostille, every document must be sworn-translated into Spanish by a traductor jurado registered with the Spanish Ministry of Foreign Affairs. We coordinate sworn translations for all family reunification files. Our cap for sworn translations is €200 per document.
Any sponsored family member aged 16 or over must provide a criminal background check from every country where they have resided for more than six months during the past five years. For US-resident dependents, this means an FBI Identity History Summary (also called an FBI criminal background check or Identity History Summary Check). The process involves submitting fingerprints to the FBI's Criminal Justice Information Services (CJIS) division, either electronically through an approved channeler or by mailing a completed FD-258 fingerprint card.
Current FBI processing times run 12–18 weeks for mailed submissions and 4–8 weeks through approved electronic channelers. The resulting FBI report must then be apostilled by the US Department of State (another 6–10 weeks by mail) and sworn-translated into Spanish. The total timeline from fingerprinting to translated, apostilled FBI check is typically 4–6 months. This is almost always the longest single bottleneck in the US-specific family reunification chain, and we advise clients to initiate the FBI check as the very first step in the process — ideally before even starting the housing report request.
If your marriage was performed in the United States, the marriage certificate must be apostilled and sworn-translated as described above. However, there are several additional considerations for US marriages in the Spanish reunification context. Religious marriage certificates issued by a church or officiant may not be accepted; the Oficina de Extranjería typically requires the civil marriage certificate issued by the county clerk's office. If you were married in a US state that issues both a religious and a civil certificate, ensure you obtain the civil version.
For marriages performed outside both the US and Spain, the certificate from the country of marriage must be apostilled or legalised according to that country's procedures. Proxy marriages and common-law marriages recognised in certain US states may face additional scrutiny. If your marriage certificate is in a language other than English or Spanish, it may require two sworn translations (into English and then into Spanish, or directly into Spanish if a qualified translator is available). We review every marriage certificate before submission to ensure it meets the Oficina de Extranjería's format requirements.
We audit your eligibility, confirm IPREM calculations, and provide a checklist of every US document required. FBI checks and apostilles are initiated immediately. Sworn translations coordinated through our registered translators.
We request the informe de vivienda from your municipality. Once all documents are assembled, we file the reagrupación familiar application at the Oficina de Extranjería on your behalf under power of attorney.
After the Oficina approves the reunification, your family member attends the Spanish consulate in the US to obtain the entry visa. We provide the consulate appointment guidance and document package for the visa interview.
Within 30 days of arrival in Spain, the family member attends a fingerprinting appointment (toma de huellas) at the police station. TIE card issued within 4–6 weeks. We handle the appointment booking and attend with your family member.
Spousal reunification is the most common form of family reunification for American residents in Spain. The sponsored spouse receives a residence and work authorisation tied to the sponsor's permit, meaning the spouse can work in Spain from day one of receiving their TIE card. The initial permit mirrors the duration of the sponsor's own permit — if you hold a two-year renewal, the spouse's permit is also valid for two years. The spouse's permit is renewed in line with yours and eventually leads to permanent residency (larga duración) after five years of continuous legal residence.
For US citizen sponsors who hold a digital nomad visa, the spousal reunification is typically filed simultaneously with the DNV application or as a modification once the sponsor's TIE has been held for one year. If both spouses are US citizens with independent income sources, each may consider applying for their own individual visa rather than using the reunification route, which may provide more flexibility in terms of work authorisation and permit independence. We assess both options during the initial consultation and recommend the structure that best fits the family's circumstances.
Children under 18 are straightforward to reunify. You must demonstrate legal custody (or joint custody with the other parent's notarised consent). The child's US birth certificate, apostilled and sworn-translated, establishes the parent-child relationship. If the child was born outside the US, the birth certificate from the country of birth follows that country's authentication procedures. Children aged 16 and 17 require their own FBI background check if they have lived in the US for six months or more during the past five years.
Children aged 18–20 can be reunified if they are economically dependent on the sponsor. Proof of dependency typically includes evidence that the child lives with the sponsor, is enrolled in education, and does not have independent income. Adult children aged 21 and over are generally outside the scope of the family reunification procedure unless they can demonstrate a disability or other exceptional dependency. For adult children who wish to move to Spain independently, the US digital nomad visa or non-lucrative visa routes are usually more appropriate than attempting reunification.
Ascendant reunification — bringing parents to Spain — carries stricter eligibility criteria than spousal or child reunification. The sponsor must hold long-term residence status (residencia de larga duración), which is typically granted after five continuous years of legal residence. Additionally, the parent must demonstrate that there are justified reasons for the reunification, such as advanced age, health conditions, or economic dependency on the sponsor. The Oficina de Extranjería applies these criteria more restrictively than for spouses and children, and rejections at first instance are not uncommon.
For parents who are themselves US citizens, the IRS implications of moving to Spain are significant. US citizens are taxed on worldwide income regardless of where they live, and establishing Spanish tax residency triggers dual filing obligations with both the IRS and the Agencia Tributaria. The FATCA reporting requirements (Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act) apply to any financial accounts held in Spain, and parents may also need to file FBARs (FinCEN Form 114) for any Spanish bank accounts exceeding the aggregate threshold. We do not provide tax advice, but we coordinate with US-qualified CPAs and enrolled agents who specialise in expatriate tax compliance to ensure the family is aware of these obligations before the parent arrives in Spain.
The intersection of US tax law and Spanish family reunification is one of the most commonly overlooked aspects of the process for American families. The critical distinction is whether the sponsored family member is a US citizen, a US permanent resident (green card holder), or a non-US person.
We strongly recommend that every US citizen family engaging in the reunification process consult with a US expatriate tax specialist before the sponsored family member establishes Spanish residency. The timing of the move, the structure of the tax return, and the election of specific IRS provisions can have material long-term consequences.
The United States and Spain have a bilateral Social Security agreement (Totalization Agreement) that prevents dual Social Security taxation and allows workers to combine credits earned in both countries to qualify for benefits. For US citizens who have been contributing to Social Security in the US and are now working in Spain, the agreement determines which country's Social Security system covers you based on the expected duration of your assignment and the nature of your employment.
Sponsored family members who work in Spain after receiving their TIE will contribute to the Spanish Social Security system (Seguridad Social). These contributions count toward Spanish pension entitlements and, under the Totalization Agreement, can be combined with US Social Security credits for pension eligibility purposes. The practical effect is that a sponsored spouse who works in Spain for several years builds pension credits in both systems. We recommend obtaining a US Social Security Statement (available online through my.ssa.gov) before relocating to establish a baseline of US credits, and consulting with a qualified advisor about how the Totalization Agreement applies to your family's specific situation.
Health insurance is a mandatory requirement for the reagrupación familiar application. Each sponsored family member must have health insurance that provides full coverage in Spain without co-pays, waiting periods, or exclusions for pre-existing conditions. Public health coverage through the Spanish national system is not available to newly arrived family members until they are registered with the Seguridad Social through employment or through the convenio especial voluntary contribution scheme.
For the initial period, private health insurance is required. Our insurance partner provides Sanitas policies (Sanitas is part of the Bupa group) through spanish-healthinsurance.com that are specifically designed to meet the immigration requirements for family reunification applications. These policies are accepted by every Oficina de Extranjería in Spain and by Spanish consulates in the United States. For additional coverage options, our partner at 247expatinsurance.com offers comprehensive expat health insurance plans that complement or replace the initial policy once the family is settled.
The total timeline for family reunification as a US citizen sponsor is typically 3 to 6 months from the date all documents are ready to the date the family member receives their TIE card in Spain. However, the document preparation phase — particularly the FBI background check and apostille chain — can add 4–6 months to the front end. The realistic total timeline from initial engagement to family TIE card is therefore 6–12 months for most US families.
We track every deadline and milestone throughout the process. Delays are most commonly caused by slow FBI processing, municipal housing report backlogs, or the consulate appointment availability in the family member's US city. We cannot accelerate FBI processing times, but we can ensure that every other element of the application is ready the moment the FBI check arrives.
Beyond the standard challenges that apply to all non-EU sponsors, US citizen applicants face several complications that are unique to the American context:
From FBI checks to the final TIE card, our team of bar-registered solicitors, legal specialists, and immigration specialists manages every stage of the US family reunification process.
Book a ConsultationFamily reunification is procedurally demanding. These are the reasons American clients consistently cite for working with us rather than attempting the process independently.
We handle family reunification files from every US state. We know which Secretary of State offices process apostilles electronically, which require mail submissions, and how to coordinate multi-state document chains efficiently.
We guide you through the FBI Identity History Summary process from day one, including channeler selection, fingerprint submission, and the federal apostille at the Department of State. We build the timeline around this bottleneck.
We file the reagrupación familiar application on your behalf under power of attorney. You do not need to attend the Oficina de Extranjería in person. We manage all communications, requerimientos, and follow-ups directly.
We prepare the exact document package required by the Spanish consulate in the family member's US city, including consulate-specific requirements that vary between New York, Miami, Los Angeles, Houston, Chicago, and San Francisco.
While we do not provide US tax advice, we flag every IRS implication of the reunification process and coordinate with US expatriate tax professionals to ensure your family's compliance position is clear before the move.
We book the fingerprinting appointment, attend with your family member at the police station, and track the TIE card through to collection. The file is not closed until every family member holds their card.
The FBI Identity History Summary takes 12–18 weeks by mail, plus 6–10 weeks for the federal apostille. Families who wait until other documents are ready lose 4–6 months. Start the FBI check on day one.
A birth certificate issued in Ohio must be apostilled by the Ohio Secretary of State, not the state where you currently live. Each document must be apostilled by the issuing state. Wrong-state apostilles are rejected and the process restarts.
Many US marriages produce both a religious certificate and a civil certificate. Spanish authorities require the civil marriage certificate issued by the county clerk. Religious certificates alone are routinely rejected at the Oficina de Extranjería.
The informe de vivienda expires after three months in most provinces. If you request it before the rest of your documents are ready, it may expire before you can file. Time the housing report to arrive 4–6 weeks before your target filing date.
US citizens are taxed on worldwide income regardless of where they live. A US-citizen spouse who moves to Spain must continue filing with the IRS. Failure to file can result in penalties that compound over years and complicate future US passport renewals.
The Oficina de Extranjería authorisation is valid for approximately two months. The family member must attend the Spanish consulate in the US within that window. If the consulate appointment backlog exceeds the window, the authorisation expires and must be re-requested.
US remote workers on the Spanish DNV who have completed their first year of residence and are now eligible to sponsor their spouse through reagrupación familiar.
Retired or financially independent Americans on the NLV who want to bring minor children to join them in Spain. IPREM thresholds typically already met through savings income.
US citizens employed by a Spanish company on a standard work permit, now eligible to bring their spouse and children after one year of residence.
High-net-worth Americans with complex multi-state document chains — born in one state, married in another, divorced in a third. Multi-state apostille coordination is our standard workflow.
US citizens with permanent residency (larga duración) who are eligible to sponsor parents over 65 or parents who are economically dependent. Ascendant reunification requires careful evidence preparation.
Families with US, Latin American, or other nationalities where some documents originate from countries outside the Hague Apostille Convention and require full consular legalisation instead.
Reagrupación familiar for US citizens — from FBI checks and apostilles through to the family TIE card. Bar-registered solicitors, legal specialists, and immigration specialists at every stage.