1. VisaHQ.com
  2. /
  3. Global Mobility News
  4. /
  5. Spain
  6. /
  7. Moroccan Consulates in Spain Overwhelmed as Residents Rush to Secure Papers for Regularization

Moroccan Consulates in Spain Overwhelmed as Residents Rush to Secure Papers for Regularization

Apr 16, 2026
·
Moroccan Consulates in Spain Overwhelmed as Residents Rush to Secure Papers for Regularization
The ripple effects of Spain’s new amnesty are spilling over to consular posts. Morocco’s embassy confirmed on 15 April that its consulates in Valencia, Barcelona and Algeciras have seen demand for the "fiche anthropométrique"—a police-clearance certificate required under Spain’s decree—soar by more than 300 % since late January. Valencia’s post is now processing nearly 800 certificates a day and has extended opening hours to 18:00 on weekdays and weekends.

Moroccan Consulates in Spain Overwhelmed as Residents Rush to Secure Papers for Regularization


Applicants exploring ways to smooth out these procedural hurdles might consider engaging VisaHQ, which specializes in Spain-related visa and document processing. Its digital platform (https://www.visahq.com/spain/) provides step-by-step support for obtaining police certificates, scheduling consular appointments and checking document readiness—services that can save precious time and help ensure regularization files are submitted complete and on schedule.

Consular officials cite staffing, security and IT constraints. Unlike Spain’s fully online application portal, Morocco still requires applicants to appear in person to submit fingerprints, pay the €10 fee and collect documents three days later. Long queues along Calle Serranos in Valencia have prompted local police to erect temporary barriers and advise neighbouring businesses to adjust delivery schedules. For Moroccan nationals—Spain’s second-largest non-EU community at 900,000 people—the certificate is often the last missing piece for a successful regularization file. Immigration lawyers warn that without it, applications will be deemed incomplete and placed on hold. Some are redirecting clients to smaller consulates such as Murcia, but appointment slots there are now booked out until late May. Spanish employers who sponsor work contracts for newly regularised Moroccans should therefore anticipate delays of two to three weeks while background checks are obtained. The Foreign Ministry in Rabat is reportedly considering a pilot e-certificate that could be transmitted directly to Spanish authorities, but no timeline has been announced. The situation underscores a broader challenge: Spain’s unilateral immigration reforms depend on foreign governments’ administrative capacity to supply documents. Similar pressure is expected at consulates of Colombia, Venezuela and Senegal in the coming weeks, suggesting that the logistical bottlenecks of regularization extend far beyond Spain’s own borders.

Spaniard Visas & Immigration Team @ VisaHQ

VisaHQ's expert visas and immigration team helps individuals and companies navigate global travel, work, and residency requirements. We handle document preparation, application filings, government agencies coordination, every aspect necessary to ensure fast, compliant, and stress-free approvals.

×