Residency
What Is a Lote Number? How to Track Your TIE Card with Real Data
Your lote number is your position in the TIE card queue. Learn how to check it, what the formats mean, and why some offices are 10x faster — with live data.
Official sources
Risk notes
- Processing speeds are based on SCLT tracking data, not official government estimates.
- Office speeds can change without notice. Check live data before making decisions.
What Is a Lote Number? How to Track Your TIE Card with Real Data
You’ve been fingerprinted. You have a receipt. Somewhere on it there’s a number labeled “lote” and nobody at the police station explained what it means.
That number is the single most useful piece of information for answering the question on every immigrant’s mind: how long until my card is ready?
If you haven’t been through the fingerprinting stage yet, start with What Is TIE? for the full picture of the residence card process.
Your Lote Number = Your Position in the Queue
At the end of your fingerprinting appointment (toma de huellas), you receive a receipt (resguardo). The lote number on it is your individual position in the card manufacturing and delivery queue for your specific police station.
Your TIE card is manufactured at a central facility and shipped in batches to the police station where you were fingerprinted. The lote number tells you which batch yours belongs to.
Each applicant gets their own lote number. Family members fingerprinted at the same office on the same day will have different numbers — we’ve verified cases with lotes 350, 362, 363, and 385 from one family.
How to Check Whether Your Card Has Arrived
The Spanish immigration system publishes which lote has most recently been received at each office. Here’s how to check:
Step 1. Go to the ICP appointment website: sede.administracionespublicas.gob.es
Step 2. Select your province, then select the specific office where you were fingerprinted.
Step 3. The page displays:
“EL ÚLTIMO LOTE RECIBIDO EN LA OFICINA SELECCIONADA ES EL [number]” “The last lote received at the selected office is [number]”
Step 4. Compare: published lote ≥ your lote → your card is there. Time to pick it up.
Or skip the manual checking entirely — SCLT’s live tracker monitors this for you daily, across every office in Spain.
Lote Format Varies by Region
Not all offices display lote numbers the same way. Don’t panic if yours looks different from what you expected:
| Format | Example | Where you’ll see it |
|---|---|---|
| Bare number | 125 | Most provinces |
| Year/number | 2026/289 | Valencia and some Mediterranean offices |
| Number/year | 17/2026 | Girona-style format |
The number itself is what matters. Whether it says 289 or 2026/289, the comparison logic is the same: when the office’s published number reaches yours, your card is ready.
Why Some People Wait 2 Weeks and Others Wait 3 Months
The general guidance — “30 to 45 days after fingerprinting” — is technically true on average and practically useless as advice. The actual wait depends almost entirely on which office processes your card.
We’ve been tracking lote progression at over 100 police stations across Spain, collecting 1,866 data snapshots over 41 days. Here’s what the data shows.
Processing speed varies 10x between offices
| Tier | Speed | Real wait time |
|---|---|---|
| Fast | ≥15 lotes/week | ~2-3 weeks |
| Medium | 8–15/week | ~4-6 weeks |
| Slow | 3–8/week | 2+ months |
| Very slow | <3/week | 3+ months |
| Stagnant | 0 movement for 40+ days | Unknown |
This variation exists within the same city. In Madrid, one office processes ~18 lotes per week while another (Getafe) went completely stagnant for over 40 days. In Barcelona, Rambla Guipúscoa runs at ~14/week while Terrassa flatlined for 40+ days.
Valencia residents are lucky: both Patraix and Marítimo process at roughly 18-20 per week — among the fastest in Spain.
This is exactly why choosing your office before booking your fingerprint appointment is one of the most impactful decisions in the entire TIE process.
Five processing patterns
Offices don’t just differ in speed — they differ in behavior:
Steady batch — Consistent weekly advancement. Predictable, plan-friendly. Best case scenario.
Small-step-fast — Frequent small increments that add up quickly. Good throughput, slightly less predictable day-to-day.
Irregular burst — Silence for 2-3 weeks, then a sudden jump of +50 lotes. Your card might arrive all at once after weeks of nothing. Nerve-wracking, but the total wait may not be longer.
One-by-one — Advancing a single lote at a time. Slow but at least moving.
Large-irregular — Unpredictable jumps with long gaps. The hardest pattern to plan around.
Summer slowdown is real
Our 41-day tracking window (May–July 2026) revealed a clear national trend: processing speeds peaked in June and began decelerating into July. If you’re getting fingerprinted in early summer, expect some slowdown as the system digests the seasonal workload.
How to Estimate Your Wait
A rough formula:
(Your lote − current published lote) ÷ office weekly speed = estimated weeks
Example: Your lote is 280. The office currently shows lote 220. The office processes about 15 lotes per week.
→ (280 − 220) ÷ 15 = 4 weeks
When the formula doesn’t work
- Burst-pattern offices: Use a range. “Between 2 and 6 weeks” is more honest than a point estimate.
- Stagnant offices: The formula gives ∞. Check whether the office has a history of resuming — some do, some have been silent for months.
- New year transitions: Some offices may reset lote numbering in January. If your lote is
5and the office shows980, you might actually be ahead, not behind.
Track It Without Checking Every Day
We built SCLT’s TIE lote tracker because this data didn’t exist anywhere — not on the government website, not on any expat forum, not in any lawyer’s office.
What we track:
- Real-time lote status for 100+ offices across Spain
- Weekly processing speed per office
- Processing pattern classification (steady, burst, stagnant…)
- Province breakdowns: Madrid · Barcelona · Valencia · and every other province
The data behind this guide — 1,866 snapshots, 100+ offices, 41 days of continuous tracking — feeds directly into the live tracker. Your lote number is more than a number on a receipt. It’s your position in a queue that can now be tracked, measured, and compared.
This article is part of SCLT’s TIE knowledge base — built from 118 immigration law articles, 3,205 real user questions, and 1,866 office tracking data points. Track your lote live →
Related: What Is TIE? · Choose Your Office Wisely · Card Pickup Guide
This guide summarizes publicly available information and community experience. It does not constitute legal or immigration advice.
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