Moving to the Costa del Sol means navigating a new legal environment, a different language, and — should anything go wrong — an unfamiliar emergency services system. The good news: Spain's system is logical, well-resourced, and more accessible to non-Spanish speakers than most newcomers expect. The main thing you need to know before you unpack a single box is this: 112 is the only number you need to remember.
Three Police Forces, One Emergency Number
Spain operates three separate police forces, each with a distinct jurisdiction and uniform. They look different, they handle different things, and knowing the difference matters — though in a genuine emergency, the distinction is irrelevant because 112 will route your call to whichever service is appropriate.
- Guardia Civil (green uniforms, call 062): Spain's national gendarmerie, founded in 1844 and carrying a semi-military structure. On the Costa del Sol, you'll encounter them on the AP-7 autopista, at coastal border checkpoints, and in inland municipalities like Mijas pueblo and Benahavis where no local force operates. They handle serious rural crime, highway accidents, drug trafficking, environmental protection through their SEPRONA unit, and border security. If you have a road accident on the A-7 or AP-7 outside an urban area, the Guardia Civil's Tráfico unit will likely be first on scene.
- Policía Nacional (blue uniforms with red and gold trim, call 091): The civilian national force that operates in Spain's cities and larger towns. In Málaga province, they are the force you'll deal with for serious crime, immigration matters, and — critically for new residents — issuing NIE numbers and TIE residency cards. Their comisaría in Marbella and the main station in Málaga city are where most expat bureaucracy happens. They also handle counter-terrorism, organised crime, and cybercrime at a national level.
- Policía Local (white and blue vehicles, call 092): Each municipality funds its own local force, accountable to the ayuntamiento (town hall). In Estepona, Marbella, Fuengirola, or Torremolinos, it's the Policía Local you'll see managing traffic, handling noise complaints, enforcing parking regulations, and responding first to minor incidents. In tourist-heavy resort towns, many local officers speak workable English.
112: The One Number That Always Works
The pan-European emergency number 112 is the single most important number for any new resident on the Costa del Sol. It is free to call from any phone — mobile, landline, or even a handset without a SIM card or credit. Operators are available 24 hours a day, 365 days a year, and speak English. When you call, the operator routes you to whichever emergency service — police, ambulance (ambulancia), or fire brigade (bomberos) — is appropriate for your situation.
If you don't speak Spanish, 112 is always the right starting point. The individual force numbers (091, 092, 062) are useful if you speak Spanish and know exactly which service you need; otherwise, don't overthink it — call 112 and let the dispatcher handle the routing.
When the operator answers, you'll be asked a short sequence of questions: what happened, where you are, how many people are involved, and whether anyone is in immediate danger. If you don't know the address, describe the nearest landmark or road junction. On the Costa del Sol's coastal strip, a kilometre marker on the N-340 or the name of a nearby urbanisation is usually sufficient for rapid dispatch.
There is also a dedicated medical emergency line, 061, but for non-Spanish speakers, 112 remains the cleaner option as it handles the same dispatch with English-language support.
How to Report a Crime: The Denuncia
This is where newcomers frequently get confused. Calling 112 is for emergencies. But if you've been the victim of a crime — a car break-in, a bag theft at the beach, a burglary at your apartment — and the incident is not actively in progress, you need to file a denuncia: a formal police report that initiates the legal record of the crime and, critically for property owners, is required by insurers before any claim can be processed.
There are three ways to file a denuncia:
- In person at a comisaría: Police stations are open 24 hours, seven days a week. For violent crimes, sexual offences, crimes where you know the perpetrator, or cases involving minors, an in-person report is mandatory — online or phone options do not apply. Bring your passport or TIE card, a list of stolen items with approximate values, any receipts or photos you have, and the crime reference number if police previously attended the scene. If your Spanish is limited, bring a bilingual friend — many Málaga province stations have English-speaking officers, particularly in tourist areas, but it is not guaranteed.
- Online via denuncias.policia.es: The Policía Nacional's online portal handles non-violent crimes — lost or stolen documents, vehicle theft, items stolen from a car, and residential burglaries where the perpetrator is unknown. You submit the details online, receive a reference number, and are then required to visit your nearest station within 48 hours to sign the report in person and make it official. If you do not complete that step, the report has no legal standing — a detail that trips up many expats filing insurance claims.
- By phone at 902 102 112: The Servicio de Atención al Turista Extranjero (SATE) operates this English-language tourist crime reporting line between 9am and 9pm daily. SATE was designed specifically for foreign visitors and residents — the Málaga office (also reachable at +34 951 926 161) can help you navigate filing your denuncia and can assist with cancelling bank cards, contacting your embassy or consulate, and locating family members.
If you're a property owner and your home is burgled, the denuncia is not optional for your insurer — it is a prerequisite. File it promptly, get the signed copy, and forward it to your insurance provider. This applies equally whether you're in a resale apartment in Fuengirola or a new-build villa in Estepona that you're renting out while waiting to relocate.
As we detail in our piece on petty theft on the Costa del Sol, the most common crimes affecting residents and visitors here are opportunistic — bag snatches, car break-ins, phone theft — rather than anything more serious. For these, the online denuncia portal is adequate and avoids a lengthy station visit.
The AlertCops App: Useful, But Not a Replacement for 112
AlertCops is the official Spanish Ministry of the Interior app, free on iOS and Android, and worth downloading before you need it. It provides a direct chat channel to the Policía Nacional and Guardia Civil, an SOS button that transmits your location and a 10-second audio recording to emergency services, and the ability to attach photos and videos as evidence. The app operates in English, French, German, Spanish, Russian, Italian, and Basque, and includes simultaneous translation in over 100 languages — genuinely useful when nerves and a language barrier collide. It is particularly valuable for situations where you cannot safely make a voice call.
That said, AlertCops supplements 112 — it does not replace it. For life-threatening emergencies, call 112. Use AlertCops for reporting non-urgent incidents, flagging suspicious activity, or situations where you need to alert police without making an audible call.
What to Carry: The Document Question
All three Spanish police forces are legally entitled to request identification at any time — at roadside checkpoints, in transport hubs, or during any security operation. As a resident, you are required to carry your TIE (Tarjeta de Identidad de Extranjero) or, while your residency is being processed, a copy of your NIE certificate and passport. If your residency document is lost or stolen, filing a denuncia at a Policía Nacional station is a prerequisite before you can request a replacement — another reason to know the process before you need it.
If you're still in the early stages of your relocation — navigating the NIE appointment, the Padrón registration, the bank account — understanding which police force handles immigration paperwork (Policía Nacional, not Guardia Civil or Policía Local) will save you a wasted journey. It's one of the administrative realities of Spanish life that our broader coverage of the safety landscape on the Costa del Sol puts into perspective: the bureaucracy can be slow, but the underlying environment is genuinely secure.
Key Numbers at a Glance
- 112 — All emergencies (police, ambulance, fire). English-speaking operators. Free from any phone, 24/7.
- 091 — Policía Nacional direct line (Spanish preferred)
- 092 — Policía Local direct line (Spanish preferred)
- 062 — Guardia Civil direct line (Spanish preferred)
- 061 — Medical emergencies (Spanish preferred; 112 covers same)
- 902 102 112 — SATE tourist crime reporting line, English available, 9am–9pm
- +34 951 926 161 — SATE Málaga direct line
- 016 — Gender violence helpline, available in 53 languages including English
- AlertCops app — Free, multilingual, direct police chat and SOS
One final, honest note: Spain's emergency response on the Costa del Sol is competent and well-practised in handling non-Spanish-speaking callers. What it is not is instantaneous in all circumstances — rural areas, peak summer weekends, and major accident scenarios can mean longer response windows than residents from Toronto or Geneva might expect. The system works. Understanding how to use it correctly — which number, which force, when to file in person — means that if you ever do need it, you won't be learning the process under pressure. Save the numbers. Download the app. File the denuncia if you need one. Then get back to the reason you moved here in the first place.
For a broader picture of everyday safety across the coast, including what the crime data actually shows versus what first-time visitors assume, see our piece on road safety on the Costa del Sol — because statistically, the AP-7 is a more relevant concern for most new residents than anything that would require a call to 091.