The General Directorate of Police (DGP) of Spain is the governing body of the
Ministry of the Interior, attached to the
Secretary of State for Security, which is responsible for exercising direct command of the National Police Corps, as well as the organization, direction, coordination and execution of the missions entrusted to the National Police by current provisions, in accordance with the guidelines and orders issued by the Minister of the Interior. In general, the National Police is divided into different areas of action for the exercise of its functions, both at the central level (for all of
Spain) and at the territorial level, replicating this division of powers in all territorial dependencies, adapting each one to the corresponding scale. These are called
operational police functions. All different forms of organization, whether at the central or territorial level, follow this division of operational police functions, being divided into these 5 areas: • '
Public Safety (Seguridad Ciudadana
)' – general law enforcement and public security functions, specially with patrol cars and with special units (K-9 unit, riot control unit, etc). • '
Judiciary or Criminal Investigation Police (Policía Judicial
)' – crime investigation and judicial cooperation. • '
Scientific or ForensicPolice (Policía Científica
)' – crime scenes units and preparation of expert reports for the judicial authority. • '
Intelligence or Information (Información
)' – intelligence and anti-terrorism and radicalization unit, having always under his direction: •
TEDAX-NRBQ () – Explosive Ordinance Disposal (EOD) and CRBN (Chemical, Radiological, Biological, and Nuclear) specialised team. •
Immigration and '
Borders (Extranjería y Fronteras
)' – Control of foreigners and entry and exit from Spain, as well as issuance of documentation.
Central Structure The
National Police Corps depends on the General Directorate of Police (DGP) of Spain and is composed at the
central level of: • The
Deputy Directorate of Operations (DAO), responsible for collaborating with the Director General in managing public order and citizen security functions, and for the direction, coordination, and supervision of central, supraterritorial, and territorial units; for monitoring and controlling the results of operational programs; for defining the human and material resources applicable to these programs; and for strategic planning regarding digital transformation. The DAO is also responsible for the operational police functions at a central level, being these: • The
General Commissariat of Information • The
General Commissariat of Judiciary Police • The
General Commissariat of Public Safety • The
General Commissariat of Immigration and Borders • The
General Commissariat of Forensic Police. • The DAO also has under his orders the following units: • The
Operations and Digital Transformation Division. • The
Strategic Planning and Coordination Unit. • The
Special Operations Group (GEO) • The
Internal Affairs Unit. • The
Operational Support Brigade. • The
Subdirectorate General of Human Resources and Training, responsible for collaborating with the Director General in the direction and coordination of the management of DGP personnel, as well as their selection and training. It is divide into: • The General Secretariat. • The
Human Resources Planning Unit. • The
Occupational Risk Prevention and Social and Health Protection Unit. • The
Personnel Division. • The
Training and Development Division. • The
Subdirectorate General of Logistics and Innovation, responsible for collaborating with the Director General in the direction, coordination, administration, and management of financial and material resources, as well as documentation on Spanish and foreign nationals, and police archives. It is divided into: • The General Secretariat. • The
Information Technology and Telecommunications Unit. • The
Economic and Technical Division. • The
Documentation Division. • The
International Cooperation Division, which is responsible for managing the Interpol National Central Bureau, the Europol National Unit, and the SIRENE Office, directing collaboration and assistance with police forces in other countries, and coordinating working groups in which the Directorate General of Police participates within the European Union and other international institutions, as well as aspects related to support missions to third countries and police personnel serving abroad. It is organised: • The General Secretariat. • The
International Coordination Unit. • The
Interpol National Central Bureau. • The
Europol National Unit. • The
SIRENE Office. • The
Technical Office, which is responsible for providing support and assistance to the Director General.
Territorial Structure The territorial organization, hierarchically divided, will consist of: •
Regional Police Headquarters (
Jefatura Superior de Policía), there is one in each
autonomous community and in
Ceuta and
Melilla, except in
Andalucía, that is divided into 2 of these. They are based in the capital of the autonomous community but not always. •
Provincial Police Headquarters (
Comisaría Provincial), there is one in each
spanish province, based in the provincial capital always. •
Local Police Stations (
Comisaría local), existing only in those cities that are not the provincial capital and the Ministry of the Interior determines, generally being large urban areas but also in some smaller areas that, in principle, would correspond to the
Guardia Civil. •
Zonal Police Headquarters (Comisaría Zonal), there are only few of these in large urban areas that are divided into districts, being responsible for their district o precinct police stations. •
District or Precinct Police Stations (Comisarías de Distrito), they exist only in the largest cities that, due to needs, are divided into smaller areas to respond, like in
Madrid. If there is a local police station, it is normally never divided into zonal or district police stations as they are smaller in size than the provincial ones, that are those that are divide into zonal and district police stations. Apart from the territorial organization mentioned above, there are other different territorial units created only for specific functions: •
Police and Customs Cooperation Centers (
Centros de Cooperación Policial y Aduanera), created by Spain on its borders, with Portugal and France, for the exchange of information and support of cross-border police and customs operations. These centers are a tool for preventing and suppressing crimes, improving police cooperation, and facilitating border control within the framework of the European Union. •
Police Cooperation Centers (
Centros de Cooperación Policial), created by Spain with Morocco for the same functions as the Police and Customs Cooperation Centers but without customs cooperation. •
Border Posts (Puestos fronterizos), they exist in specific places on spanish borders to control entrance/exit from Spanish territory.They are normal border posts, different from the ones above. •
Immigration Units (
Unidades de Extranjería), they exist for carrying out administrative procedures for foreigners. •
Documentation Units (
Unidades de Documentación), they exist for carrying out issuance and obtaining of national ID and passport, only for Spaniards. == Special units ==