To be listed in the Swedish Population Register, you must be living in Sweden and plan to stay here for at least one year. You need to notify us of your move to Sweden, and must visit a Swedish state service centre in person.
The Swedish Tax Agency decides whether or not an individual meets our population registration requirements. Being listed in the Swedish Population Register means you are registered as resident in Sweden. We register personal data such as your name, address, date of birth and civil status. When you are first listed in the Swedish Population Register, you will also be assigned a personal identity number.
Use our Moving to Sweden ("Flytta till Sverige") e-service, which makes it quick and easy to complete your notification. This e-service is available in English, Arabic and Swedish. You can also ask for help with using the e-service at a service centre.
You and your family members who are moving with you must visit a Swedish state service centre. in person for an identity check when you have arrived in Sweden.
You have to book an appointment for an identity check at selected service centres. You can also submit your notification if you did not submit it directly in the e-service.
When you submit your notification, you must also provide:
You do this by showing valid ID such as a passport or national identity card. If you are a citizen of an EU or EEA country, you can show your passport or national identity card.
You need to provide:
Make sure your name is on your door or on the post box in the entrance. This applies regardless of your living circumstances. The Swedish Tax Agency cannot register “care of” (“c/o”) addresses.
If you are staying in temporary accommodation such as a hotel or hostel, please give the address when you notify us of your move to Sweden. If you move to another residential property before you are listed in the Swedish Population Register and receive your personal identity number, you must notify us of your new address and the date on which you moved there. You can do this by contacting our tax information service, or by visiting a Swedish state service centre in person.
Tell us why you intend to stay in Sweden. For example, you could tell us:
When you move to Sweden, the Swedish Tax Agency needs to record details of your civil status in the Swedish Population Register.
If you have a child under 18 years old who is moving with you, you must prove who the parents of the child are.
This proof could include a birth certificate, an extract from the civil register or a family registration document. If a custody decision has been reached, you should provide a notification document.
The parents or guardians of a child under 18 must jointly notify us of the child’s move to Sweden. If one of the child’s parents or guardians is unable to visit a service centre in person, one parent or guardian must have the right to represent the child. As a parent or guardian, you can represent your child if you have written consent from the child’s other parent or guardian. Children who are 16 or older can notify us of their move to Sweden themselves.
If a child moving with you is 18 or older but under 21, you must prove who the parents of the child are.
If you move to Sweden and belong to the same family as a Swedish citizen who has exercised their right to free movement in another EU or EEA country, you need to provide documentation confirming your family relationship.
You might also have independent right of residence – for example, if you are a citizen of an EU or EEA country and are studying or working in Sweden.
If you move to join your spouse or registered civil partner, you need to provide documentation confirming your civil status. This could be a marriage certificate, an extract from the civil register or a family registration document, for example.
If you move to join your cohabiting partner who is a Swedish citizen, you may need provide documentation so that the Swedish Tax Agency can assess your cohabitation relationship. Being cohabiting partners means that you live together in a relationship and have a common household.
The documentation you can show includes the following:
When you belong to a family and are for example a child over 21 years old, a sibling or cousin, you need to provide documentation confirming that you have a family relationship. This could include a birth certificate, an extract from the civil register or a family registration document. You must also provide proof that at least one of the following circumstances applies:
You must prove that your Swedish family member has exercised their right to free movement. They have done this if they have lived and had right of residence in another EU or EEA country of which they were not a citizen.
You must also prove that you and your Swedish family member had a family relationship in the period during which they exercised their right to free movement.
Your Swedish family member has exercised their right to free movement if you can show any of the following documentation, for example:
You and your Swedish family member had a family relationship in the period during which they exercised their right to free movement if you can show any of the following documentation, for example:
Information is available on the European Commission’s website about what free movement for EU citizens means.
If you are not an EU/EEA citizen, keep in mind that you need to contact the Swedish Migration Agency about the right to stay in Sweden.
If we need you to provide additional information, we will normally send you a letter. However, we might also contact you by email or phone. To ensure mail gets to you, it is important for your name to be written in the place where it is delivered: on your postbox, for example.
If the Swedish Tax Agency cannot reach you, we will not be able to process your notification of a move to Sweden. This may mean that we do not list you in the Swedish Population Register and do not give you a personal identity number.
If you have been listed in the Swedish Population Register and assigned a personal identity number, you can apply to the Swedish Tax Agency or the Swedish Police for an ID card.