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Updated May 2026 · Departamento de Identificaciones

Last reviewed: Fact-checked against official sources

The Paraguayan cédula. How to get one, what it does, how long it takes.

The cédula de identidad is the Paraguayan national ID card and the number every downstream system — bank, DNIT, IPS, property registry — uses to track you. Foreign residents become eligible the moment DNM approves the residency carnet: the cédula is the *consequence* of residency, not a precondition for it. Below: the issuance steps, costs, validity windows, and what to do when life happens to your card.

From the law

Where the foreign-resident cédula comes from.

The cédula entitlement for foreign residents is established by [Ley 6984/2022](https://www.bacn.gov.py/leyes-paraguayas/10973/ley-n-6984-de-migraciones) and the Policía Nacional regulations on identification. The operative text:

What it is

What is the Paraguayan cédula?

If you have lived in any other Latin American country you already know the rhythm: the cédula is the regional equivalent of a national ID card, more central to daily life than passports usually are in Anglosphere countries.

  1. 01

    Issuing authority

    Policía Nacional — Departamento de Identificaciones. Main offices in Asunción (calle Ygatimí), Encarnación, Ciudad del Este and every departmental capital. The Asunción central office serves the majority of foreign-resident applications.

  2. 02

    What it looks like

    A polycarbonate card with chip and biometric photo. Front face: full name, cédula number, date of birth, sex, nationality, signature, photo. Back face: blood type, address (Asunción by default for foreign residents), parents' names, expiry date, machine-readable zone.

  3. 03

    What it does

    The cédula opens bank accounts, anchors your RUC (tax ID), connects you to IPS social security, and is required to sign property contracts, register a vehicle, exchange a foreign driver's licence or sign up for a mobile-phone postpaid line. Naturalised citizens also use it to vote in local elections. Carry the original — most government counters and many banks refuse photocopies.

  4. 04

    Validity

    10 years for adults, 5 years for minors under 18. Only the physical card expires; the *number* on it is permanent (the edge-cases section spells out exactly which life events leave it untouched). Renewal at expiry is a straightforward over-the-counter affair.

Foreign-resident cédulas are visually identical to Paraguayan-citizen cédulas. The nationality field on the card lists your country of origin; the card itself does not encode your residency status (temporary vs permanent). That distinction lives on your *carnet de residencia* issued separately by DNM.

Who can apply

Who can apply for a Paraguayan cédula?

Permanent residents
Eligible the day DNM approves the carnet de residencia permanente. Cédula validity matches the standard 10-year adult / 5-year minor schedule, renewable indefinitely as long as residency status is maintained.
Temporary residents
Eligible during the temporary-residency window (up to 2 years renewable under Ley 6984/2022). The cédula is valid for the duration of the residency carnet. When the resident converts to permanent residency, the card is reissued with a new expiry date.
Tourists, visa holders, applicants pending
Not eligible. Tourists carry passport only. A residency *application* pending at DNM does not qualify until the application is approved and the carnet de residencia is issued. The MIC Constancia de Inversionista Extranjero (Investor Pass certificate) does not by itself confer cédula eligibility — the DNM permanent-residency card is what unlocks it.

Step by step

How long does it take to get a Paraguayan cédula?

Standard issuance window is 10–15 business days after the biometric appointment — the figure the Asunción central office quoted in May 2026, and the one the WhatsApp groups report month after month. The full path from "residency approved" to "card in hand" runs about 3 weeks for most applicants. Some compress it with a paid concierge that handles the queueing; the going rate sits in the US$ 50–150 band, depending on how much hand-holding you want.

  1. 1

    Day 0 — Confirm DNM residency carnet is in hand

    You must have the physical Carnet de Residencia issued by DNM. A screenshot of the DNM approval email is not enough — Identificaciones wants the original carnet. If you are still waiting on the carnet, the cédula clock has not yet started.

  2. 2

    Day 1–3 — Schedule the biometric appointment

    Online appointment system at the Policía Nacional Identificaciones portal. Some Asunción slots open same-week; departmental offices outside Asunción often have shorter queues. Walk-in is technically possible but rarely fast — appointments win.

  3. 3

    Day 7 — Pay the issuance fee first

    Pay before you sit for biometrics — the cashier receipt is what the biometric counter asks for, so payment comes first in the queue. Pay at the office cashier or via an authorised payment network (most banks, Aquí Pago, Pago Express). The standard fee was PYG 88,500 at the Asunción central office, confirmed May 2026. Keep the receipt; you hand it over at the next step.

  4. 4

    Day 7 — Biometric appointment (in person), same visit

    Done right after payment, on the same visit. Bring: the cashier receipt from step 3, original carnet de residencia, passport (original + photocopy), proof of address (Paraguayan utility bill or rental contract), one passport photo (most offices have their own camera — confirm in advance). The counter takes your fingerprints, photo, signature, and blood-type confirmation. Reckon on 15–30 minutes once you reach the window.

  5. 5

    Day 17–22 — Card issuance

    The card is issued 10–15 business days after the biometric appointment. Most applicants collect in person at the same office. SMS notification when ready; in Asunción you can collect Monday–Friday during office hours.

  6. 6

    Day 22+ — Register downstream services

    Once you have the cédula: open a Paraguayan bank account, apply for a RUC (tax ID) at DNIT, register with IPS if you plan to be a salaried employee, exchange your driver's licence at the municipality. See the setup guide for the in-country sequence.

The total time can compress to ~10 business days if you can do the biometric appointment within a week of getting the carnet, and to ~6 weeks if you live outside Asunción and need to travel for the appointment. A scouting trip in advance lets you pre-book the biometric appointment for the week your residency is expected to be approved.

What it costs

How much does a Paraguayan cédula cost?

Standard cédula (10-year adult / 5-year minor)
PYG 88,500 (~US$ 14 at May 2026 BCP rate)
Express issuance (where available)
Around PYG 200,000 (~US$ 32) for roughly 5 business days against the standard 10–15. Not offered at every office, and the surcharge varies between branches — treat 200,000 as the Asunción ballpark, not a fixed national tariff.
Renewal at expiry
PYG 88,500 — same as standard issuance
Replacement (lost / stolen / damaged)
PYG 132,000 (~US$ 21) plus a denuncia (sworn report) at the Policía Nacional for lost or stolen — see lifecycle section
Address change
PYG 88,500 — issued as a new card with updated address; old card surrendered
Passport photo (if office camera unavailable)
PYG 25,000–40,000 (~US$ 4–6) at any photo studio in Asunción centre
Concierge / queue agent (optional)
US$ 50–150 — handles appointment booking, paperwork pre-check, accompaniment for non-Spanish speakers

Peg dates: the PYG figures above are the official Identificaciones rates as posted at the Asunción central office in May 2026; the US$ equivalents use the May 2026 BCP reference rate (~6,300 Gs. to the dollar), so the dollar column drifts with the exchange rate even when the guaraní fee holds. These are *cédula-only* fees and do not include the upstream residency cost (DNM filing PYG 1,235,400, about US$ 200 at the same rate; apostille fees in your home country; sworn translation in the US$ 28–57 per-document range). The full breakdown by route is on the cost calculator.

Lifecycle scenarios

How do you renew or replace a Paraguayan cédula?

The 10-year card meets life events. Each scenario below has its own clear path at Identificaciones; none requires restarting the residency process.

  • Standard renewal (at expiry)

    Apply 30–60 days before expiry. Same office, same biometric procedure, same PYG 88,500 fee (the rate confirmed at the Asunción central office, May 2026). If your residency status is current the renewal is purely administrative — no DNM step required.

  • Lost or stolen — replacement

    File a *denuncia policial* at any Comisaría within 48 hours of discovery (free; the report number is what Identificaciones needs). Take the denuncia + your passport to Identificaciones. New card in 10–15 business days; the replacement fee was PYG 132,000, confirmed May 2026. The number on the new card is unchanged — see number portability below.

  • Damaged card — replacement

    No denuncia required — a chipped or delaminated card is enough on its own. Present the damaged card plus your passport at Identificaciones. New card in 10–15 business days at the same PYG 132,000 replacement fee.

  • Bring the apostilled foreign marriage/divorce certificate (or Paraguayan equivalent), a sworn translation, and a request form to Identificaciones. The card is reprinted with your updated name for PYG 88,500.

  • Address change

    Bring proof of new address (utility bill or rental contract) and the current card. New card issued with the updated address for PYG 88,500. The address on the cédula does not have to be your *daily* residence — plenty of foreign residents keep an Asunción address on the card even while living in Pilar or Encarnación.

  • Change from temporary to permanent resident

    When DNM converts your residency from temporary to permanent, present the new carnet at Identificaciones. A fresh cédula is issued carrying the longer 10-year validity. Some applicants report no fee on a conversion reissue, others were charged the standard rate — confirm at the counter rather than assuming.

  • Permanent move abroad

    If you intend not to return to Paraguay for more than 3 years and want to release the cédula, you can surrender it at any Identificaciones office. Most foreign residents do not surrender — the cédula remains valid as long as your residency status remains valid (Plan-B residency holders typically retain the card).

Edge cases

Five situations the WhatsApp groups ask about every month.

  • Children's cédula

    Minors (under 18) can be issued a cédula once their residency is approved. Procedure is the same but a parent must accompany; fee is the same; validity is 5 years rather than 10. Some parents wait until age 5–6 to get the first cédula since infant biometrics aren't useful and the card expires quickly.

  • Name mismatch with passport

    If your passport shows a middle name and your apostilled birth certificate does not (or vice versa), Identificaciones will use the birth certificate version. This can create downstream issues at banks. Best practice: align the residency file with how your name appears on your bank-account-side passport.

  • Asunción address requirement

    No. The cédula address can be anywhere in Paraguay. Foreign residents living in Encarnación, Pilar, Ciudad del Este or rural areas all carry cédulas with their actual addresses. The Asunción default applies only when no proof of address is presented — but that's a worse outcome (banks notice).

  • Cédula number portability

    This is the one rule worth memorising, because it governs every scenario above: the number you are assigned at first issuance is permanent. Renew it, replace a lost card, change your name on marriage, move house, convert from temporary to permanent residency, even naturalise as a citizen — the card gets reprinted but the number underneath never moves. That single number is what DNIT, IPS, the banks, the property registry and BCP all key on, which is why it has to outlive any individual piece of plastic.

  • What if Identificaciones loses my file?

    Rare but real. Keep photocopies of your carnet de residencia and passport in cloud storage. Rule of thumb from the WhatsApp groups: if nothing has moved by about 30 business days past your biometric date, that's the point to escalate through DNM (it has cross-jurisdictional authority over residency-linked Identificaciones files) rather than re-queueing at the Identificaciones counter.

Frequently asked

Cédula — FAQ.

Can I get the cédula before my residency is approved?

No. The cédula requires the physical carnet de residencia in hand. Some agencies promise "cédula in 60 days from arrival" — what they're describing is the residency-plus-cédula combined timeline, not cédula on its own. The cédula step itself runs 3–4 weeks after residency lands.

Do I need a cédula to open a bank account?

Yes, in 2026. Pre-2022 some banks would open a basic account against passport + DNM residency receipt; post-FATF the 2022 framework tightened KYC, and a cédula is now required by all major banks (Itaú, Continental, BBVA, Banco Nacional de Fomento). Some smaller cooperatives still accept passport-only for low-volume savings accounts.

Does my cédula expire if I leave the country?

No. The cédula expiry is calendar-based (10 years for adults), not based on physical presence. As long as your underlying residency status remains valid (PR is permanent under Ley 6984/2022 absent specific revocation triggers), the cédula remains valid until its printed expiry date.

How quickly can I get a replacement if I lose mine abroad?

You need to come back to Paraguay to get the replacement — Paraguayan consulates (including the consulate in Miami, confirmed May 2026) cannot issue cédula replacements abroad. Once in country, the standard 10–15 business-day window applies. Plan a trip to Asunción for at least 3 weeks if you've lost the only physical card; bring your passport and the denuncia from your nearest Comisaría or local police equivalent.

Will the cédula number change when I naturalise as a Paraguayan citizen?

No. The cédula number is the same number you've carried as a resident. The card itself is reissued at naturalisation to reflect the change of status (Paraguayan citizen instead of foreign resident), but the underlying number is portable across the status change.

What's the difference between cédula and RUC?

The cédula is your civil ID number issued by Policía Nacional. The RUC is your tax ID number issued by DNIT — the equivalent of a US SSN-for-tax-purposes. For natural persons, the RUC is just your cédula number with a check digit appended ("-0" for individuals). For corporate entities (EAS, SRL, SA) the RUC is separately issued.

Is the cédula required for a Paraguayan driver's licence exchange?

Yes. The municipal driver's-licence office (Asunción Dirección de Tránsito, etc.) asks for the cédula at the counter. Without it the exchange-licence file cannot be opened. See the driving licence guide.

Once your cédula is in hand

What unlocks next.

The cédula is a key, not a destination. With the cédula you can: open a Paraguayan bank account (banking guide), apply for a RUC tax ID at DNIT (tax residency), exchange your foreign driver's licence (driver-licence guide), register a vehicle, sign property contracts (real-estate guide). The setup guide walks the in-country sequence for your first 30 days.