The Police Corps of Andorra () is the national police of Andorra. In 2007, the force had 240 officers serving a population of approximately 85,000.
The police force consists of the Directorate of the Police, four divisions which carry out the various missions of the police, and two "functional groups".
The Directorate of the Police is composed of a director, a deputy director who has the grade of police commissioner, a secretary, a planning and human resources officer and an administrative assistant. It directs police activities throughout the country. Its members are nominated by the Government of Andorra based on proposals from the Ministry of the Interior. The International Police Cooperation Office is part of the Directorate of Police, inside is the National Central Office of Interpol.
There are four divisions with the following responsibilities:
Six groups â for the protection of VIPs, bomb disposal, order maintenance, emergency situations, sniffer-dog training and mountain rescue â are formed by members of the four Divisions; are assembled in response to specific needs; and are assisted by colleagues from neighbouring countries, particularly in organising joint training programmes.
The ' (GIPA) is a small special forces squad trained in counter-terrorism, and hostage recovery tasks. It is the paramilitary component of the Police Corps. Although it is the closest Andorran organization in style to an active military force, it is a civilian, not a military organization. As terrorist and hostage situations are a rare threat to the country, the GIPA is commonly assigned to prisoner escort duties, and at other times to routine policing.
Grup d'Intervenció Policia d'Andorra (GIPA) is the more heavily armed tactical team of the force. They are more armed than the average officer; these are some of the weapons they are issued: