The characteristics of the fast neutron beams produced in the HiSPANoS facility at Centro Nacional de Aceleradores (CNA) are presented. The neutrons are generated by deuteron beams from a 3 MV tandem accelerator in either continuous (5 μA) or pulsed (2 ns width, 500 kHz and 4% duty cycle) mode. In this work, the pulsed mode was used in a time-of-flight characterization of the produced neutron beams in terms of yield, flux, energy resolution, and background. The results were then validated through their comparison with previously published data.Quasi-monoenergetic neutron beams between 2 and 6 MeV are produced by means of the 2H(d,n)3He reaction, featuring a neutron yield of 106 n/sr/μC at the target, with an energy resolution of about 7% at 150 cm. Neutron beams with broad energy distributions are produced by deuteron irradiation of thick beryllium and lithium targets, resulting in maximum neutron energies of 10 and 20 MeV, respectively. In this case, the neutron yields are significantly higher, reaching 1010 n/sr/μC.On the basis of these results, we consider that the HiSPANoS facility is now fully operational for the usage of fast neutrons by internal and external users of CNA.