In the last campaign, the TJ-II heliac has been operated under lithium-coated walls, representing the first stellarator ever working under these boundary conditions. Enhanced density control and discharge reproducibility, leading to the drastic enlargement of the operational window, have been obtained. A strong decrease in recycling together with changes in the shot by shot fuelling characteristics and in the wall particle inventory have been recorded. These changes, associated with the new wall scenario, had led to a long-lasting good density control. The new conditions were also mirrored in the plasma profiles under NBI heating scenarios with increased peaking of the electron density profiles. Fuelling rates corresponding just to the nominal beam current were obtained for the first time, and transitions from bell to dome-type plasma profiles, with different collapsing limits, were observed and tentatively ascribed to changes in the local edge power balance. ELM-type activity was observed in concomitance to reduced fluctuation levels and confinement improvement. Record values of plasma energy content were measured at central densities up to 8 × 10 19 m −3 under Li-coated walls.