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how to file a proof of claim in Spain (insolvency)

How to File a Proof of Claim in Spain (insolvency): Step‑by‑step

By Global Law Experts
– posted 3 hours ago

When a Spanish debtor enters concurso de acreedores, the formal insolvency procedure governed by the Ley Concursal (Ley 22/2003, 9 July), every creditor that wishes to participate in distributions must communicate and prove its claim to the court-appointed administrator (administrador concursal). Understanding how to file a proof of claim in Spain (insolvency) is therefore the single most consequential procedural step a creditor can take: miss it or do it poorly and you risk exclusion from the creditors’ table entirely.

This guide sets out the exact steps, documents needed, deadlines, costs and common pitfalls, updated to reflect Directive (EU) 2026/799, the EU Insolvency Harmonisation Directive adopted on 30 March 2026, which introduces new registry-reporting obligations, harmonised avoidance rules and cross-border proof requirements that Spanish creditors must prepare for now.

Overview of the Concurso Process and Who It Applies To

A concurso de acreedores is opened by the Juzgado de lo Mercantil (Commercial Court) when a debtor, whether a company or an individual, is unable to meet its obligations as they fall due. The opening order (auto de declaración de concurso) triggers a collective procedure in which all claims against the debtor are channelled through a single process, supervised by the court and managed day-to-day by the administrador concursal.

Under the Ley Concursal, creditors fall into three broad classes for recognition purposes: secured creditors (créditos con privilegio especial) holding registered security such as mortgages or pledges; preferential creditors (créditos con privilegio general) including certain employee and public-law claims; and unsecured or ordinary creditors (créditos ordinarios). A residual category of subordinated creditors (créditos subordinados) covers related-party and late-filed claims.

“Proving” a debt in this context means formally communicating the existence, amount, nature and ranking of a claim to the administrador concursal, together with supporting documentary evidence. This communication, referred to under Art. 85 of the Ley Concursal, is the mechanism by which the administrator compiles the provisional list of creditors that will ultimately become the binding creditors’ table (tabla de acreedores).

Eligibility and Requirements Before Filing a Proof of Claim

Any natural or legal person, domestic or foreign, that holds an existing claim against the debtor at the date of the opening order may communicate that claim in the concurso. The requirements for filing are straightforward but non-negotiable: the creditor must be able to identify itself, demonstrate legal capacity, and substantiate the debt with admissible documentary evidence. Entities must hold valid powers of attorney or corporate authorisation for the signatory. Where a claim has been assigned, the assignee must present the assignment instrument and proof that the debtor (and the administrator) have been notified.

Before preparing papers, creditors should confirm internally that the claim is not time-barred, that interest calculations are up to date, and that any security has been properly registered in the relevant public registry.

Secured Creditor vs Unsecured Creditor

A secured creditor must prove not only the underlying debt but also the existence, validity and registration of its security interest. Typically this means providing a certified extract from the Registro de la Propiedad (Land Registry) for real-estate mortgages or the relevant chattel/moveable-property registry for pledges. The date of registration matters: security registered within the suspect period preceding the opening order may be subject to avoidance (rescisión concursal). Unsecured creditors need only demonstrate the debt itself, but they should still gather anti-avoidance evidence for any payments received shortly before the concurso, a point now reinforced by Directive (EU) 2026/799’s harmonised clawback rules.

Step‑by‑Step Procedure to File a Proof of Claim in Spain

The process of filing a proof of claim in a Spanish insolvency follows a defined sequence. Each step below identifies who acts, what they must do, and the typical timeframe involved.

Step 1, Receive Notice and Confirm the Concurso Opening

Once the Commercial Court issues the opening order, the administrador concursal is required to notify all creditors appearing in the debtor’s books and records. Under the Ley Concursal, the administrator must also publish the opening in the Registro Público Concursal (Public Insolvency Register) and in the Official State Gazette (BOE). Creditors should take the following actions immediately upon receiving notice or learning of the concurso:

  • Verify the opening order details: court reference number, identity of the administrator, deadline for communications, and whether the concurso is voluntary (concurso voluntario) or necessary (concurso necesario).
  • Cross-check the debtor’s records: confirm the amount the debtor has listed for your claim, discrepancies must be corrected in your communication.
  • Identify your filing deadline: the opening order typically sets a specific window within which creditors must communicate their claims.

Step 2, Prepare the Proof of Claim (Document Checklist)

The communication to the administrator must include all information necessary for the claim to be recognised and correctly classified. As a minimum, your submission under Art. 85 of the Ley Concursal should contain:

  • Creditor identity and legal capacity: full name, registered address, tax identification number (NIF/CIF), and corporate authorisation or power of attorney for the signatory.
  • Claim amount and currency: principal, accrued interest (broken down separately), and any ancillary amounts (penalties, costs).
  • Legal basis of the claim: contract reference, invoice numbers, delivery notes, or court judgment / enforcement title.
  • Classification requested: state whether you consider the claim secured (privilegio especial), preferential (privilegio general), ordinary, or subordinated, with supporting reasons.
  • Evidence of security (if applicable): certified registry extract showing the mortgage, pledge or other encumbrance, including registration date and reference.
  • Assignment documentation (if applicable): assignment instrument and proof of notification to the debtor.
  • Anti-avoidance evidence: contemporaneous documentation supporting any pre-insolvency payments received, bank statements, board minutes, legal advice memoranda.

Organise the package chronologically and cross-reference each exhibit to the relevant paragraph of your claim communication. Incomplete or disorganised submissions are a common reason for partial rejection at the provisional-recognition stage.

Step 3, File the Proof of Claim with the Commercial Court and Administrator

The creditor’s communication is addressed to the administrador concursal. In practice, it is filed electronically through the Spanish judiciary’s electronic filing portal and simultaneously sent directly to the administrator’s notified address (often an email address specified in the opening order). A hard-copy filing at the court registry remains available where electronic filing is not practicable.

On filing, creditors should:

  • Retain proof of submission: obtain an electronic receipt or court registry stamp confirming the date and time of filing.
  • Send a duplicate to the administrator: confirm receipt in writing, this creates a documentary trail if disputes arise about timeliness.
  • Check the Registro Público Concursal: the administrator publishes the provisional creditors’ list here; monitor it for your claim’s inclusion.

Foreign creditors should note that all documents filed must be in Spanish. Non-Spanish documents require sworn translation (traducción jurada) and, where the document originates outside the EU/EFTA, apostille or consular legalisation.

Step 4, Administrator’s Provisional Recognition or Objection

The administrador concursal reviews all communications received and prepares the provisional creditors’ list (lista provisional de acreedores), which sets out each claim’s amount, classification and ranking. The administrator may:

  • Admit the claim in full as communicated.
  • Partially admit, for example, accepting the principal but rejecting the interest calculation or downgrading the classification from secured to ordinary.
  • Reject the claim entirely, typically for insufficient evidence, late filing, or because the debt is disputed by the debtor.

If your claim is partially admitted or rejected, you have the right to challenge the provisional decision by filing a motion (incidente concursal) before the Commercial Court. The timeline for this challenge is set by the court, typically a short window of 10 days from notification of the provisional list. Creditors should engage local counsel immediately if a challenge is necessary, as missed deadlines cannot normally be extended.

Step 5, Final Recognition and Inclusion in the Creditors’ Table

After the challenge period closes and any disputes are resolved, the court approves the final creditors’ table (tabla definitiva de acreedores). This document determines each creditor’s ranking and proportionate entitlement to distributions from the insolvency estate. Claims in the final table are classified in order of priority: secured (privilegio especial), preferential (privilegio general), ordinary, and subordinated. Distributions follow this hierarchy, secured creditors are paid first from the proceeds of their collateral, and ordinary creditors share pro rata in any remaining assets.

Timeline Table: Filing a Proof of Claim in a Spanish Concurso

Step Who Does It Typical Duration
Opening order published (concurso declared) Commercial Court (Juzgado de lo Mercantil) Day 0, effective immediately on publication
Individual notice sent to known creditors Administrador concursal Within days of the opening order (timing set by court)
Preparation of proof of claim Creditor / legal counsel 3–14 days (depends on complexity and document availability)
Filing of proof of claim Creditor (electronic filing + copy to administrator) Within the deadline set by the opening order (typically up to 1 month from notice)
Administrator review and provisional recognition Administrador concursal 2–8 weeks (case-dependent)
Challenge to provisional admissions/rejections Creditor / Commercial Court Typically 10 days from notification; court resolution 2–8 weeks
Final creditors’ table published Commercial Court / Administrador 1–3 months from opening (case-dependent)

Note: exact statutory deadlines vary by individual opening order. Always check the opening order and the administrator’s communication, and refer to Art. 85–87 of the Ley Concursal for the applicable framework.

Required Documents and Information for Filing a Proof of Claim

The documents needed to prove a creditor claim in Spain must demonstrate the existence, amount, nature and, where applicable, security of the debt. The table below sets out each required document together with practical notes on format, issuing authority and special requirements.

Document Notes
Proof of identity and legal capacity For companies: certificate of incorporation, company registry extract and power of attorney for the signatory. If foreign, apostille plus sworn Spanish translation.
Original contract, invoice or delivery note (or certified copy) Evidence of the underlying debt. Include dates, amounts, currency and VAT documentation where applicable.
Court judgment or enforcement title Certified copy of the judgment plus proof of enforcement (execution order), where the debt has been the subject of prior litigation.
Proof of security / mortgage / pledge (secured creditors) Certified extract from the Registro de la Propiedad or other relevant registry. Must include registration reference and date.
Assignment agreement and notice to debtor If the claim has been assigned: the assignment instrument, plus evidence that the debtor and administrator have been notified.
Statement of account / outstanding balance calculation Signed statement showing principal, interest (with calculation methodology), currency and supporting ledger entries.
Tax / VAT clearance documents Official tax documentation where requested by the administrator or where tax treatment affects the net recoverable amount.
Anti-avoidance evidence (pre-transaction documentation) Bank statements, contemporaneous correspondence, board minutes and legal advice memoranda supporting any pre-insolvency payments, critical under the 2026 harmonised avoidance framework.
Sworn translation and legalisation All non-Spanish documents must be accompanied by a traducción jurada. Documents from outside the EU/EFTA require apostille or consular legalisation.

Special Rules for Secured Creditors

A secured creditor claiming privilegio especial must prove that the security interest was validly created and registered before the opening of the concurso. In practice, this means providing a certified extract from the Registro de la Propiedad (for mortgages over immovable property) or the relevant moveable-property registry (for pledges). The registration date is critical: if the security was registered within the two-year suspect period preceding the opening order, the administrator or other creditors may seek to avoid it under the Ley Concursal’s rescission provisions (acciones de rescisión concursal). Secured creditors should therefore include in their claim communication a clear timeline showing when the security was granted, when it was registered, and the commercial context in which the transaction occurred.

Timeline and Key Deadlines for Creditor Claims

Exact deadlines in a Spanish concurso depend on the specific terms of the opening order and any directions issued by the Commercial Court. The table below summarises the standard timings and the practical actions creditors should take at each stage.

Event Common Statutory Timing Practical Action for Creditor
Deadline to lodge proof of claim Typically within 1 month of notice, as established in the opening order File immediately on receipt of notice. Prepare provisional papers in parallel with gathering final evidence.
Administrator publishes provisional creditors’ list Varies, typically weeks to months after the filing deadline Monitor the Registro Público Concursal and administrator communications. Check that your claim is correctly reflected.
Deadline to challenge provisional admissions/rejections Typically 10 days from notification of the provisional list (per court schedule) File an incidente concursal promptly through local counsel. Do not wait.
Stay on enforcement of security during concurso Enforcement may be stayed for up to 1 year from opening (Ley Concursal provisions) If secured, preserve all registration evidence and apply to the court for permission to enforce where circumstances justify it.
Interruption of limitation periods The opening of the concurso can interrupt prescription for claims against the debtor Confirm with counsel whether your claim is time-barred or has been preserved by the concurso filing.

What happens if you miss the deadline? A creditor that fails to communicate its claim within the prescribed period risks having the claim classified as subordinated (crédito subordinado) under the Ley Concursal, which places it at the bottom of the distribution hierarchy. In practice, subordinated claims receive payment only after all secured, preferential and ordinary creditors have been satisfied in full, an outcome that is rare in most insolvency estates. Late creditors may apply to the court for admission for good cause, but such applications are granted only in exceptional circumstances. The recommended practice is unequivocal: file as early as possible.

Costs, Fees and Tax Considerations

Filing a proof of claim in Spain involves a combination of court-related, administrative and professional costs. The table below provides indicative ranges; creditors should verify current amounts with local counsel and the relevant court or registry portal before filing.

Item Typical Cost Notes
Court electronic filing fee Minimal or waived for certain filings Some Commercial Courts do not charge a separate fee for claim communications. Confirm with the local court portal.
Registry extract (Registro de la Propiedad) €20–€60 per extract Varies by registry and number of entries. Obtain a certified extract.
Sworn translation (traducción jurada) €30–€150 per page Varies by language pair and document complexity.
Legal counsel / insolvency lawyer Market rates (hourly or fixed fee) Essential for contested claims, classification disputes and avoidance defence.
Notary / apostille €20–€100 Required for legalisation of foreign-origin documents.
Internal administrative costs Variable Accounting, legal and management time to prepare the claim package.

Amounts shown are indicative as of the date of publication. Creditors should confirm current fee schedules directly with the relevant court, registry or professional service provider.

What Changes in 2026: EU Directive and Immediate Actions for Creditors Filing Claims in Spain

Directive (EU) 2026/799, adopted by the Council on 30 March 2026, introduces the most significant harmonisation of European insolvency law in two decades. While Member States have a transposition window before the Directive’s provisions become binding domestic law, the practical effect for creditors filing claims in Spain is already emerging. Industry observers expect the following areas to require the most immediate attention:

  • Harmonised avoidance (clawback) rules: the Directive introduces common frameworks for challenging pre-insolvency transactions. Creditors who received payments from the debtor in the period before the concurso must now maintain stronger contemporaneous evidence, bank records, board minutes, legal opinions, to defend against avoidance actions.
  • Registry reporting obligations: the Directive mandates improvements to insolvency registers and cross-border data sharing. Early indications suggest that Spain will need to update the Registro Público Concursal to include additional standardised data fields.
  • Cross-border proof requirements: creditors proving claims across EU borders will benefit from more uniform procedures, but will also need to ensure their documentation meets newly harmonised standards.

Action checklist for creditors in 2026:

  • Obtain certified registry extracts for all registered security interests, confirm validity and registration dates.
  • Gather contemporaneous commercial documentation for all pre-insolvency payments received from Spanish debtors.
  • Confirm that all security interests are properly registered in the relevant Spanish public registry.
  • Update internal claim templates to include any additional EU-mandated registry fields as they are published.
  • Instruct counsel to monitor the Spanish transposition timetable for Directive (EU) 2026/799 and flag any procedural changes that affect proof-of-claim requirements.

Common Pitfalls When Filing a Proof of Claim in Spain and How to Avoid Them

  • Late filing. Missing the deadline set in the opening order results in automatic subordination of the claim. Set internal alerts immediately upon receiving notice and file as early as possible, even if supporting documents are still being gathered, a provisional communication preserves the claim.
  • Weak evidence of assignment. Where a claim has been assigned, creditors frequently fail to include proof that the debtor and administrator have been notified of the assignment. Without this, the administrator may refuse to recognise the assignee. Always attach the assignment instrument and a dated notification receipt.
  • Failure to register security before the concurso. An unregistered mortgage or pledge will not be recognised as secured. Ensure all security is registered in the relevant public registry well before any signs of financial distress.
  • Poor translation or legalisation of foreign documents. Documents filed in a language other than Spanish, or without proper apostille/legalisation, will be rejected or delayed. Engage a sworn translator (traductor jurado) and confirm apostille requirements for the originating country.
  • Ignoring administrator notices. The administrator’s provisional list is published with a short challenge window. Failure to monitor communications and respond within the deadline means accepting the administrator’s classification, even if it is wrong.
  • Confusing provisional with final recognition. Provisional admission does not guarantee final recognition. Continue to monitor the process until the final creditors’ table is approved by the court.
  • Inadequate anti-avoidance evidence. Under the strengthened framework introduced by Directive (EU) 2026/799, creditors who received pre-insolvency payments must be prepared to demonstrate that those payments were made for legitimate commercial reasons. Maintain a complete documentary trail from the outset.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Fernando Martínez Sanz at Martínez Sanz Abogados, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. BOE, Ley 22/2003, 9 July, Concursal (consolidated text)
  2. EUR-Lex, Directive (EU) 2026/799 (Insolvency Harmonisation Directive)
  3. Council of the EU, Press release on EU insolvency rules (30 March 2026)
  4. Administracion.gob.es, Concurso de acreedores guidance
  5. Uría Menéndez, Lender’s Guide to Spanish Insolvency (2022)
  6. CMS Expert Guide, Restructuring and Insolvency Law: Spain
  7. European e-Justice Portal, Insolvency (Spain)
  8. Matheson, EU Insolvency Harmonisation Directive: Practical Implications

FAQs

How do I file a proof of claim in a Spanish insolvency (concurso)?
You communicate your claim in writing to the administrador concursal, including your identity, the amount owed, the legal basis of the debt, supporting documents and your proposed classification. The communication is filed electronically with the Commercial Court and a copy is sent directly to the administrator. See the full step-by-step procedure above for detailed instructions.
At a minimum: proof of identity and legal capacity, the underlying contract or invoice, a statement of account, and, for secured creditors, a certified registry extract showing the security interest. Foreign documents must include a sworn Spanish translation and apostille where required. The full documents checklist is set out in the required documents section above.
The opening order sets the deadline, which is typically within one month of the creditor receiving individual notice from the administrator. Missing the deadline normally results in the claim being classified as subordinated, last in the distribution hierarchy. Late admission for good cause is possible but rare. The recommended practice is to file immediately.
Secured creditors (créditos con privilegio especial) hold priority over the proceeds of their collateral. However, enforcement is typically stayed for up to one year from the opening order under the Ley Concursal. Secured creditors must prove registration of their security in the relevant public registry and may apply to the court for permission to enforce in specific circumstances. See the secured creditor requirements and common pitfalls sections above.
Yes. Foreign creditors have the same right to communicate claims as domestic creditors. All documents must be accompanied by a sworn translation into Spanish (traducción jurada), and documents originating outside the EU/EFTA must bear an apostille or consular legalisation. Foreign creditors may also need to appoint a local representative or grant a power of attorney to Spanish counsel for filing and representation purposes.
Immediately upon receiving notice of the concurso, or sooner if you anticipate the debtor’s insolvency. Legal counsel is essential for claims involving disputed amounts, classification challenges, enforcement of security, or defence against avoidance actions. An experienced insolvency practitioner can also ensure that your proof of claim meets all formal requirements and is filed within the deadline.
You must demonstrate that any pre-insolvency payment you received was made for legitimate commercial reasons and at arm’s length. Retain bank statements, contemporaneous correspondence, board or committee minutes, legal advice memoranda, and any documentation showing the commercial rationale for the transaction. The harmonised avoidance framework under Directive (EU) 2026/799 makes this evidence even more critical.

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How to File a Proof of Claim in Spain (insolvency): Step‑by‑step

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