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The landscape for public contracts Spain companies rely on shifted materially on 1 January 2026, when revised EU harmonised procurement thresholds took effect and Spain’s transposition of those thresholds under the régimen armonizado (SARA) became operative. These changes, confirmed by the EU Public Buyers Community and reflected in updated guidance on administracion.gob.es, alter which contracts fall under full EU-harmonised procedures, impose stricter subcontracting disclosure and payment-chain obligations, and require immediate redlining of existing commercial agreements. Coupled with a wave of 2026 Royal Decree-Laws (RDLs) addressing temporary contract and rental measures, the reforms create a compliance event that corporate counsel, contracts teams, and SMEs bidding for public work cannot afford to defer.
From 1 January 2026, Spain applies revised EU procurement thresholds that determine whether a public sector contract falls under the harmonised regime known as SARA (sujeto a regulación armonizada). The threshold for works contracts rose to €5,538,000, while supplies and services thresholds for central government entities moved to €143,000 and for sub-central contracting authorities to €221,000, according to the EU Public Buyers Community reminder published 19 January 2026. Any contract that now crosses these new figures triggers the full suite of EU-mandated procedural, transparency, and subcontracting requirements under Spain’s Law 9/2017 (LCSP).
Industry observers expect the practical effect to be threefold: more contracts will escape the harmonised regime (because thresholds have risen), subcontracting rules for those that remain within SARA will tighten in application, and companies must recalibrate their contract clauses immediately. The six actions every contracting team should take now are:
Spain’s core public procurement statute is Ley 9/2017, de 8 de noviembre, de Contratos del Sector Público (the LCSP), which transposed the 2014 EU Public Procurement Directives (2014/23/EU, 2014/24/EU, and 2014/25/EU) into Spanish law. The LCSP governs how public authorities at central, regional, and local levels award works, supplies, services, and concession contracts. It establishes procedural rules, transparency obligations, subcontracting constraints, and remedies for tenderers, all calibrated by whether a given contract exceeds certain value thresholds, as outlined in the official Spanish procurement guidance.
SARA, sujeto a regulación armonizada, is the Spanish legal label for contracts that fall under the EU’s harmonised procurement regime. When a public contract’s estimated value equals or exceeds the EU threshold for its type, the contract is classified as SARA and must comply with the full body of EU procedural requirements: mandatory publication in the Official Journal of the EU (OJEU/TED), prescribed minimum tender periods, detailed award criteria transparency, standstill obligations before contract signature, and heightened subcontracting disclosure rules. Contracts below the SARA thresholds follow a lighter, nationally regulated procedure under the LCSP. The distinction is binary: SARA status triggers a fundamentally different compliance burden for both contracting authorities and bidders.
Every two years the European Commission recalculates the procurement thresholds to reflect currency fluctuations against the SDR basket used under the WTO Government Procurement Agreement. The EU Public Buyers Community confirmed on 19 January 2026 that updated thresholds apply from 1 January 2026 for a two-year cycle. Spain’s administracion.gob.es reflected these new figures in its harmonised-regime guidance. The numbers feed directly into the LCSP’s SARA classification and, consequently, into every commercial and subcontracting agreement linked to public sector contracts 2026.
The table below compares the previous threshold cycle (2024–2025) with the figures applicable from 1 January 2026, based on the EU Public Buyers Community reminder and the corresponding Spanish government guidance.
| Contract Type | 2024–2025 Threshold (€) | 2026–2027 Threshold (€) |
|---|---|---|
| Works contracts & works concessions | 5,382,000 | 5,538,000 |
| Supplies & services, central government | 140,000 | 143,000 |
| Supplies & services, sub-central authorities | 215,000 | 221,000 |
| Services concessions | 5,382,000 | 5,538,000 |
| Utilities sector, supplies & services | 431,000 | 443,000 |
Example 1, Works contract moves outside SARA. A regional government in Andalucía publishes a road-resurfacing tender estimated at €5,400,000. Under the 2024–2025 cycle (threshold: €5,382,000), this contract would have been classified as SARA, requiring OJEU publication and full harmonised procedures. Under the 2026 threshold of €5,538,000, the same contract now falls below the line and may follow the lighter national procedure. The practical bidding consequence: shorter minimum tender periods, no mandatory OJEU publication, and reduced subcontractor disclosure requirements.
Example 2, Services contract remains within SARA. A central government ministry procures IT consulting services valued at €200,000. The 2026 central-government threshold for services stands at €143,000. Because the estimated value exceeds that figure, the contract remains SARA-classified and all harmonised rules, including mandatory subcontractor identification at bid stage, apply in full.
Example 3, Aggregated framework risk. An SME holds a four-year framework agreement for office supplies to a sub-central authority. Individual call-off orders are small, but the aggregate estimated value across the framework’s life reaches €230,000. The 2026 sub-central threshold is €221,000. The framework agreement is therefore SARA-classified, and every call-off must comply with the harmonised subcontracting and reporting regime, a point many SMEs overlook when structuring framework bids.
The subcontracting rules Spain’s LCSP imposes on SARA-level contracts are among the strictest in the EU. The 2026 threshold adjustments do not change the substance of these rules, but they change which contracts are caught. For contracts that remain above the revised thresholds, compliance with subcontracting obligations is non-negotiable, and early indications suggest contracting authorities are increasing enforcement scrutiny in the post-2026 cycle.
Under the LCSP, tenderers for SARA-classified contracts must identify at bid stage any portion of the contract they intend to subcontract, including the identity of proposed subcontractors where known. Post-award, the main contractor must notify the contracting authority before engaging any subcontractor and obtain explicit approval where the subcontracted portion exceeds the percentage specified in the contract documents (typically 50–60% of contract value). Failure to disclose is grounds for contract termination. The 2026 threshold shift means that companies holding contracts in the narrow band between the old and new thresholds may no longer face this obligation, but they should confirm SARA status on a contract-by-contract basis before relaxing any controls.
The LCSP mandates that main contractors pay subcontractors within the deadlines established by Ley 3/2004 (Spain’s Late Payment Act), generally 30 days from invoice verification. For SARA contracts, main contractors must also certify compliance with these payment terms to the contracting authority. The practical effect: contracts above the 2026 SARA thresholds must include explicit payment-chain clauses that mirror these statutory deadlines and reporting requirements. Industry observers expect contracting authorities to request documentary evidence of subcontractor payment compliance as a condition of progress-payment release.
Under the LCSP, the main contractor remains fully liable to the contracting authority for the performance of subcontracted work. However, subcontractors may face direct liability to the public entity in specific circumstances, particularly where the contract documents so provide. For SARA contracts, the flow-through warranty, in which the subcontractor warrants compliance with the same technical, quality, and regulatory standards imposed on the main contractor, becomes essential. The 2026 threshold adjustments mean that certain contracts previously requiring flow-through warranties may now fall outside SARA, and vice versa.
| Risk Factor | Contract Above 2026 SARA Threshold | Contract Below 2026 SARA Threshold |
|---|---|---|
| Subcontractor pre-approval required | Yes, mandatory notification and approval | Depends on contract terms (not mandated by LCSP harmonised rules) |
| Payment-chain certification to authority | Yes, 30-day payment + reporting obligation | Statutory late-payment rules apply but no reporting to authority |
| Flow-through warranty obligations | Strongly recommended / often required | Best practice but not procedurally mandated |
| Termination risk for non-disclosure | High, express statutory ground for termination | Lower, depends on contract-specific terms |
| Transparency / public register obligations | Yes, subcontractor data published | Limited publication requirements |
The following clause templates illustrate the kind of language that commercial and subcontracting agreements should incorporate, or redline, in light of the 2026 SARA threshold changes and related public procurement Spain reforms. Each clause is mapped to the specific legal trigger that necessitates the update.
Template language: “The Contractor shall not subcontract any portion of the Works/Services without the prior written consent of the Contracting Authority. For contracts classified as sujeto a regulación armonizada (SARA) under the applicable thresholds effective 1 January 2026, the Contractor shall identify all proposed subcontractors at bid stage and shall notify the Contracting Authority of any subsequent subcontractor appointments no fewer than [fifteen (15)] business days before the proposed subcontractor commences work. Subcontracting in excess of [60]% of the contract value is prohibited unless expressly authorised in the procurement documents.”
Template language: “The Contractor shall pay each Subcontractor within thirty (30) calendar days of verification of the relevant invoice. The Contractor shall, upon request by the Contracting Authority, provide documentary evidence of timely payment to all Subcontractors, including copies of payment confirmations and Subcontractor acknowledgments. Failure to comply with this obligation shall constitute a material breach entitling the Contracting Authority to withhold progress payments.”
Template language: “The Contractor warrants that it meets, and shall continue to meet throughout the term, all solvency, technical capacity, and non-exclusion requirements established under Ley 9/2017 and the applicable procurement documents. The Contractor further warrants that neither it nor any of its proposed Subcontractors is subject to any ground for exclusion under LCSP Article 71, including but not limited to tax or social security arrears, and that this warranty has been verified as at the date of award.”
Template language: “The Contractor shall maintain complete and accurate records of all subcontracting arrangements, payments, and performance metrics and shall grant the Contracting Authority and its designated auditors reasonable access to such records upon [five (5)] business days’ notice. For SARA-classified contracts, the Contractor shall submit a quarterly subcontracting report detailing: (a) the identity of each active Subcontractor; (b) the value of work subcontracted; (c) the payment status of each Subcontractor invoice; and (d) any changes to previously disclosed subcontracting arrangements.”
Template language: “Contract prices shall be subject to revision in accordance with LCSP Article 103 and the price-revision formulae specified in the procurement documents, provided that: (i) the contract has been in execution for at least [two (2)] years since formalisation; and (ii) the revision formula is linked to an official price index published by the Instituto Nacional de Estadística. Any temporary price-adjustment measures introduced by Royal Decree-Law during the contract term shall apply automatically to the extent mandated by law, and the parties shall negotiate in good faith any consequential amendment within [thirty (30)] calendar days of the RDL’s entry into force.”
Template language: “If a change in law, including but not limited to a revision of EU procurement thresholds, a reclassification of this contract’s SARA status, or the enactment of a Royal Decree-Law (including RDL 8/2026 regarding rental contracts and related temporary measures), materially alters the rights or obligations of either party, the affected party shall notify the other within [fifteen (15)] business days and the parties shall negotiate an amendment in good faith. If no amendment is agreed within [sixty (60)] calendar days, either party may terminate the affected portion of the contract upon [thirty (30)] days’ written notice, without prejudice to accrued rights.”
For SMEs and mid-cap companies bidding for public procurement Spain tenders, the 2026 threshold changes create both risk and opportunity. The following ten-point plan addresses the most critical preparedness items:
Companies with active public sector contracts 2026 must act now. The following six-step plan, structured on a 30/60/90-day timeline, addresses compliance with the revised SARA thresholds and related measures:
| Date | Event | Practical Impact |
|---|---|---|
| 9 November 2017 | LCSP (Law 9/2017) enacted | Core procurement statute; establishes SARA framework, subcontracting rules, and threshold classification system |
| November 2025 | European Commission publishes revised procurement thresholds for 2026–2027 cycle | New threshold figures announced; contracting authorities begin preparation |
| 1 January 2026 | Revised EU thresholds take effect; Spain applies new SARA figures | All tenders advertised from this date must use new thresholds to determine SARA classification |
| 19 January 2026 | EU Public Buyers Community publishes formal threshold reminder | Authoritative reference confirming threshold figures; use for contract documentation and legal opinions |
| Q1 2026 | RDL 8/2026 and related temporary RDL measures published in BOE | Temporary rental/contract measures may affect operational leases and subcontracting arrangements linked to public contracts |
| 31 December 2027 | End of current two-year threshold cycle | Thresholds will be recalculated; contracts teams should diarise for next review cycle |
| Entity Type | New 2026 Reporting / Approval Requirement | Key Compliance Deadline |
|---|---|---|
| Central government contracting authority | Apply revised EU thresholds for awarding procedures; publish SARA tenders on OJEU/TED and national platform | Effective 1 January 2026, applies to tenders advertised from this date |
| Regional (Autonomous Community) authorities | Apply SARA thresholds for regional contracts; check for community-specific supplementary rules | Immediate, review region-specific guidance within 30 days of 1 January 2026 |
| SMEs / Subcontractors | New disclosure obligations for contracts above SARA thresholds; payment-chain transparency and certification | Update agreements and POs before next invoice cycle; full compliance required for tenders after 1 January 2026 |
The 2026 SARA threshold changes are not merely a technical recalibration, they represent a compliance inflection point for every company engaged in public procurement Spain. Contracts that were harmonised yesterday may not be tomorrow, and vice versa. The practical consequence is that commercial agreements, subcontracting arrangements, tender templates, and internal procurement policies all require immediate review and, in most cases, redlining. Companies that act within the 90-day operational window outlined in this guide will not only avoid compliance risk but will position themselves as credible, well-prepared bidders in an increasingly competitive public procurement market. Those that defer face the real possibility of tender disqualification, subcontractor disputes, and payment-chain enforcement actions.
Global Law Experts provides access to experienced contract law practitioners in Spain who can conduct threshold audits, redline commercial agreements, and prepare tender-ready documentation aligned with the 2026 reforms. For tailored guidance on compliance public tenders Spain requirements, reach out through the contact form below.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact ILIA ETL GLOBAL at ILIA ETL GLOBAL | Tax & Legal, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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