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Understanding how to enforce a foreign judgment in Spain is essential for any creditor, award‑holder, or in‑house legal team that holds an unsatisfied decision against a party with assets on Spanish territory. Spain operates two parallel regimes for cross‑border enforcement: the exequatur procedure for foreign court judgments, governed principally by Law 29/2015 (Ley de cooperación jurídica internacional en materia civil, or LCJIC) and the Ley de Enjuiciamiento Civil (LEC); and the recognition route for foreign arbitral awards under the 1958 New York Convention and Spain’s Ley 60/2003 de Arbitraje.
This guide walks through every stage of the enforcement procedure Spain timeline, from eligibility checks and document preparation through to execution against assets, with the costs, deadlines, and 2026 practice developments that practitioners need before instructing local counsel.
A foreign court judgment or arbitral award cannot be directly executed in Spain. It must first be recognised, declared enforceable by a Spanish court, before the creditor can proceed to compulsory execution against the debtor’s assets. The recognition of a foreign judgment in Spain follows one of three routes, depending on the origin of the decision and the applicable legal framework:
Once recognition is granted, enforcement proceeds under Article 549 LEC and its accompanying provisions, which govern the attachment and seizure of assets, garnishment of accounts, and other execution measures. Any creditor, assignee, or successor‑in‑interest with a legitimate claim may apply.
The foreign decision must be final and binding in its country of origin, interim or interlocutory orders that remain subject to ordinary appeal generally do not qualify. Court judgments must resolve a civil or commercial matter; criminal restitution orders may qualify if they contain a civil component. Arbitral awards must arise from a valid arbitration agreement and be binding on the parties under the law of the seat.
Spanish courts may refuse recognition on limited, exhaustive grounds. Under Law 29/2015, a foreign court judgment will be refused if:
For arbitral awards under the New York Convention, refusal grounds mirror these principles and add objections relating to the invalidity of the arbitration agreement, excess of arbitral jurisdiction, or improper composition of the tribunal (Article V, New York Convention).
The original judgment creditor, the award creditor, or any lawful assignee or legal successor may file the application. Foreign nationals and companies have full standing. However, all applicants must be represented by a Spanish abogado (lawyer). In most recognition and enforcement proceedings, appointment of a procurador (court procedural representative) is also mandatory.
The following numbered procedure covers how to enforce a foreign judgment in Spain and, in parallel, how to enforce an arbitration award in Spain. Where the steps differ for arbitral awards, the distinction is noted.
On receiving the foreign judgment or arbitral award, the creditor should confirm finality by obtaining a certificate from the originating court or tribunal that no ordinary appeal remains pending. Calculate the full amount due, principal, interest, and costs, and prepare a formal demand to the debtor. Critically, assess whether the debtor’s assets in Spain are at risk of dissipation; if so, provisional measures must be sought urgently (see Step 4). Begin gathering the documents needed to enforce the judgment in Spain (see the documents checklist below) and instruct a Spanish abogado at the earliest opportunity.
Route selection determines which court hears the application, which documents are required, and how long the process takes:
Selecting the wrong route, for example, filing an exequatur application for a judgment that qualifies for direct enforcement under the Brussels Ia Recast Regulation, wastes months and incurs unnecessary costs. Industry observers note that this is one of the most frequent tactical errors in cross‑border enforcement in Spain.
The applicant, through a Spanish procurador and abogado, files a written petition (demanda de exequátur) with the competent court. The petition must set out the legal basis for recognition, identify the parties, attach the complete set of exequatur Spain documents (see the required documents table below), and include sworn Spanish translations of every non‑Spanish document prepared by a traductor jurado (sworn translator). All foreign public documents must bear a Hague Apostille, or, for non‑Apostille countries, full consular legalisation. The court registers the application, assigns a case number, and serves notice on the debtor, who is given a period to file an opposition.
Where there is a genuine risk that the debtor will transfer, encumber, or dissipate assets before recognition is obtained, Spanish law permits the creditor to apply for provisional measures in Spain, even before or simultaneously with the exequatur application. Available measures include:
Applications are filed with the court that will hear the recognition proceedings, or with the local court of first instance if recognition has not yet been commenced. The court may hear the application ex parte where advance notice to the debtor would undermine the measure’s effectiveness. The applicant will typically be required to provide a bond (caución) to cover potential damages if the measures are later discharged. Early indications from recent practice suggest a growing willingness by Spanish courts to grant pre‑recognition freezing orders where the applicant demonstrates clear urgency and a quantifiable risk of asset flight.
After the debtor is served with notice of the exequatur application, an opposition period begins, typically 30 days for the debtor to file a response. Opposition is limited to the narrow grounds for refusal described above. If the debtor opposes, the court will schedule a hearing to examine evidence and legal arguments. If no opposition is filed, the court may grant recognition on the papers without a hearing. The court issues a decision (auto) either granting or refusing recognition. The likely practical effect of uncontested applications is that recognition is often granted within two to four months of filing, though contested cases may extend to six months or longer depending on the court’s caseload.
Once recognition is granted (or, for EU judgments, once the judgment and certificate are filed), the creditor files a formal enforcement application (demanda ejecutiva) under Article 549 LEC. The court issues an enforcement order (auto despachando ejecución) and directs the Letrado de la Administración de Justicia (court clerk with enforcement powers) to execute the measures necessary to satisfy the debt. These may include:
If the debtor’s assets are insufficient to satisfy the judgment, the creditor may consider initiating insolvency proceedings (concurso de acreedores) as an alternative enforcement strategy, depending on the circumstances. Execution timelines vary significantly: attachment of bank accounts may be completed in weeks, while real estate auctions can take twelve months or longer.
The debtor may appeal a recognition order on limited grounds. An appeal (recurso de apelación) must be filed within the statutory window, typically 20 business days of notification of the decision, before the Audiencia Provincial. For New York Convention awards, opposition to recognition is confined to the grounds set out in Article V of the Convention. An appeal does not automatically suspend enforcement unless the court grants a stay, which requires the debtor to demonstrate a likelihood of success and, usually, to post security.
| Step | Who Does It | Typical Duration |
|---|---|---|
| Pre‑filing review, demand, and document preparation | Claimant and Spanish counsel | 1–2 weeks |
| File recognition / exequatur application | Applicant through procurador and abogado | 1 day to file; court docketing 1–2 weeks |
| Court notice and opposition period | Court / debtor | 1–3 months (varies by court) |
| Substantive consideration or hearing | Court | 2–6 months from filing |
| Recognition decision issued | Court | 2–6 months (total from filing; shorter if uncontested) |
| Enforcement / execution proceedings | Court enforcement officers and claimant | 1–12 months (asset‑dependent) |
| Provisional measures (if sought urgently) | Court (urgent procedure) | Days to 4 weeks |
Assembling the correct exequatur Spain documents before filing prevents the most common cause of procedural delay. Every non‑Spanish document must be accompanied by a certified sworn translation into Spanish prepared by a traductor jurado (officially appointed sworn translator), and must be legalised with a Hague Apostille or, for non‑Apostille countries, full consular legalisation.
| Document | Notes (Issuer, Format, Legalisation, Translation) |
|---|---|
| Certified copy of the foreign court judgment | Issued and sealed by the originating court. Must be an official certified copy. Hague Apostille or consular legalisation required. Sworn Spanish translation mandatory. |
| Original or certified copy of the arbitral award | Original award or court‑certified copy. For New York Convention enforcement, also provide the original arbitration agreement or a certified copy (Article IV). Apostille/legalisation and sworn Spanish translation required. |
| Certificate of enforceability or finality | Issued by the originating court or tribunal confirming the decision is final, binding, and enforceable. For EU judgments, the Annex I certificate under Brussels Ia Recast. Apostille and sworn translation required. |
| Proof that no further ordinary appeal is pending | Court certificate or declaration confirming the appeal period has expired. Apostille and sworn translation required. |
| Identity and corporate status documents | Individual: passport or national ID. Company: certificate of incorporation, commercial register extract, proof of authority of signatory. Apostille/legalisation and translation for foreign documents. |
| Power of attorney to Spanish abogado and procurador | Notarised power of attorney signed by the principal or authorised officer. Apostille/legalisation and sworn Spanish translation required. Must expressly cover enforcement proceedings. |
| Evidence of debt and outstanding balance | Invoices, account statements, demand letters, interest calculations, and any payment history. Sworn translation required. |
| Proof of service in the original proceedings | Certificates of service, postal receipts, or Hague Service Convention certificates demonstrating valid notice to the debtor. Apostille and sworn translation required. |
| Court filing forms and petition | Completed according to local court requirements. Filed through the procurador in the format prescribed by the court registry. |
| Sworn Spanish translations | Every non‑Spanish document must be translated in full by a traductor jurado officially appointed by the Spanish Ministry of Foreign Affairs. |
For EU judgments enforced under the Brussels Ia Recast Regulation, the document requirements are streamlined: the creditor needs the judgment, the standard Annex I certificate, and, where the judgment was given in default, proof of service. A sworn Spanish translation of all documents remains mandatory unless the court directs otherwise.
Total timelines for the enforcement procedure Spain timeline depend on the route chosen, the debtor’s response, and the complexity of execution. The following ranges reflect practitioner experience across Spanish courts, drawing on estimates published by leading practitioner guides:
| Phase | Typical Duration | Key Deadline or Note |
|---|---|---|
| EU direct enforcement (no exequatur) | 3–8 months total | File judgment and Annex I certificate directly; enforcement order follows promptly. |
| Exequatur proceedings (Law 29/2015) | 6–18 months | Opposition period for debtor after service. Hearing scheduled if contested. Appeal within 20 business days of recognition order. |
| New York Convention award recognition | 4–12 months | Filed before the TSJ. Opposition limited to Article V grounds. Shorter timelines if uncontested. |
| Execution against assets (post‑recognition) | 1–12 months | Duration depends on asset type: bank account attachment in weeks; real estate auction in months. Debtor may be ordered to disclose assets. |
| Provisional measures (urgent application) | Days to 4 weeks | Filed before or alongside recognition. Court may act ex parte in genuine emergencies. Bond typically required. |
Courts in Madrid and Barcelona tend to carry heavier caseloads, which can extend timelines at the recognition stage. Provincial courts may process uncontested exequatur applications more quickly. The creditor’s ability to identify and locate specific assets significantly accelerates the execution phase.
The costs to enforce a judgment in Spain combine fixed procedural charges with variable professional fees. The table below provides indicative ranges current as of 2026. All figures should be confirmed with local counsel, as they vary by claim value, court location, and case complexity.
| Item | Typical Range | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Court filing fees | €0 – €1,500 | Many recognition filings attract modest administrative fees. Legal entities may incur tasas judiciales depending on claim amount. |
| Procurador (court representative) | €150 – €600 | Regulated fee scale based on claim value. Mandatory for most court proceedings. |
| Abogado (legal fees) | €2,000 – €20,000+ | From fixed‑fee packages for straightforward recognitions to hourly billing for contested or high‑value matters. |
| Certified sworn translations | €30 – €150 per page | Rates vary by source language, document complexity, and urgency. |
| Apostille / consular legalisation | €20 – €200 per document | Depends on origin country and whether obtained in person or through agents. |
| Enforcement execution fees | €200 – €5,000+ | Depends on asset type, number of enforcement actions, and whether real estate auction is required. |
| Expert valuations / forensic charges | €500 – €10,000+ | For asset tracing, real estate valuation, or forensic accounting. |
| Insolvency / ancillary proceeding costs | Variable | If enforcement triggers or interfaces with insolvency proceedings, additional court fees and administrator costs apply. |
Spanish courts have discretion to award procedural costs (costas procesales) against the losing party. If the debtor’s opposition to recognition is dismissed entirely, the creditor may recover a substantial portion of its legal fees. However, cost recovery is not guaranteed, and the court’s assessment of recoverable abogado fees may be lower than fees actually incurred.
No wholesale statutory reform to Spain’s enforcement framework has taken effect in 2025 or 2026. However, several practical developments affect the landscape for parties seeking to enforce a foreign judgment in Spain:
Practitioners should review the most recent practice notes and any post‑2024 court rulings relevant to their specific enforcement route before filing.
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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