Our Expert in Spain
No results available
Understanding how to conduct an internal investigation in Spain is now a core competency for every compliance officer, in‑house counsel and HR director operating in the country. Since Law 2/2023 (Ley 2/2023, de 20 de febrero, reguladora de la protección de las personas que informen sobre infracciones normativas y de lucha contra la corrupción) came into force, entities that meet the statutory thresholds must maintain an internal information channel and respond to reports within strict deadlines, acknowledgement within 7 calendar days, and a substantive outcome within 3 months. This guide walks through each phase of the investigation process, from triage to post‑investigation remediation, and flags the data‑protection limits, criminal‑proceedings suspension risks, and document‑preservation requirements that trip up even experienced teams.
It is current as of June 2026 and reflects the enforcement posture of the Autoridad Independiente de Protección del Informante (A. A. I. ) and the Agencia Española de Protección de Datos (AEPD).
An internal investigation in Spain is a structured, fact‑finding procedure that a company initiates when it becomes aware, through a whistleblower report, employee complaint, audit irregularity or regulatory inquiry, of possible misconduct, fraud, or a breach of legal or compliance obligations. Its purpose is to establish facts, assess liability, remediate harm, and, where required, report findings to the competent authority.
Under Law 2/2023, the following entities must implement an internal information system (canal interno de información):
Companies with between 50 and 249 employees may share resources for the channel, but each entity remains individually responsible for its own investigation process and compliance with statutory deadlines.
The designated “responsible person” (responsable del sistema) must be a senior officer or body with independence and autonomy. In practice, this is usually the compliance officer, a compliance committee, or, for smaller entities, the board secretary. The decision to involve external counsel should be taken at intake whenever the report concerns potential criminal conduct, involves senior management, or carries a risk of evidence destruction. External counsel adds legal‑professional privilege protections and specialist investigative experience, particularly in white‑collar and data‑protection matters.
Law 2/2023 protects a broad range of informants. Coverage is not limited to employees: it extends to self‑employed workers, shareholders, members of governing bodies, volunteers, trainees, job applicants, and any person who has obtained information about a breach in a work or professional context. Third‑party contractors and suppliers may also use the internal channel. This wide scope means that the investigation team must be prepared to handle reports from individuals who sit outside the conventional employer–employee relationship.
Engage specialised external counsel from Day 0 if:
Before launching interviews, the investigator must complete conflict‑of‑interest checks, confirm the role of the Data Protection Officer (DPO), and, where applicable, consult with worker representatives as required by the applicable collective bargaining agreement (CBA). These prerequisites are not optional: failure to observe CBA consultation obligations can render evidence inadmissible and expose the company to labour‑law claims.
The following investigation steps for Spain reflect the statutory framework of Law 2/2023, AEPD data‑protection guidance, and established practitioner best practice. Each step specifies who acts, the target timeframe, and the key output. The summary table below provides an at‑a‑glance timeline; detailed guidance follows in the numbered sub‑sections.
| Step | Who Does It | Typical Duration |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Intake & acknowledge report | Compliance officer / designated responsible person (or external channel operator) | Acknowledge within 7 calendar days (Law 2/2023) |
| 2. Scope & investigative plan | Lead investigator (compliance / in‑house counsel) ± external counsel | 1–2 weeks |
| 3. Evidence collection & preservation | IT / forensics + DPO + external forensic provider (if needed) | Preservation action within 24–72 hours; collection ongoing through weeks 1–6 |
| 4. Witness interviews & statements | Investigator (with HR / legal present if needed) | 2–6 weeks (depending on scope) |
| 5. Analysis & draft findings | Investigator + external counsel (if engaged) | 2–4 weeks |
| 6. Final report, remediation & closure | Board / HR + external counsel (if necessary) | Conclude within 3 months from receipt; may extend to 6 months if exceptionally complex |
| 7. Post‑investigation follow‑up | Compliance officer / board | Ongoing |
Record the date and channel through which the report was received. Assign a unique case identifier and open the case log. Perform an immediate confidentiality assessment: restrict access to the report on a strict need‑to‑know basis. Run conflict‑of‑interest checks on every person who will touch the case, including the responsible person and any proposed investigator.
Determine urgency. Reports alleging imminent evidence destruction, ongoing harm, or serious criminal conduct should be escalated to external counsel and, where necessary, the board within 24 hours.
Law 2/2023 requires the company to acknowledge receipt to the informant within 7 calendar days. The acknowledgement must confirm that the report has been received and outline the procedure that will follow. A sample acknowledgement:
“We confirm receipt of your report dated [date], assigned reference [ID]. Your report will be assessed confidentially in accordance with Law 2/2023. You will be informed of the outcome within three months.”
Output: completed intake form, case log entry, acknowledgement letter, and any immediate protective measures (e.g., preserving access to systems, restricting the subject’s ability to delete data).
Draft a written investigative plan that defines:
At this stage, prepare the chain‑of‑custody template that will accompany every piece of evidence from collection through to any eventual court proceeding. If the scope indicates that the matter may cross into criminal territory, the plan should include a decision point for suspension for criminal proceedings (see the decision‑point box below).
Output: written investigative plan, chain‑of‑custody template, privilege protocol.
Evidence preservation in Spain must begin immediately, ideally within 24–72 hours of intake. Practical steps include:
Data protection constraints apply throughout this phase. The AEPD’s guidance on data protection in labour relations requires that data collection be proportionate and limited to what is strictly necessary. If the investigation involves large‑scale processing of personal data or monitoring of employee communications, a Data Protection Impact Assessment (DPIA) may be required. The legal basis for processing is typically the employer’s legitimate interest or a legal obligation, but the scope must be documented in a record of processing activities.
Output: evidence log, forensic images with hash verification, sealed document repository, data processing record.
Plan interviews in a logical sequence, typically starting with peripheral witnesses and working inward to the subject of the investigation. Key considerations for conducting interviews in Spain include:
Output: interview notes, signed statements (where permissible), updated evidence log.
Collate all evidence and map it against the legal and factual scope defined in Step 2. Assess the level of misconduct and determine whether the conduct amounts to a disciplinary infraction, a civil liability issue, a criminal offence, or a combination. Consider:
Output: draft investigative report, preliminary recommendations.
Present the final report to the decision‑making body (typically the board, a compliance committee, or HR, depending on the nature of the misconduct). Approve and implement the remedial plan. Communicate the outcome to the informant within the statutory deadline, Law 2/2023 requires the internal procedure to be completed within a maximum of 3 months from receipt of the report, with an exceptional extension to 6 months where justified by the complexity of the matter.
If the investigation reveals conduct that must be reported to a public authority (regulatory breach, criminal offence), make the disclosure through external counsel. Preserve the investigation file for the applicable retention period, but be mindful of data‑protection limits: personal data collected during the investigation should not be retained longer than necessary and must be deleted or anonymised once the retention period expires.
Output: final report, remediation log, outcome notification to informant, authority disclosures (if applicable).
Close the case log but schedule a follow‑up review at 6 and 12 months to confirm that remedial measures are working. Update the company’s compliance programme, code of conduct, and training materials to reflect lessons learned. Record disciplinary outcomes (anonymised where appropriate) for future reference.
Decision Point, If Criminal Proceedings Are Opened: Where a parallel criminal investigation or prosecution is opened by a Spanish court or the Fiscalía (public prosecutor), the company must exercise extreme caution. Industry observers expect that continuing active witness interviews or evidence gathering can prejudice the criminal proceedings and expose the company to allegations of obstruction or evidence contamination. The prudent course is to suspend all non‑essential investigative activity immediately, preserve evidence in sealed form under external counsel’s direction, and coordinate further steps with criminal defence counsel. A sample internal suspension notice: “Effective immediately, all investigative activity under case [ID] is suspended pending coordination with external counsel in light of criminal proceedings. All evidence must be preserved in its current form.
No interviews may be conducted without prior written authorisation.
The following checklist sets out the documents needed for an internal investigation. Maintain all items in a secure, access‑controlled repository. Data protection internal investigation requirements under the AEPD mandate that personal data is processed only to the extent necessary and retained only for as long as required.
| Document | Notes |
|---|---|
| Intake form / report copy | From whistleblower or complainant; digital copy with timestamp; kept under strict access control. |
| Case log / evidence log | Investigator‑maintained; includes chain‑of‑custody entries for each item (forensic images, export logs, interview records). |
| Forensic images / export files | Created by IT / forensics vendor; preserve original hash values; store offline; record every person who accessed them. |
| Relevant emails and documents | Exported to sealed folder; maintain a redaction log if the materials contain third‑party personal data. |
| Witness interview notes / signed statements | Contemporaneous notes; signed statements where lawful; note any limits imposed by the applicable CBA or data‑protection law. |
| HR records (contracts, prior warnings) | HR to provide date‑stamped copies; exercise particular caution with sensitive health data. |
| Policies and previous compliance audits | Copy of applicable compliance programme, code of conduct, and any prior audit or monitoring reports relevant to the allegation. |
| External counsel work product | Maintain privileged files separately from the main case file; keep a log of privileged communications. |
| Whistleblower acknowledgement and outcome letters | Acknowledgement within 7 calendar days; outcome communicated within 3 months (Law 2/2023). Retain copies in the case file. |
| Data processing records and DPIA (if applicable) | Record the legal basis, categories of data processed, recipients, and retention periods. Conduct a DPIA if large‑scale monitoring is involved (AEPD guidance). |
Where the investigation involves employees covered by a collective bargaining agreement, check whether the CBA imposes additional documentation requirements, for example, mandatory notification to the works council before initiating a disciplinary investigation, or restrictions on how interview records may be used.
The internal investigation timeline is driven by two sets of deadlines: the statutory limits under Law 2/2023 and the practical operational targets that an effective investigation demands.
Statutory deadlines (Law 2/2023):
Practical operational targets:
Missing the statutory deadlines does not extinguish the obligation to investigate, but it exposes the company to administrative sanctions under Law 2/2023 and oversight action by the A.A.I.. It may also undermine the credibility of the investigation if the matter proceeds to litigation or regulatory enforcement.
The costs of an internal investigation in Spain vary significantly depending on scope, complexity, and whether external providers are engaged. The table below provides indicative market ranges. All figures should be treated as estimates and confirmed with providers before engagement.
| Item | Typical Amount (Spain, Indicative) | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Internal investigator (in‑house time) | Salary‑based / opportunity cost | Internal charge allocation, no external invoice. Factor in diverted compliance‑team capacity. |
| External counsel (scoping, privileged report) | €1,500–€3,500 per day | Small/medium probe; complex white‑collar matters are higher. Engage specialised criminal/compliance counsel for privilege. Fees vary by firm and complexity. |
| Forensic IT (imaging + analysis) | €1,000–€10,000+ | Dependent on number of devices and complexity. GDPR‑compliant ESI (electronically stored information) review increases costs. |
| External HR / investigative specialist | €600–€1,500 per day | Interview support, CBA navigation, translation coordination. |
| Administrative costs (storage, translations) | €200–€2,000 | Volume‑ and language‑dependent. Multi‑language investigations at the higher end. |
Investigation costs are generally treated as a deductible business expense for corporate‑tax purposes, but the treatment of specific items (e.g., legal fees related to criminal defence, penalties) may differ. Confirm with the company’s tax advisors before allocating budget.
Since Law 2/2023 entered into force, the operational landscape for internal investigations in Spain has shifted in several important ways. Compliance officers should note the following developments as of mid‑2026:
Even experienced compliance teams encounter procedural traps when conducting an internal investigation in Spain. The following pitfalls are the most frequently observed:
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Jordi Sot Ball-Llosera at Toda & Nel-lo, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
posted 26 minutes ago
posted 27 minutes ago
posted 53 minutes ago
posted 54 minutes ago
posted 1 hour ago
posted 2 hours ago
posted 2 hours ago
posted 2 hours ago
posted 2 hours ago
posted 3 hours ago
posted 3 hours ago
posted 3 hours ago
No results available
Find the right Legal Expert for your business
Sign up for the latest legal briefings and news within Global Law Experts’ community, as well as a whole host of features, editorial and conference updates direct to your email inbox.
Naturally you can unsubscribe at any time.
Global Law Experts is dedicated to providing exceptional legal services to clients around the world. With a vast network of highly skilled and experienced lawyers, we are committed to delivering innovative and tailored solutions to meet the diverse needs of our clients in various jurisdictions.
Global Law Experts is dedicated to providing exceptional legal services to clients around the world. With a vast network of highly skilled and experienced lawyers, we are committed to delivering innovative and tailored solutions to meet the diverse needs of our clients in various jurisdictions.
Send welcome message