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Understanding how to file for bankruptcy in Spain is essential for any company director, CFO, or general counsel confronting financial distress. Spanish insolvency law centres on a single collective proceeding known as the concurso de acreedores, the formal procedure through which an insolvent debtor’s assets are administered, creditors are paid in statutory order, and the company either restructures or liquidates. The process is governed by Real Decreto Legislativo 1/2020 (the Texto Refundido de la Ley Concursal), as substantially reformed by Ley 16/2022, and is filed before Spain’s specialised commercial courts (Juzgados de lo Mercantil).
This guide sets out every stage of the insolvency procedure in Spain, from eligibility checks and the director’s critical two‑month duty to file, through documents, timeline, costs, and the changes directors must be aware of heading into 2026.
A concurso de acreedores is Spain’s unified insolvency proceeding. It applies to any debtor, whether a natural person carrying on business activity, a limited company (sociedad limitada), a corporation (sociedad anónima), or another legal entity with legal personality, that cannot regularly meet its payment obligations as they fall due. The proceeding can be initiated by the debtor itself (voluntary concurso), by one or more creditors (necessary concurso), or, in certain circumstances, by the Public Prosecutor. The statutory framework is consolidated in Real Decreto Legislativo 1/2020, published in BOE no. 127, and its major reform under Ley 16/2022.
Once declared, the concurso places the debtor’s assets under judicial supervision, halts most individual enforcement actions, and appoints an insolvency practitioner (administrador concursal) to oversee operations. The aim is to preserve value for all creditors while giving the debtor an opportunity to restructure, or, where restructuring is not viable, to ensure orderly liquidation.
The concurso de acreedores in Spain can resolve in two principal ways:
The distinction matters because a convenio preserves the business, jobs, and commercial relationships, whereas liquidation ends them. Directors should seek specialist corporate insolvency advice early to maximise the chance of a restructuring outcome.
Before filing a petition, it is necessary to confirm that the statutory preconditions are satisfied. The Texto Refundido de la Ley Concursal establishes two insolvency states that can trigger a concurso:
Any legal person with two or more creditors whose debts have fallen due and remain unpaid may be subject to a concurso. The petition is filed before the Juzgado de lo Mercantil corresponding to the debtor’s registered office (domicilio social). For foreign companies operating through a branch or establishment in Spain, jurisdiction typically lies with the commercial court of the place where the branch is registered, subject to the EU Insolvency Regulation for cross‑border cases.
Spanish law imposes a strict obligation on directors: once a director knows, or should have known, that the company is in a state of actual insolvency, the director must request the declaration of concurso within two months. Failure to comply with this two‑month duty to file can result in the concurso being classified as culpable (concurso culpable), exposing directors to personal liability for the company’s shortfall in assets. This is one of the most consequential deadlines in Spanish corporate law.
The following numbered steps outline the insolvency procedure in Spain from the moment financial distress is identified through to the conclusion of the concurso. Each step identifies the responsible actor and the typical timeframe.
The company’s directors and CFO, supported by external counsel, should carry out a formal assessment of the company’s financial position. This involves reviewing cash‑flow projections, current liabilities, and the maturity of outstanding debts to determine whether the company is in actual or imminent insolvency. If insolvency is confirmed, the board of directors must pass a resolution authorising the filing of the concurso petition. Board minutes should record the factual basis for the decision. This step should be completed within 0–7 days of identifying distress, given the two‑month duty to file.
Before commencing formal proceedings, directors may explore voluntary restructuring or pre‑concurso communication with creditors. The Ley Concursal provides for a structured pre‑insolvency framework, including the notification to the court that negotiations with creditors are under way. Filing this notification can provide temporary protection from creditor enforcement and, importantly, may suspend the running of the two‑month duty to file while negotiations proceed. This phase typically lasts 7–30 days but is not mandatory.
The debtor’s lawyer files the concurso petition at the Juzgado de lo Mercantil of the company’s registered office. The petition must include the signed declaration of insolvency, the supporting documentation (see the documents table below), and evidence establishing the debtor’s inability to meet obligations. In a creditor‑initiated (necessary) concurso, the petitioning creditor must prove the existence of its claim and the debtor’s insolvency. Court registry processing typically takes 1–7 days after submission.
The commercial court examines the petition for completeness and legal sufficiency. If it is satisfied, the judge issues an order (auto) declaring the concurso and appointing an administrador concursal (insolvency practitioner). This order is published in the Registro Público Concursal and, where required, in the BOE. The administrator takes control of, or supervises, the debtor’s operations, depending on whether the concurso is voluntary or necessary. This phase generally takes 1–30 days after filing, depending on court workload.
Once the declaration is published, creditors have a statutory window to file their claims with the insolvency administrator. The administrator reviews and classifies each claim (privileged, ordinary, or subordinated) and compiles the definitive creditor list and inventory of the debtor’s assets. A creditors’ meeting may be convened. The claims window typically runs for one to two months from the date of publication in the Registro Público Concursal, though the exact period is set by the court in its declaration order.
With the creditor list finalised, the proceeding moves to its resolution phase. The debtor (or, in some cases, creditors) may propose a convenio, a restructuring plan setting out debt reductions, payment extensions, or both. Creditors vote on the proposal; if approved and judicially sanctioned, the company continues trading under the convenio’s terms. If no convenio is reached, or if the debtor requests liquidation, the court opens the liquidation phase. The administrator then realises assets and distributes proceeds in statutory priority order. Liquidation can last from several months to over twelve months in complex cases; the judge may set time limits under the reformed procedural rules.
| Step | Who Does It | Typical Duration |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Internal insolvency assessment and board resolution | Company directors / CFO / external counsel | 0–7 days |
| 2. Pre‑concurso negotiation with creditors (optional) | Company + creditors / advisors | 7–30 days |
| 3. File petition at the Juzgado de lo Mercantil | Debtor (or creditor) via company lawyer | Filing day; court registry processing 1–7 days |
| 4. Court declares concurso and appoints administrador concursal | Commercial court (Juzgado de lo Mercantil) | 1–30 days after filing |
| 5. Creditors file claims; administrator compiles list | Creditors + administrador concursal | 1–2 months from publication |
| 6. Convenio negotiation or liquidation | Debtor / creditors / insolvency practitioner | Months (convenio); months to 12+ months (liquidation) |
Incomplete or poorly organised documentation is one of the most common reasons for delays in commercial court filing. The table below sets out the documents needed for a concurso de acreedores in Spain, who issues them, and key notes on format.
| Document | Notes |
|---|---|
| Petition form and signed declaration of insolvency facts | Prepared by company lawyer and directors; signed original. Court form requirements may vary by province. |
| Company bylaws and recent excerpt from the Companies Register (Registro Mercantil) | Issued by the Registro Mercantil; certified copy or official extract. |
| Board minutes and power‑of‑attorney authorising filing | Internal company minutes, signed by the board secretary. Must evidence the resolution to file. |
| Audited accounts or latest financial statements and management accounts | Issued by the company or its auditor; include balance sheet, profit‑and‑loss account, cash‑flow statement, and explanatory report. |
| Creditor list (names, addresses, amounts) | Company‑prepared; include contact details, invoice references, and supporting contracts. |
| Employee list and payroll records | Company HR records; required because employee claims receive statutory priority. |
| Tax and social security certificates | Issued by Agencia Tributaria and Tesorería General de la Seguridad Social. Often requested by the court. |
| Lease agreements, security agreements, and title deeds | Company files and third‑party records, where applicable. |
| Proof of publication (Registro Público Concursal / BOE notice) | Arranged by the court registry after declaration; the debtor should verify publication promptly. |
After appointment, the administrador concursal will typically request additional materials, including detailed contract schedules, litigation records, inter‑company loan agreements, asset valuations, and insurance policies. Companies should begin collating these items at the assessment stage (Step 1) to avoid delays once the proceeding is under way.
Creditors filing claims during the claims window must provide evidence of the debt, typically invoices, contracts, delivery notes, court judgments, or notarised documents. Claims should be addressed to the insolvency administrator within the deadline set by the court’s declaration order, and creditors should retain copies for their own records. Late claims risk being classified as subordinated, significantly reducing the creditor’s recovery.
Timing is decisive. The table below consolidates the key deadlines that apply throughout the concurso de acreedores.
| Deadline | Who It Applies To | Time Allowed |
|---|---|---|
| Two‑month duty to file | Company directors | Within 2 months of knowledge (or constructive knowledge) of actual insolvency |
| Pre‑concurso negotiation notification | Debtor / advisors | Must be filed before the two‑month duty expires; provides temporary protection |
| Court examination and declaration | Juzgado de lo Mercantil | 1–30 days from petition filing (varies by court) |
| Creditor claims window | Creditors | Typically 1–2 months from publication in the Registro Público Concursal |
| Administrator’s report (inventory and creditor list) | Administrador concursal | Statutory period set by court; typically within 2 months of appointment |
| Overall procedural target | Court / all parties | Reforms introduced a target maximum of 12 months, though extensions are possible |
The overall duration of a concurso de acreedores varies significantly depending on the complexity of the case, the number of creditors, and the court’s caseload. Simple cases may conclude within six to eight months. Complex proceedings, particularly those involving contested claims, multiple asset classes, or cross‑border elements, can extend well beyond twelve months. Industry observers expect that the procedural reforms under Ley 16/2022, which emphasised faster timelines and judicial case management, will continue to shorten average durations as courts adapt their practices.
Directors and companies should budget for several categories of cost when considering how to file for bankruptcy in Spain. Because amounts depend on case size, court location, and professional market rates, the figures below are illustrative categories rather than fixed sums. Amounts should be verified with the relevant court and professional advisors before filing.
| Item | Typical Amount | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Court registry / filing fees | Variable, verify with Juzgado fee schedule | May depend on province; some filings carry no fixed fee but incur administrative costs. |
| Insolvency administrator (administrador concursal) fees | Variable, set by the court under a regulated schedule | Remuneration is determined by the judge; typically one of the largest cost items. |
| Legal fees (company counsel) | Market rates (fixed fee or hourly) | Varies by firm and case complexity. |
| Publication / registry notice fees | Small administrative fees | For publication in the Registro Público Concursal and, where applicable, the BOE. |
| Accounting / valuation reports | Variable, depends on asset base | Expert reports may be required in convenio proposals or during liquidation. |
| Employee priority payments (if applicable) | Statutory amounts | Outstanding payroll and social security contributions; these enjoy statutory priority and must be addressed early. |
Tax implications also deserve attention. Debt write‑downs agreed in a convenio may have corporate income tax consequences, and VAT adjustments may be available for creditors whose claims are formally recognised as uncollectable. Directors should engage specialist tax advisors alongside insolvency counsel. For a deeper breakdown of typical fee ranges, see the costs deep‑dive for concurso de acreedores (forthcoming).
The Spanish insolvency framework has been in a period of consolidation following the major reform enacted by Ley 16/2022, which transposed the EU Restructuring Directive and substantially amended the Texto Refundido de la Ley Concursal. In 2025–2026, the key practical developments have centred on the re‑affirmation and enforcement of existing obligations rather than new legislation. Official guidance published on administracion. gob. es has restated the director’s two‑month duty to file and clarified the interaction between pre‑insolvency negotiation frameworks and the running of that duty. Courts have continued to apply the procedural time targets introduced by the 2022 reform, with early indications suggesting that average declaration timelines have shortened in larger commercial courts.
The consolidated text of Real Decreto Legislativo 1/2020, as updated on the BOE, remains the single reference statute for practitioners.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Oscar Folchi Riera at Unión Legal – Abogados y Economistas, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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