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Foreign investment screening in Spain has become one of the most consequential gating items for cross-border M&A transactions closing in 2026. Under the regime anchored in Article 7 bis of Law 19/2003 and implemented through Royal Decree 571/2023, certain acquisitions by non-Spanish investors require prior authorisation from the Council of Ministers before completion. The transitional regime that extends prior-authorisation obligations to EU and EFTA investors, originally a COVID-era emergency measure, has been renewed once more through Decree‑Law 1/2025, keeping those expanded rules in force until 31 December 2026.
This guide walks deal teams, in-house counsel and private-equity professionals through every practical step: who must file, which sectors trigger scrutiny, how to structure an SPA to manage approval risk, and what realistic timelines to build into transaction timetables.
Spain’s FDI screening regime draws its authority from a layered set of national and EU instruments. At the EU level, Regulation (EU) 2019/452 established a cooperation mechanism for screening foreign direct investments across Member States. Spain transposed and expanded on this framework through domestic legislation that gives the government broad discretion to block or condition transactions affecting public order, public security or public health.
| Instrument | Date / Status | Effect |
|---|---|---|
| Article 7 bis, Law 19/2003 (as amended) | In force (primary legal basis) | Establishes the obligation to obtain prior authorisation for certain foreign direct investments in Spain. |
| Royal Decree 571/2023 | In force since 2023 | Implements the screening mechanism: defines thresholds, sensitive sectors, filing procedures, documentation and review timelines. |
| Decree‑Law 1/2025 | In force; extends transitional regime to 31 December 2026 | Maintains the obligation for EU/EFTA investors to seek prior authorisation in sensitive sectors, a regime originally introduced as a temporary COVID-era measure. |
| EU Regulation 2019/452 | In force at EU level | Provides the cooperation framework between Member States and the European Commission on FDI screening; sets out the types of factors to consider (security, public order). |
The primary enforcing authority is the Directorate-General for International Trade and Investment within Spain’s Ministry of Industry, Trade and Tourism. Applications for prior authorisation are assessed by a coordinating committee (the Junta de Inversiones Exteriores) before being escalated to the Council of Ministers for a final decision. The Council of Ministers holds exclusive competence to approve, condition or block a transaction. In practice, the Directorate-General serves as the initial point of contact and manages the pre-filing consultation process, which experienced practitioners strongly recommend using before submitting a formal application.
Prior authorisation under Spain’s foreign investment rules is triggered when three cumulative conditions are met: the investor qualifies as a “foreign” investor, the target operates in a sensitive sector, and the acquisition meets certain control or shareholding thresholds. Understanding each element, and how they interact, is essential for determining whether a planned cross-border M&A transaction in Spain will face screening.
The regime distinguishes between two broad categories of investor, with the transitional extension under Decree‑Law 1/2025 blurring a line that was once more clear-cut.
| Investor Category | Key Thresholds | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Non‑EU / Non‑EFTA investors | Acquisition of 10 % or more of share capital, or effective participation in the management or control of a Spanish company in a sensitive sector. | This is the permanent regime. It applies regardless of deal size and covers indirect acquisitions (e.g., through intermediate holding companies). |
| EU / EFTA investors (transitional regime, to 31 Dec 2026) | Same thresholds, 10 % shareholding or control, where the target operates in a sensitive sector. | Under Decree‑Law 1/2025, these investors remain subject to prior authorisation in Spain until 31 December 2026. Deal teams must check the ultimate parent’s nationality and whether any non-EU entity exercises de facto control over the investing vehicle. |
| Spanish or purely domestic entities | Not subject to the foreign investor test. | Still subject to Spanish merger control (CNMC) and any applicable sectoral licence requirements. |
A critical nuance: the screening applies to the ultimate beneficial owner. An EU-domiciled fund whose limited partners are predominantly non-EU sovereign wealth funds, or whose general partner is ultimately controlled by a non-EU entity, may be treated as a non-EU investor for screening purposes. Deal teams must conduct thorough ownership-chain analysis early in due diligence.
Royal Decree 571/2023, aligned with the factors set out in EU Regulation 2019/452, defines the sectors that trigger screening. The list includes but is not limited to:
Industry observers expect the practical scope of “sensitive” to continue widening, particularly around AI, cloud infrastructure and biotech supply chains. Even where a target’s primary activity is not listed, ancillary operations, such as holding personal-data sets or supplying a defence contractor, can bring it within scope.
FDI screening and merger control in Spain are separate regimes administered by different authorities, but they frequently apply to the same transaction. Understanding how they interact, and sequencing filings correctly, can prevent costly delays in cross-border M&A.
The Spanish competition authority, the Comisión Nacional de los Mercados y la Competencia (CNMC), reviews transactions that meet certain turnover and market-share thresholds under the Defence of Competition Act. A transaction may simultaneously trigger:
| Regime | Filing Trigger | Decision Authority |
|---|---|---|
| FDI screening | Foreign investor + sensitive sector + control / 10 % threshold | Council of Ministers (on recommendation of coordinating committee) |
| Merger control | Turnover and market-share thresholds under Defence of Competition Act | CNMC (Phase I / Phase II); Council of Ministers in public-interest referrals |
| Sectoral approvals | Sector-specific licence or ownership-change notification rules | Relevant sectoral regulator |
In practice, many deal teams file FDI and merger control applications in parallel, since the two review processes run independently. However, the SPA should be structured so that closing is conditioned on obtaining all required clearances. Where the transaction is politically sensitive or involves a high-profile target, early informal engagement with both the Directorate-General and the CNMC is advisable to identify any coordination issues.
This section is the operational core for deal teams planning a filing under Spain’s foreign investment screening regime. Assembling a complete filing at the outset, rather than responding to information requests after submission, is the single most effective way to shorten review times.
| Stage | Statutory Period | Practical Range |
|---|---|---|
| Pre-filing consultation (informal, optional but recommended) | No statutory deadline | 2–4 weeks |
| Formal filing accepted / completeness check | Up to 30 business days from submission | 2–6 weeks (information requests reset the clock) |
| Phase I review (standard assessment) | 30 business days from complete filing | 6–10 weeks in practice |
| Phase II review (in-depth, if triggered) | Additional 60 business days | 3–5 months from Phase II opening |
| Council of Ministers decision | Included within Phase I / Phase II window | Decision typically follows committee recommendation within 2–4 weeks |
| Conditional approval, remedy negotiation | No separate statutory window; absorbed into review | Can add 4–8 weeks to overall timeline if substantive remedies are required |
Simple-case scenario: A non-sensitive acquisition by an EU investor where the transitional regime applies but the filing is straightforward might clear in approximately 8–12 weeks from formal filing. Complex-case scenario: A non-EU sovereign-linked fund acquiring a majority stake in a Spanish semiconductor or AI company could face a combined Phase I and Phase II review lasting 5–7 months. Conditional-approval scenario: Where the government requires behavioural or structural remedies (continued supply obligations, board-composition requirements, data-localisation commitments), early indication suggests an additional 1–2 months for negotiation and formalisation.
Protective SPA drafting is essential wherever a cross-border M&A transaction in Spain may require FDI prior authorisation. The goal is to allocate risk fairly between buyer and seller while preserving deal certainty.
The following clause outlines are illustrative and should be adapted to the specific transaction with qualified legal counsel.
Technology and life sciences are the two sectors attracting the most intense scrutiny under Spain’s FDI screening regime in 2026. Transactions in these areas require enhanced disclosure, earlier engagement with authorities and carefully designed mitigation strategies.
Acquisitions involving artificial intelligence, semiconductor design, cloud and SaaS platforms with cross-border data flows, and cybersecurity companies face particularly close examination. The authorities are focused on potential risks to data sovereignty, continuity of supply to European customers, and technology leakage to non-allied jurisdictions.
Effective mitigations include:
Life sciences investment in Spain, particularly pharmaceutical manufacturing, clinical-trial data repositories, biotech with pandemic-preparedness relevance and medical-device production, triggers screening because of the supply-chain security dimension. The Spanish authorities assess whether a change of ownership could disrupt the supply of essential medicines or allow sensitive clinical data to leave the EU.
Practical mitigations include:
| Sector | Additional Filing Documents | Common Remedies Imposed |
|---|---|---|
| Technology (AI, semiconductors, cloud, cybersecurity) | IP register and patent portfolio; data-flow diagrams; government/defence customer list; cybersecurity audit results | Data-localisation commitments; IP ring-fencing; board-composition requirements; ongoing reporting obligations |
| Life Sciences (pharma, biotech, medical devices) | Manufacturing-site inventory; supply agreements with public health system; clinical-trial data location map; regulatory-approval status per product | Supply-continuity guarantees; capex commitments; restrictions on transferring clinical data outside the EU; retention of key personnel |
Completing a transaction that requires prior authorisation in Spain without obtaining it carries significant legal risk. The Council of Ministers may declare the transaction void, require divestiture or impose conditions retroactively. Administrative fines can be levied for failure to comply with filing obligations, and the amounts can be substantial depending on the value of the transaction and the nature of the infringement.
Additionally, Spain’s regime includes a post-closing declaration obligation: once an investment has been completed (with or without prior authorisation, depending on whether the transaction fell within a mandatory-filing category), investors are generally required to file a declaration with the Investment Register within one month. Failure to comply with this declaration obligation is itself an administrative infringement. Industry observers expect enforcement activity to intensify in 2026, particularly in the technology and life-sciences sectors, as the government develops institutional capacity and inter-ministerial coordination under Royal Decree 571/2023.
The short answer is: closing before obtaining FDI prior authorisation where one is required is unlawful and exposes both parties to enforcement action. In transactions where it is uncertain whether screening applies, a voluntary pre-filing consultation with the Directorate-General is the safest course. The decision matrix below provides initial orientation, but every transaction should be assessed on its specific facts.
| Investor Type | Is Prior Filing / Authorisation Typically Required? | Practical Note |
|---|---|---|
| Non‑EU / Non‑EFTA investors | Often required if stake ≥ 10 % in a sensitive sector or if control thresholds are met. | High risk, file early; build conditions precedent into the SPA and allow 3–7 months in the timetable. |
| EU / EFTA investors (transitional regime, to 31 Dec 2026) | May still trigger prior authorisation under the extended transitional rules (Decree‑Law 1/2025). | Check whether the government has invoked notification obligations; verify investor structure and the nationality of the ultimate parent. |
| Spanish or domestic entities | Usually not subject to the foreign-investor test. | Assess sectoral licence requirements and merger control thresholds (CNMC). FDI screening does not apply, but other clearances may still be needed. |
For emergency or time-sensitive transactions, such as distressed-asset acquisitions or public takeover bids, the Directorate-General can, in exceptional circumstances, expedite the review. Early, informal engagement with the authority is critical in these situations. Deal teams should also consider whether structuring the acquisition in phases (an initial minority stake below the threshold, followed by a call option) might allow interim closing while the full approval process runs, though such structures carry their own regulatory risks and should be designed with specialist advice.
Spain’s FDI screening regime is no longer a peripheral compliance consideration, it is a central element of transaction planning for any cross-border M&A deal involving a Spanish target in a sensitive sector. The extension of the transitional regime for EU/EFTA investors to 31 December 2026 under Decree‑Law 1/2025 means that virtually all foreign acquirers must conduct a screening analysis at the outset of due diligence. Getting it right requires early ownership-chain mapping, thorough sector analysis, proactive engagement with the Directorate-General, and SPA drafting that allocates approval risk clearly between buyer and seller. The practical timelines, from 8 weeks in straightforward cases to 7 months in complex reviews, must be built into deal timetables from day one.
With the right preparation and specialist guidance, FDI screening need not derail a deal; but ignoring it, or treating it as an afterthought, can prove extremely costly. Deal teams considering acquisitions in Spain should seek specialist M&A legal advice at the earliest opportunity to assess filing obligations and structure transactions accordingly.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Jordi Casas at Osborne Clarke, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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