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If you hold a foreign court judgment or arbitral award and the debtor has assets in Spain, understanding how to enforce a foreign judgment in Spain is critical to recovering what you are owed. Spain operates two parallel enforcement regimes, one for foreign court judgments (the exequatur procedure governed by Law 29/2015 on international legal cooperation in civil matters) and one for foreign arbitral awards (governed primarily by the 1958 New York Convention and Spain’s Arbitration Act). This guide sets out the full enforcement procedure Spain‑side: eligibility criteria, the step‑by‑step filing and recognition process, the documents needed to enforce a judgment in Spain, realistic timelines, and the costs to enforce a judgment in Spain.
It is current as of June 2026.
Spain permits the recognition of a foreign judgment in Spain provided the decision satisfies domestic and treaty‑based conditions. The applicable legal framework depends on the origin of the decision:
In all cases, enforcement ultimately proceeds through the Spanish execution framework set out in the Ley de Enjuiciamiento Civil (LEC), with Article 549 LEC specifying the requirements for an enforcement application once recognition has been obtained. This means the enforcement procedure Spain timeline involves two distinct phases: first, recognition (or exequatur); second, execution against assets.
Any creditor, award holder, or their legal successor with a legitimate interest may initiate the process. Both natural persons and companies, including foreign‑incorporated entities, have standing, provided they can demonstrate title to the claim.
The foreign decision must be final and enforceable in its country of origin. Interim or provisional foreign orders are generally not eligible for recognition, although Spanish courts may grant their own provisional measures in support of pending recognition proceedings. For arbitral awards, the award must be binding on the parties and not subject to a pending set‑aside application in the seat of arbitration (or the applicant must explain why any such application should not bar enforcement).
Under Law 29/2015, a Spanish court may refuse recognition of a foreign judgment on limited grounds:
Refusal grounds for arbitral awards under the New York Convention mirror these closely, with additional grounds relating to the invalidity of the arbitration agreement, excess of arbitral mandate, and improper composition of the tribunal.
The original judgment creditor, the award creditor, or any party who can demonstrate a lawful assignment or succession of the claim may file an enforcement application. Foreign applicants need not be resident in Spain, but they must appoint a Spanish abogado (lawyer) and procurador (court procedural representative) to act on their behalf in the proceedings.
The following numbered steps cover the full enforcement procedure Spain timeline, from initial receipt of the foreign decision through to execution against assets. Where the procedure differs for arbitral awards, the distinction is noted.
On receipt of the foreign judgment or arbitral award, the creditor or their Spanish counsel should confirm that the decision is final and enforceable in the country of origin, identify the applicable legal regime (EU regulation, bilateral treaty, or Law 29/2015 for judgments; New York Convention for arbitral awards), and locate the debtor’s assets in Spain. An early asset‑tracing exercise is advisable: if the debtor may dissipate assets, provisional measures should be sought urgently (see Step 4 below). All supporting documents should be gathered at this stage to avoid delays in the filing.
The choice of route determines the competent court, the documents required, and the timeline:
Selecting the wrong route delays enforcement by months. Industry observers note that one of the most frequent tactical errors is filing an exequatur application for an EU judgment that qualifies for direct enforcement under the Brussels Ia Recast Regulation.
The applicant, acting through a Spanish procurador and assisted by an abogado, files a written application (demanda de exequátur) with the competent court. The application must set out the basis for recognition, identify the parties, describe the foreign decision, and be accompanied by the full set of exequatur Spain documents listed in the documents table below. The court registers the application and serves notice on the debtor, who is given a period (typically 30 days) to file an opposition. If the debtor opposes recognition, the court will schedule a hearing. If no opposition is filed, the court may grant recognition on the papers. For New York Convention awards, the procedure follows the same structure before the TSJ.
Spanish law permits a creditor to apply for provisional measures in Spain even before recognition has been granted, provided the applicant can demonstrate urgency and a risk that the debtor may dissipate, conceal, or encumber assets. Provisional measures include:
Applications for provisional measures in Spain are filed before the same court that will hear the recognition application, or before the Court of First Instance if the recognition proceedings have not yet been commenced. The court may hear the application ex parte where prior notice to the debtor would jeopardise effectiveness. The applicant will normally be required to post a bond (caución) to cover potential damages if the measures are later discharged.
Once the court grants recognition (or, for EU judgments, once the judgment and certificate are filed), the creditor files a formal enforcement application under Article 549 LEC. This application, called a demanda ejecutiva, asks the court to order execution against the debtor’s identified assets. The court issues an enforcement order (auto despachando ejecución) and directs the court enforcement agent (Letrado de la Administración de Justicia, formerly Secretario Judicial) to carry out the necessary measures: attachment of bank accounts, seizure and auction of real estate, garnishment of wages, or seizure of commercial assets. The creditor must identify specific assets or request that the court order the debtor to make an asset disclosure.
Execution proceedings can take from several months to over a year depending on asset complexity and debtor cooperation.
The debtor may appeal a recognition order within the statutory time limits. For exequatur decisions under Law 29/2015, the debtor may file an appeal (recurso de apelación) before the Audiencia Provincial within 20 business days of notification. For New York Convention awards, the debtor may oppose enforcement on the limited grounds set out in Article V of the Convention. An appeal does not automatically suspend enforcement, but the debtor may apply for a stay. The creditor should be prepared to respond to opposition arguments, most commonly, public policy objections, defective service, or jurisdictional challenges, with supporting evidence and legal submissions.
| Step | Who Does It | Typical Duration |
|---|---|---|
| Pre‑filing review and asset tracing | Claimant and Spanish counsel | 1–3 weeks |
| File recognition / exequatur application | Applicant through procurador | 1 day to file; court docketing 1–2 weeks |
| Court notice and opposition period | Court (Juzgado de Primera Instancia or TSJ) | 30 days for opposition; 1–3 months total |
| Substantive hearing (if opposition filed) | Court | 2–6 months |
| Recognition order issued | Court | 1–2 months after hearing (or shorter if uncontested) |
| File enforcement / execution application (Article 549 LEC) | Applicant through procurador | 1–2 weeks to prepare and file |
| Execution proceedings (attachment, auction, garnishment) | Court enforcement agent (Letrado de la Administración de Justicia) | 3–12 months (asset‑dependent) |
| Provisional measures (if sought on urgency) | Judge (urgent procedure) | Days to 4 weeks |
Assembling the correct exequatur Spain documents before filing avoids the most common cause of procedural delay. The table below sets out the full checklist. Every non‑Spanish document must be accompanied by a certified sworn translation prepared by an official Spanish translator (traductor jurado) and, where applicable, legalised with an apostille (for Hague Convention contracting states) or consular legalisation (for non‑Hague states).
| Document | Notes (Issuer, Format, Legalisation, Translation) |
|---|---|
| Certified copy of the foreign judgment or court decision | Issued by the originating court with court seal. Apostille or consular legalisation required. Sworn Spanish translation required. |
| Original or certified copy of the arbitral award | Original award or court‑certified copy. For New York Convention awards, also provide the original arbitration agreement or a certified copy (Article IV). Apostille or consular legalisation and sworn Spanish translation required. |
| Certificate of enforceability (from country of origin) | Declaration from the originating court or authority confirming the judgment/award is final and enforceable. For EU judgments, the Annex I certificate under the Brussels Ia Recast Regulation. Apostille and sworn translation required. |
| Evidence of identity or corporate status | Passport or national ID for individuals. For companies: certificate of incorporation, commercial register extract, and proof of authority of the person signing the power of attorney. Apostille and sworn translation for foreign documents. |
| Power of attorney to Spanish abogado and procurador | Signed by the principal (or authorised corporate officer). Apostille or consular legalisation and sworn Spanish translation required. A notarised power of attorney (poder notarial) is standard. |
| Proof of service on the defendant in original proceedings | Documents demonstrating that the debtor was properly served in the foreign proceedings (certificates of service, postal receipts, Hague Service Convention certificates). Apostille and sworn translation required. |
| Outstanding balance calculation and supporting evidence | Creditor’s statement of account, ledgers, invoices, demand letters, and interest calculations showing the amount due. Sworn translation required. |
| Sworn Spanish translations of all non‑Spanish documents | Prepared by a traductor jurado officially appointed by the Spanish Ministry of Foreign Affairs. Translations must cover the complete text of each document. |
| Apostille or consular legalisation certificates | Hague Apostille for contracting states; full consular legalisation for non‑Hague states. One apostille per public document. |
| Court filing forms and petitioner statement | Completed local court forms. The application must be filed through a procurador (mandatory court procedural representative). |
For EU judgments enforced without exequatur under the Brussels Ia Recast Regulation, the document requirements are streamlined: the creditor needs only the judgment, the Annex I certificate, and, if the judgment was issued in default, proof of service. However, a sworn Spanish translation of all documents remains mandatory unless the court orders otherwise.
The total time to enforce a foreign judgment in Spain varies significantly depending on the route chosen, whether the debtor opposes, and the complexity of asset execution. The following ranges reflect practitioner experience across Spanish courts:
| Phase | Typical Duration | Key Deadline / Note |
|---|---|---|
| EU direct enforcement (no exequatur) | 3–8 months total | File judgment + Annex I certificate directly; execution begins promptly once enforcement order is issued. |
| Exequatur proceedings (Law 29/2015) | 6–18 months | 30‑day opposition window for debtor after service of application. Hearing scheduled 2–6 months after opposition. Appeal within 20 business days of recognition order. |
| New York Convention arbitral award recognition | 4–12 months | Filed before TSJ. Opposition grounds limited to Article V of the Convention. Shorter if uncontested. |
| Execution against assets (post‑recognition) | 3–12 months | Duration depends on asset type (bank accounts: weeks; real estate auction: months). Debtor may be ordered to disclose assets. |
| Provisional measures (urgent application) | Days to 4 weeks | Can be filed before or alongside recognition. Court may act ex parte in urgent cases. Bond typically required. |
Madrid and Barcelona courts tend to have 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 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. 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 | Spain does not charge court filing fees for most civil proceedings involving natural persons. Legal entities may incur fees (tasas judiciales) depending on the claim amount and type of proceeding. |
| Procurador (court representative) | €150 – €600 | Regulated fee scale based on claim value; mandatory appointment for all court proceedings. |
| Abogado (legal fees) | €2,000 – €20,000+ | Ranges from fixed‑fee packages for straightforward recognitions to hourly billing for contested or high‑value matters. |
| Certified sworn translations | €30 – €150 per page | Costs 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 (levy, attachment, auction) | €200 – €5,000+ | Depends on asset types, 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. |
| Provisional measures bond (caución) | Variable (court‑determined) | Typically a percentage of the claim value; returned if the creditor prevails. |
Spanish courts have discretion to award 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 the abogado fees may be lower than the actual fees incurred.
No wholesale statutory reform to Spain’s enforcement framework has been enacted in 2025 or 2026. However, several developments affect the practical landscape for parties seeking to enforce a foreign judgment in Spain:
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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