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how to transfer a mining concession in Spain

How to Transfer a Mining Concession in Spain (2026): Step-by-step Process

By Global Law Experts
– posted 7 hours ago

Understanding how to transfer a mining concession in Spain is essential for any concessionaire, buyer or adviser involved in a sale, corporate restructuring or inheritance of mineral rights. The process is governed primarily by Law 22/1973 (Ley de Minas), Title IX, which establishes that every transfer of a mining exploitation concession requires prior administrative authorisation from the competent Mining Directorate. Since January 2026, amendments to the General Regulations of the Mining Law have introduced strengthened transferee competence testing, additional documentary proof obligations and new prior administrative acts that must be completed before an application can proceed.

This guide consolidates the national procedure, eligibility criteria, required documents, realistic timelines, indicative costs and the specific 2026 rule changes into a single, transaction-ready reference for concessionaires, M&A teams and in-house counsel operating in Spain.

Overview of the Process and Who It Applies to

A mining concession transfer in Spain is the administrative procedure by which an existing exploitation concession, the right to extract mineral resources from a defined area, passes from one holder (the assignor) to another (the proposed transferee). The transfer is not a purely private transaction: under Title IX of Law 22/1973, no change of concession holder takes effect until the competent regional Mining Directorate has issued a formal authorisation. Both natural persons and legal entities may hold concessions, but the transferee must satisfy specific legal, technical and financial requirements before approval is granted.

The high-level flow of the transfer mining concession Spain procedure follows four stages: (1) the parties agree the commercial terms and execute a transfer agreement or sale-and-purchase agreement (SPA); (2) the proposed transferee submits an application to the competent Mining Directorate, accompanied by supporting documents; (3) the Directorate conducts administrative completeness checks and a substantive assessment of the transferee’s technical and financial competence; and (4) the Directorate issues a decision, approval (with or without conditions) or refusal, followed by registration, notation and post-approval formalities.

The procedure applies whenever a concession changes hands, whether through a direct sale, a share deal that triggers a change-of-control clause in the concession terms, an inheritance, a corporate merger or a lease or assignment of exploitation rights. For a broader introduction to mining rights in Spain, readers may wish to consult our general guide to mining concessions in Spain.

Eligibility and Concession Transfer Requirements

Before the transfer application is filed, both parties must verify that the proposed transferee meets all eligibility criteria and that the concession itself is free of impediments. The concession transfer requirements are more demanding under the 2026 framework than under previous rules, particularly concerning evidence of the transferee’s technical and financial capacity.

Legal Capacity and Corporate Form

Any natural person of legal age or any company duly incorporated and registered in the Spanish Commercial Registry (Registro Mercantil), or in a recognised EU company register, may in principle acquire a mining concession. The transferee must provide proof of legal capacity: a current certificate of incorporation, an up-to-date registry extract (not older than three months at the date of filing), and a notarised power of attorney if acting through a representative. Where the transferee is a foreign-incorporated entity, the equivalent documents must be apostilled or legalised and accompanied by a sworn Spanish translation.

Foreign Applicants and Ownership Limits

Spain does not impose a blanket prohibition on foreign ownership of mining concessions. EU and EEA nationals and companies generally enjoy the same rights as Spanish applicants. Non-EU entities may acquire concessions subject to reciprocity principles and, where applicable, foreign direct investment (FDI) screening under Spain’s national security review mechanism. Industry observers expect that, in practice, the critical hurdle for foreign applicants is demonstrating adequate in-country technical capability and financial solvency to operate the concession, a requirement that the 2026 amendments have made considerably more granular. A foreign company considering whether it can hold a mining concession in Spain should engage local counsel early to confirm its eligibility route and any FDI notification obligations.

Environmental and Land-Use Preconditions

The concession being transferred must be in good standing. This means that any required Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA) decision must be valid and current, all reclamation or remediation obligations up to the transfer date must be satisfied, and the concessionaire must hold (or have a binding commitment for) the necessary surface-land rights, whether through ownership, lease or written landowner consent. If environmental authorisations have lapsed or if there are outstanding remediation orders against the concession, the Mining Directorate will not approve the transfer until those matters are resolved. This is a common cause of delay and a point where the 2026 rules impose additional prior administrative acts that must be evidenced in the application file.

Step-by-Step Procedure to Transfer a Mining Concession in Spain

The following numbered steps describe the standard national procedure. Regional autonomous communities may add supplementary procedural requirements, applicants should always check the specific portal of the relevant autonomous community (for example, the Junta de Castilla y León, Junta de Andalucía or Generalitat de Catalunya). The concession transfer timeline from initial agreement to post-approval registration typically ranges from three to twelve months, depending on the complexity of the title and the region.

Step Who Does It Typical Duration
1. Draft and sign transfer agreement (SPA/assignment) and gather seller documents Parties (seller and buyer) and their lawyers 1–6 weeks (depends on negotiation and due diligence)
2. Submit transfer application to competent Mining Directorate (regional or central) Proposed transferee (with seller) via electronic procedure or paper filing Day 0 = filing; acknowledgement within 5–15 days
3. Administrative completeness check and requests for missing documents Mining Directorate 10–30 days (varies by region); applicant has 10–30 days to respond
4. Technical and financial competence assessment of transferee Mining Directorate (may consult technical evaluators or regional environment authority) 30–90 days (2026 rules add stricter checks, expect longer for complex titles)
5. Substantive decision: approval with conditions or refusal Mining Directorate (regional) 1–6 months from complete file (varies by region and complexity)
6. Registration/notation and post-approval formalities (fees, tax filings, public register update) Applicant, Registry and tax authorities 2–6 weeks after approval

Step 1, Agree the Transfer and Draft the Assignment or SPA

The process begins with a commercial agreement between the assignor (current concessionaire) and the proposed transferee. The parties should execute a written SPA or assignment agreement that includes, at minimum: the precise identification of the concession (reference number, coordinates, mineral resource type); the purchase price or consideration; warranties regarding the concession’s legal and environmental standing; an express condition precedent making completion contingent on obtaining administrative transfer approval from the Mining Directorate; and a long-stop date that accommodates realistic approval timelines. During this phase, the buyer typically conducts due diligence covering the concession title, environmental permits, outstanding royalties, pending administrative proceedings and any encumbrances. This due diligence file becomes the foundation for several of the documents submitted in the formal application.

Step 2, Prepare and Lodge the Transfer Application

The transfer application is submitted to the competent Mining Directorate of the autonomous community in which the concession is located. In most regions, the filing may be made electronically through the autonomous community’s e-Administration portal; in some, paper filing remains available. The application must be signed by both the assignor and the proposed transferee (or their authorised representatives) and accompanied by a formal cover letter specifying the concession reference, the identity and contact details of both parties, and the legal basis for the transfer (citing Title IX of Law 22/1973). All supporting documents listed in the required documents section below must be attached to the application at the time of filing.

Missing documents will trigger a completeness deficiency notice and delay the procedure.

Step 3, Administrative Completeness Check and Requests for Additional Information

Upon receipt, the Mining Directorate conducts a formal completeness review (subsanación phase). If the file is incomplete, the Directorate issues a written notice identifying the deficiencies and granting the applicant a period, typically 10 to 30 days depending on the region, to remedy them. Failure to respond within the stipulated period may result in the application being deemed withdrawn (desistimiento). The completeness check does not assess the merits of the transfer; it confirms only that all required forms, signatures and documentary annexes are present. Industry observers note that this phase is where most avoidable delays occur, because applicants underestimate the volume and specificity of documents now required under the 2026 framework.

Step 4, Technical and Financial Competence Assessment of the Transferee

This is the substantive gate of the procedure and the stage most significantly affected by the 2026 amendments. The Mining Directorate evaluates whether the proposed transferee possesses the technical capability and financial resources to operate the concession in accordance with the approved exploitation plan. Under the January 2026 amendments to the General Regulations, the Directorate now requires explicit, documentary evidence of the transferee’s technical and financial capacity. This includes audited financial statements (typically for the preceding three financial years), bank guarantees or credit facility letters, CVs and professional certifications of the transferee’s proposed technical director and key operational staff, and a demonstration that the transferee has the organisational structure to comply with environmental, health and safety obligations.

The Directorate may consult external technical evaluators or the regional environment authority before reaching a conclusion. For complex or high-value concessions, early indications suggest this assessment phase may take 60 to 90 days or longer under the new rules.

Step 5, Regional Approval Decision and Formal Authorisation

Following the competence assessment, the Mining Directorate issues a formal resolution: either approving the transfer (with or without conditions), or refusing it with reasons. The approval is typically published or notified to both parties and recorded in the Mining Register maintained by the autonomous community. If the transfer is refused, the applicant may file an administrative appeal (recurso de alzada) to the superior body, or challenge the decision before the administrative courts (jurisdicción contencioso-administrativa). Conditions imposed on approval, for example, a requirement to update the exploitation plan, post a financial guarantee or complete specific remediation works, must be satisfied before the transfer is formally perfected.

The likely practical effect of the 2026 amendments is that conditional approvals will become more common, as regulators use conditions to bridge any residual concerns about the transferee’s capability.

Step 6, Post-Approval Formalities: Registers, Fees and Tax Filings

Once the transfer approval from the Mining Directorate is final, the transferee must complete several post-approval tasks. These include: updating the Mining Register entry to reflect the new concession holder; paying any outstanding administrative or registration fees; filing the relevant tax returns (including, where applicable, transfer tax or VAT declarations); notifying the regional environment authority if required; and ensuring that insurance policies, bank guarantees and operational permits are transferred or reissued in the new holder’s name. The entire post-approval phase typically takes two to six weeks. Only once all notations are complete is the transfer legally perfected and the new concessionaire’s rights enforceable against third parties.

Documents Needed for a Mining Concession Transfer

The following table consolidates the documents needed for a concession transfer application across Spain. Specific autonomous communities may require additional regional forms; applicants should verify the exact requirements on the relevant regional portal, for example, the Junta de Castilla y León procedure page. Items marked with an asterisk (*) reflect strengthened or newly detailed requirements under the 2026 General Regulations amendments.

Document Notes (Issuer, Format, Validity)
Transfer application form / cover letter Submitted by transferee; must include concession reference number, title details and contact details of both parties.
Original concession title or certified copy of concession deed Issued to current concessionaire; must be certified; attach proof of no encumbrances.
Signed assignment / SPA Signed by assignor and assignee; include full sale terms and effective date; legalised signature if executed outside Spain.
Proof of legal capacity of transferee Company deed (certificate of incorporation) and updated Commercial Registry extract (not older than 3 months).
Power of attorney for applicant or representative Notarised; apostilled and translated where the representative is based outside Spain.
Technical project / feasibility study Signed by a qualified mining engineer or technician; must include maps, cartography and a demonstration of operational capability.
Environmental authorisations / EIA decision Copy of current EIA approval and any required environmental permits.
Proof of technical staff / CVs / certificates * CVs, diplomas and professional registrations of key technical personnel. 2026: more detailed documentation required.
Financial statements and proof of funding * Audited accounts for the last 3 years, or bank guarantees / credit facility letters / investor commitment letters. 2026: explicit evidence of funding sources recommended.
Insurance certificates Operational and environmental liability insurance policies (where required by the concession terms or regional regulations).
Tax compliance certificate Issued by the Agencia Tributaria confirming no outstanding tax obligations.
Social security compliance certificate Required where the transferee has existing staff or operational obligations in Spain.
Maps / cartography and landowner consent Definitive designation of concession area; written landowner consent or lease agreement for surface access.
Regional-specific forms and administrative fee receipts Check the applicable autonomous community portal for any additional forms and proof of fee payment.

Concession Transfer Timeline and Key Deadlines

The concession transfer timeline in Spain is shaped by a combination of statutory deadlines (where they exist) and typical administrative practice, which varies significantly between autonomous communities. The timeline table in the step-by-step section above provides the benchmark durations for each stage. Several key timing points merit particular attention.

Completeness response deadline. When the Mining Directorate issues a deficiency notice, the applicant usually has 10 to 30 days to provide the missing documents. If this window is missed, the application may be archived without a decision on the merits.

Competence assessment period. There is no single statutory clock that binds the Directorate’s assessment of transferee competence. In practice, straightforward transfers with full documentation may be assessed within 30 to 45 days. Complex titles, particularly those involving large mineral deposits, multiple environmental permits, or transfers to newly formed entities, may require 60 to 90 days or more. The 2026 rules expand the scope of this assessment, and early indications suggest that average processing times have increased by approximately 20 to 30 per cent since the amendments took effect.

Overall elapsed time. From application filing to final registration, applicants should plan for a total elapsed time of three to twelve months. Transactions in regions with heavy mining activity (Castilla y León, Andalucía, Asturias) may experience longer queues. Contractual long-stop dates in the SPA should be set with sufficient margin, a minimum of nine to twelve months is prudent for contested or high-value transfers.

Tacit approval. Spanish administrative law provides for tacit approval (silencio administrativo positivo) in some licensing procedures when the administration fails to decide within the prescribed period. However, in the mining concession context, the transfer of a public-domain right, the general rule is that silence operates as a tacit refusal (silencio negativo). Applicants should therefore pursue active follow-up with the Directorate rather than rely on deemed-approval provisions.

Costs, Fees and Tax Considerations for Mining Concession Fees 2026

The costs associated with a concession transfer fall into three categories: administrative fees payable to the regulator, professional advisory fees, and taxes arising from the transaction. The table below provides indicative ranges; all amounts should be verified against the specific autonomous community portal and current fee schedules before reliance.

Item Amount (Indicative) Notes
Administrative application fee (regional) €200–€2,000 Varies by autonomous community; check the regional e-Administration portal for the current fee schedule.
Technical report / feasibility study €5,000–€50,000+ Dependent on deposit size, geological complexity and scope of the exploitation plan.
Legal and transaction advisory fees 1%–5% of transaction value or fixed retainer Covers due diligence, SPA drafting, application preparation and regulatory liaison.
Registration / notation fees €100–€1,000 Payable to the Mining Register; varies by region.
Taxes on transfer (VAT, transfer tax or capital gains) Depends on transaction structure Sale of concession rights may attract VAT (if within an economic activity) or transfer tax (ITP); capital gains tax applies to the seller. Consult Spanish tax counsel.
Ongoing royalties Per concession terms Royalties payable under the concession continue after transfer; liability transfers with the title.

All fee figures in this table are indicative. Regional fee schedules are published by each autonomous community and are subject to annual revision. Transaction-specific tax advice is essential: the tax treatment of a concession transfer depends on whether the transaction is structured as an asset sale, a share deal, a merger or an inheritance, and on whether the parties are resident or non-resident for Spanish tax purposes.

What Changes in 2026: New Mining Law and January 2026 General Regulations Amendments

The January 2026 amendments to the General Regulations of the Mining Law represent the most significant procedural change to mining concession transfers in Spain in decades. These amendments form part of the broader mining law reform programme aligned with the 2025–2029 Raw Materials Action Plan. The key changes that directly affect the transfer process are set out below.

Mandatory enhanced proof of technical and financial capacity. Transferees must now submit detailed, documentary evidence of their technical and financial competence as part of the application file. This goes beyond the previous requirement to demonstrate “adequate means” and now requires audited financial statements, specific evidence of funding sources, named technical personnel with verified qualifications, and a structured organisational chart showing how the transferee will comply with environmental, health and safety obligations.

New prior administrative acts. Where the concession is subject to outstanding environmental remediation orders or where the exploitation plan requires updating, the 2026 amendments require that these prior administrative acts be completed, or at least initiated and evidenced, before the transfer application can be formally admitted. This shifts the burden of environmental compliance from a post-approval condition to a pre-application gate.

Strengthened fee and royalty provisions. The amendments introduce greater clarity on the allocation of royalty obligations between assignor and assignee, and require that any arrears be cleared before transfer approval is granted. Industry observers expect this to reduce disputes over outstanding royalty liabilities that historically complicated transfers.

Practical Impact for Sellers, Buyers and Counsel

  • Sellers should conduct a compliance audit of the concession before marketing it for sale, addressing any environmental remediation obligations, expired permits or unpaid royalties. Delays at the pre-application gate are now more likely and more costly.
  • Buyers must prepare a comprehensive competence dossier well in advance of filing: audited accounts, technical staff CVs, insurance arrangements and an organisational compliance plan. Assembling this material takes time and should begin during the due diligence phase, not after signing.
  • Counsel should build longer regulatory timelines into SPA conditions precedent and long-stop dates, and should consider including express representations regarding environmental standing, royalty status and technical project compliance.

Common Pitfalls When Transferring a Mining Concession in Spain, and How to Avoid Them

  • Incomplete technical and financial proof. The most common cause of application rejection or delay is an insufficient competence dossier. Fix: conduct a pre-application audit against the 2026 documentary checklist; obtain bank confirmation letters and staff certifications before filing.
  • Ignoring region-specific forms and procedures. Each autonomous community may require additional forms, specific cartographic formats or supplementary environmental declarations that are not part of the national template. Fix: check the relevant regional e-Administration portal and, where possible, file a pre-application enquiry (consulta previa) with the Mining Directorate.
  • Missing or lapsed environmental permits. An expired EIA decision or unresolved remediation order will now block the application at the admissibility stage under the 2026 rules. Fix: review all environmental authorisations during due diligence and initiate renewal or remediation proceedings as early as possible.
  • Underestimating timelines. The 2026 competence tests add processing time, and regional backlogs can extend the procedure further. Fix: set SPA long-stop dates at nine to twelve months; include a contractual mechanism for extension if delays are attributable to the administration rather than the parties.
  • Failure to address royalty arrears. Outstanding royalties must now be cleared before transfer approval mining directorate authorisation is granted. Fix: include a seller warranty on royalty status and verify independently with the relevant regional mining authority.

A well-drafted SPA should include a condition precedent clause along the following lines: “Completion of the transfer shall be conditional upon the parties obtaining unconditional written approval of the transfer from the competent Mining Directorate within [9/12] months of the date of this agreement, failing which either party may terminate this agreement by written notice.” This protects both parties against regulatory delay and ensures that the commercial agreement does not expire before the administrative process concludes.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Daniel Roca Vivas at BUFETE PRAT ROCA, S.L.P., a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. MINLEX, Spain Country Report (JRC / RMIS)
  2. Law 22/1973 (Mining Act), Official PDF
  3. CorralRosales, Amendments to General Regulations of the Mining Law (January 2026)
  4. Junta de Castilla y León, Regional Mining Procedure Portal
  5. Invest in Spain / ICEX, Mining Investment Overview
  6. Dudkowiak & Putyra, Transferring Mining Concessions: Legal Analysis
  7. Wallonie Economy Portal, Mining Concession Transfer (Comparative Reference)
  8. Mining Events, Spain Mining Law and the 2025–2029 Raw Materials Action Plan

FAQs

How do I transfer a mining concession in Spain?
The process involves six stages: (1) agree the commercial terms and sign an SPA; (2) submit a transfer application to the competent regional Mining Directorate; (3) pass the administrative completeness check; (4) undergo a technical and financial competence assessment; (5) receive the Directorate’s approval decision; and (6) complete post-approval formalities including register updates and tax filings. The full procedure is set out in the step-by-step section above.
The application must include the transfer application form, a certified copy of the concession deed, the signed SPA, proof of the transferee’s legal capacity, a technical project or feasibility study, environmental authorisations, financial statements, insurance certificates, tax and social security compliance certificates, and any region-specific forms. The complete checklist is provided in the required documents table above.
From application filing to final registration, the typical elapsed time is three to twelve months, depending on the autonomous community and the complexity of the concession. The 2026 amendments have extended average processing times by an estimated 20 to 30 per cent due to enhanced competence testing. The timeline table above provides stage-by-stage duration estimates.
Yes. Spain does not impose a blanket prohibition on foreign ownership of mining concessions. EU and EEA companies enjoy the same rights as Spanish entities. Non-EU companies may acquire concessions subject to reciprocity principles and potential FDI screening. The critical practical requirement for all foreign applicants is demonstrating in-country technical capability and financial solvency under the 2026 rules.
If the Mining Directorate concludes that the transferee lacks adequate technical or financial capacity, it will refuse the transfer application. The applicant may file an administrative appeal (recurso de alzada) or submit a revised application with strengthened evidence. In practice, pre-application engagement with the Directorate and a comprehensive competence dossier are the most effective ways to avoid refusal.
Legal counsel should be engaged before the SPA is signed, ideally at the due diligence stage. Lawyers can identify title defects, environmental liabilities and regulatory risks that affect the transfer’s viability, and can structure the SPA to protect both parties against administrative delays. Counsel should also prepare or review the formal transfer application and competence dossier. Readers can search for qualified mining law practitioners through our lawyer directory.
Yes. Royalty obligations under the concession terms transfer to the new concessionaire upon completion of the administrative transfer. Under the 2026 amendments, any royalty arrears must be cleared before the Mining Directorate will grant approval. Buyers should verify the royalty payment history during due diligence and obtain a seller warranty on royalty status in the SPA.
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How to Transfer a Mining Concession in Spain (2026): Step-by-step Process

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