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insolvency freight contracts spain

How Spain's 2026 Insolvency Reform Changes the Treatment of Freight & Transport Contracts

By Global Law Experts
– posted 1 hour ago

The rules governing insolvency freight contracts in Spain have undergone their most significant transformation in over a decade. Spain’s 2026 insolvency reform, completing the transposition of the EU Restructuring Directive and amending key provisions of the Commercial Code, reshapes how freight and transport agreements are treated when a carrier, shipper or logistics operator enters restructuring or insolvency proceedings. For transport CFOs, logistics creditors and shipping lawyers, the changes alter creditor class composition, voting mechanics, and the enforceability of termination clauses in carriage agreements. This guide provides a sector-specific analysis of the reform, practical checklists for protecting claims, and model contract clauses designed for the new legal environment.

Key Takeaways at a Glance

  • Contracts survive by default. Freight and transport contracts in force at the date of insolvency declaration generally continue unless the insolvency administrator or the restructuring plan expressly provides otherwise.
  • Ipso facto clauses are restricted. Contractual provisions that allow automatic termination solely because a counterparty has entered insolvency or restructuring proceedings are now unenforceable under the reformed regime.
  • New creditor classes reshape negotiation leverage. Transport creditors, fuel suppliers, sub-carriers, warehouse operators, must understand where their claims fall within the reformed priority waterfall to protect recovery rates.
  • Cross-class cram-down is now available. A restructuring plan can be confirmed over the objection of dissenting creditor classes, provided statutory safeguards are met, fundamentally changing negotiation dynamics for freight carriers restructuring.
  • Pre-insolvency action is critical. Carriers and shippers that document claims, secure cargo interests and prepare restructuring proposals before formal proceedings gain a decisive strategic advantage.

Overview, What the 2026 Spanish Insolvency Reform Changed for Restructuring Plans and Contracts

Spain’s restructuring and insolvency framework has been progressively modernised since the adoption of the Texto Refundido de la Ley Concursal (TRLC). The 2026 reform represents the culmination of a multi-year legislative process that began with the EU Restructuring Directive (Directive (EU) 2019/1023) and continued through successive amendments to the TRLC and the Commercial Code. For the transport sector, the reform is doubly significant: it modernises general restructuring tools while also incorporating amendments to the commercial code provisions on freight transport contracts that were developed by the specialist reform commission.

Legislative Timeline and What Changed

Period Event Practical Effect
2019–2022 EU Directive (EU) 2019/1023 adopted; Spain begins transposition via reforms to the TRLC (Books I and II) Introduction of pre-insolvency restructuring plans (planes de reestructuración) and early-warning mechanisms
2024–2025 EU insolvency harmonisation directive approved; transposition deadlines set for member states EU minimum standards requiring harmonised pre-insolvency tools, cross-class cram-down and stay provisions
2026 (reform entry) Spanish 2026 reform enters into force, TRLC amendments and Commercial Code transport contract provisions enacted New restructuring plan rules; reformed creditor classes and voting thresholds; restrictions on ipso facto clauses; updated treatment of transport contracts in insolvency
2026–2027 Early cases and judicial interpretations expected Practical clarifications on the treatment of ongoing freight contracts, cargo release disputes and creditor priority conflicts

The practical effect for transport stakeholders is immediate. Restructuring plans now operate under tighter procedural timelines, broader debtor protections, and enhanced tools for imposing plans on dissenting creditors, all of which change how freight carriers, shippers and their advisors must approach negotiations.

Interaction with the EU Insolvency Harmonisation Directive

The EU insolvency harmonisation directive, approved in the 2024–2025 legislative cycle, establishes minimum standards that all member states must implement. These include mandatory pre-insolvency restructuring frameworks, rules on the treatment of executory contracts during restructuring, and a harmonised approach to cross-class cram-down. Spain’s 2026 reform transposes these requirements while retaining certain national specificities, notably, the treatment of transport-sector creditor priorities and the interplay between the TRLC and the Commercial Code’s freight transport provisions. Industry observers expect that the Spanish implementation will serve as a reference point for other civil-law jurisdictions grappling with the same transposition challenges.

What Happens to Freight and Transport Contracts on Insolvency in Spain

The treatment of transport contracts during insolvency is one of the most commercially consequential aspects of the 2026 reform. Under the amended TRLC, the general rule is that bilateral contracts in force at the date of insolvency declaration remain in effect. Neither the declaration of insolvency (concurso) nor the commencement of a restructuring plan proceeding automatically terminates existing freight or carriage agreements. This default rule of contract survival is reinforced by the new restriction on ipso facto clauses, contractual provisions that purport to terminate an agreement solely on the basis of a counterparty’s insolvency or restructuring filing.

For transport companies, this means that a carrier entering insolvency proceedings remains bound by its existing carriage obligations, and shippers cannot unilaterally walk away from volume commitments simply because the carrier has filed. Conversely, the insolvency administrator (administrador concursal) retains the power to terminate contracts that are burdensome to the estate, subject to judicial authorisation and compensation to the counterparty.

Contractual Remedies for Shippers and Carriers

The reform preserves, and in some respects strengthens, the remedies available to both sides of insolvency freight contracts in Spain. Shippers whose carrier enters insolvency may seek cargo release orders from the insolvency court, assert retention-of-title claims over goods in transit, and file priority claims for carriage already performed but unpaid. Carriers, meanwhile, may invoke the restructuring plan framework to renegotiate volume commitments, extend payment terms with fuel suppliers and sub-carriers, and obtain interim financing to maintain operations during proceedings. Security interests, including statutory liens on cargo under the Commercial Code’s freight transport provisions, remain enforceable, though their exercise may be subject to the general stay on enforcement actions that accompanies the insolvency declaration.

Practical Scenarios

  • Scenario 1, Carrier insolvent mid-voyage. A road freight carrier declares insolvency while goods are in transit. The shipper cannot terminate the carriage contract solely on the basis of the insolvency filing. The goods must be delivered unless the insolvency administrator obtains judicial authorisation to terminate. The shipper should file a priority claim for any advance payment and seek a cargo release order if delivery is delayed.
  • Scenario 2, Shipper enters restructuring with outstanding freight invoices. A large retailer enters pre-insolvency restructuring owing significant sums to multiple carriers. The carriers’ unpaid freight claims are classified according to the reformed priority waterfall. Carriers with statutory liens may assert secured-creditor status; those without liens fall into the ordinary creditor class and must negotiate within the restructuring plan framework.
  • Scenario 3, Logistics operator with cross-border fleet. A logistics company operating across Spain, France and Portugal enters Spanish insolvency proceedings. Vehicles and cargo located outside Spain may be subject to competing enforcement actions. The reformed TRLC’s recognition provisions and the EU Insolvency Regulation (recast) govern the treatment of foreign-situated assets, but local enforcement risks must be managed proactively.
Contract Type Treatment on Insolvency Practical Steps for Counterparties
Spot freight / single-shipment carriage Survives; must be performed unless administrator terminates with court approval File priority claim for pre-insolvency invoices; seek cargo release order if goods are held
Volume / framework transport agreement Survives; ipso facto termination clauses unenforceable; may be modified by restructuring plan Review volume commitments; prepare negotiation position on modified terms; assess whether to support or oppose restructuring plan
Warehouse / storage ancillary to carriage Survives subject to the same rules; statutory lien on stored goods may give secured-creditor priority Assert lien rights promptly; file secured-creditor claim; resist premature release of goods without payment or adequate security
Sub-carriage / intermodal contracts Survives; sub-carrier claims rank as ordinary unless a statutory lien applies Document all services performed; notify insolvency administrator of outstanding claims within statutory deadline
Vehicle lease / fleet finance Subject to specific rules on financial leases; lessor may be stayed from repossession Monitor stay period carefully; prepare application for relief from stay if lease payments are not maintained

Creditor Classes, Priorities and Voting Under the New Regime

Understanding creditor priorities in Spain is essential for any transport stakeholder navigating an insolvency or restructuring. The 2026 reform reorganises the creditor classification system and introduces new voting rules that directly affect freight carriers, fuel suppliers, sub-carriers and other supply-chain creditors. The reformed framework distinguishes between secured creditors (créditos con privilegio especial), creditors with general preferential claims (créditos con privilegio general), ordinary creditors (créditos ordinarios), and subordinated creditors (créditos subordinados).

For transport-sector creditors, the critical question is whether their claim qualifies for any form of preferential or secured treatment. Statutory liens on cargo, recognised under the Commercial Code’s freight transport provisions, can elevate a carrier’s or warehouse operator’s claim to secured status. Employee claims (drivers, crew, warehouse staff) retain their general preferential ranking. Fuel suppliers, tyre providers and maintenance contractors will typically hold ordinary claims unless they have negotiated specific security.

How Votes Are Calculated and What Classes Matter for Transport Restructurings

Under the reformed TRLC, creditors vote on restructuring plans within their respective classes. The reform introduces the possibility of cross-class cram-down, meaning a plan can be approved by the court even if one or more creditor classes vote against it, provided the plan meets the “best-interest-of-creditors” test and the “absolute priority” or “relative priority” rule. For transport restructurings, this means that an ordinary-creditor class dominated by freight carriers could be bound by a plan approved by secured lenders, even if the carriers voted against it. Industry observers expect this mechanism to shift negotiating power significantly toward secured creditors and large institutional lenders in freight carriers restructuring scenarios.

Creditor Type Priority Ranking Typical Recovery and Strategic Implications
Secured creditors (with statutory lien on cargo or specific collateral) Highest, privilegio especial Highest expected recovery; strong leverage in restructuring plan negotiations; can block plans that impair their collateral value
Employee claims (drivers, crew, warehouse staff) General preferential, privilegio general Protected up to statutory limits; paid ahead of ordinary and subordinated creditors
Tax and social security authorities General preferential (partial) and ordinary (remainder) Significant voting bloc; may support plans that preserve employment and ongoing tax revenue
Ordinary trade creditors (fuel suppliers, sub-carriers without liens, maintenance providers) Ordinary, créditos ordinarios Moderate to low recovery; vulnerable to cram-down; must form alliances with other ordinary creditors to influence plan terms
Subordinated creditors (related-party claims, late-filed claims, fines) Lowest, créditos subordinados Minimal or zero recovery expected; no voting rights on restructuring plans

The practical implication for transport creditors is clear: those who can establish secured status, through statutory liens, retention-of-title arrangements or negotiated security packages, will enjoy dramatically better outcomes than unsecured trade creditors. Pre-insolvency restructuring in Spain now rewards proactive claim documentation and security perfection.

How Carriers and Shippers Should Prepare, Propose and Defend a Restructuring Plan in Spain

The 2026 reform makes the restructuring plan (plan de reestructuración) the centrepiece of Spain’s pre-insolvency and insolvency toolkit. For transport companies facing financial distress, or for shippers and logistics creditors responding to a counterparty’s restructuring, understanding the mechanics of plan preparation and defence is essential.

Pre-Insolvency Actions

Transport companies contemplating a restructuring plan in Spain should begin preparation well before formal proceedings are initiated. The reformed TRLC provides for a pre-insolvency phase, often called the “pre-pack” or communication period, during which the debtor can negotiate with creditors under court protection. During this phase, the debtor benefits from a stay on enforcement actions, buying time to prepare a viable restructuring proposal. For freight carriers, the key pre-insolvency actions include: documenting all existing contracts and counterparty obligations, identifying which contracts are essential to continued operations, securing interim financing commitments, preparing a realistic viability plan demonstrating future cash flows from carriage operations, and engaging early with the largest creditor groups (secured lenders, fuel suppliers, key customers).

During Proceedings, Operational Continuity and Contract Management

Once formal proceedings begin, the insolvency of transport companies creates immediate operational pressures. Vehicles may be subject to competing security interests, cargo in transit must be delivered or secured, and sub-carriers may refuse to perform without payment guarantees. The restructuring plan framework allows the debtor, with the insolvency administrator’s oversight, to novate or assign existing contracts, negotiate new terms with fuel suppliers and lessors, and propose modified payment schedules for outstanding freight invoices. Carriers should prioritise maintaining the contracts that are essential to revenue generation while seeking court approval to terminate burdensome agreements.

Practical Checklist for Transport Companies Entering Restructuring

  • Inventory all contracts. Compile a complete register of freight, sub-carriage, warehouse, lease and fuel supply agreements, noting termination provisions, security interests and outstanding balances.
  • Classify creditors. Map every creditor to the reformed priority waterfall (secured, preferential, ordinary, subordinated) and estimate voting power in each class.
  • Identify essential contracts. Determine which carriage agreements and supplier relationships are critical to ongoing operations and revenue.
  • Secure interim financing. Engage lenders willing to provide debtor-in-possession or interim financing; the reformed TRLC gives such financing priority protection.
  • Prepare the viability plan. Develop financial projections demonstrating that the restructured business can generate sufficient cash flow to service the proposed plan obligations.
  • Engage key creditors early. Open negotiations with the largest creditor classes before filing; pre-agreed plan support accelerates court approval.
  • Document cargo and fleet status. Record the location, condition and ownership/lease status of all vehicles and cargo to prevent disputes during proceedings.
  • Review insurance coverage. Confirm that cargo, liability and fleet insurance policies remain in force during restructuring and insolvency proceedings.
  • Appoint specialist advisors. Retain insolvency practitioners with transport-sector experience who understand both the TRLC and the Commercial Code’s freight provisions.
  • Monitor cross-border exposures. If operating internationally, assess the impact of EU Insolvency Regulation (recast) provisions on foreign-situated assets and contracts.

Practical Risk Scenarios and Negotiation Playbook for Creditors

Transport creditors facing a counterparty’s insolvency must act quickly and strategically. The following scenarios illustrate common situations and the actions creditors should take under the reformed insolvency freight contracts regime in Spain.

  • Carrier insolvent mid-voyage. Goods are in transit when the carrier enters insolvency. The shipper should immediately notify the insolvency administrator in writing, assert any statutory lien on the goods, and apply to the insolvency court for a cargo release order. If the goods are perishable, an urgent application for expedited release is available.
  • Port detention of cargo. A port warehouse operator holds cargo belonging to an insolvent shipper. The operator should assert its statutory lien, file a secured-creditor claim, and refuse release until payment or adequate security is provided. The reformed rules restrict the court’s ability to order release without compensation.
  • Cross-border asset freeze. A Spanish logistics company’s vehicles are seized in another EU member state under local enforcement proceedings. The creditor should invoke the EU Insolvency Regulation (recast) to coordinate proceedings and prevent dissipation of assets that form part of the Spanish insolvency estate.
  • Secured lender enforcement against fleet. A fleet finance lender seeks to repossess vehicles during restructuring. The general stay on enforcement applies, but the lender can apply for relief from the stay if the debtor fails to maintain lease payments or if the vehicles are depreciating and uninsured. Early engagement with the insolvency administrator is essential to protect collateral value.

In each scenario, the common thread is speed and documentation. Creditors who file claims promptly, assert security interests on record, and engage proactively with the insolvency administrator will achieve materially better outcomes than those who wait.

Compliance Checklist and Model Clauses for Insolvency Freight Contracts in Spain

Given the 2026 reform’s restrictions on ipso facto clauses and its reinforcement of contract survival, transport companies should review and update their standard freight and carriage agreements. The following model clauses are designed to provide practical protection within the bounds of the reformed law.

  • Model Clause 1, Insolvency-Aware Force Majeure. “If either party becomes subject to insolvency, restructuring or pre-insolvency proceedings under applicable law, and such proceedings materially impair that party’s ability to perform its obligations under this agreement, the affected party shall notify the other party within [5] business days. The non-affected party shall be entitled to request adequate assurance of performance within [10] business days, failing which it may suspend performance (but not terminate) until adequate assurance is received or the insolvency court issues a continuation order.”
  • Model Clause 2, Security for Ongoing Carriage. “The Carrier shall, upon the Shipper’s reasonable request following any event of financial distress (including but not limited to the filing of a communication under the TRLC or the appointment of an insolvency administrator), provide a bank guarantee or escrow deposit equal to [X]% of the estimated freight charges for the next [30/60/90] days of carriage services.”
  • Model Clause 3, Jurisdiction and Applicable Insolvency Law. “Any dispute arising from or in connection with the insolvency of either party shall be subject to the exclusive jurisdiction of the Spanish commercial courts (juzgados de lo mercantil) at [city]. The parties acknowledge that the treatment of this agreement in insolvency shall be governed by the TRLC as amended, and that any provision of this agreement purporting to terminate it solely on the basis of insolvency or restructuring proceedings shall be unenforceable to the extent prohibited by applicable law.”

These clauses should be reviewed by qualified insolvency practitioners before incorporation into live contracts. Early indications suggest that Spanish courts will scrutinise any clause that attempts to circumvent the ipso facto restriction indirectly, for example, through disproportionate security demands triggered exclusively by insolvency-related events.

Conclusion, Preparing for the New Landscape of Insolvency Freight Contracts in Spain

Spain’s 2026 insolvency reform fundamentally changes the rules of engagement for freight and transport contracts in insolvency and restructuring proceedings. Contract survival, ipso facto restrictions, reformed creditor priorities and cross-class cram-down collectively create a new strategic environment in which preparation and speed are decisive. Transport companies, shippers and logistics creditors who understand the reformed framework, and who act before, not after, insolvency proceedings commence, will protect their commercial interests far more effectively. For a detailed overview of Spain’s broader restructuring plan framework, see the Spain Restructuring Plan 2026 Guide. To discuss how these changes affect your specific contracts and creditor position, contact the Global Law Experts insolvency team for a consultation with a qualified specialist.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Fernando Martínez Sanz at Martínez Sanz Abogados, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. BOE, Boletín Oficial del Estado
  2. Uría Menéndez, A Lender’s Guide to the Spanish Insolvency System
  3. Cuatrecasas, Restructuring Review: Doing Business in Spain
  4. CMS Expert Guide, Restructuring and Insolvency Law: Spain
  5. Latham & Watkins, Insolvency Disputes: Spain
  6. GA‑P, Guide to Spanish Pre-Insolvency Restructurings
  7. Chambers Practice Guides, Shipping 2026: Spain
  8. Matheson, EU Insolvency Harmonisation Directive: Practical Implications

FAQs

What changes did the 2026 insolvency reform introduce for restructuring plans in Spain?
The 2026 reform completed Spain’s transposition of the EU Restructuring Directive, introducing enhanced restructuring plan tools under the TRLC. Key changes include restrictions on ipso facto termination clauses, a reformed creditor-class system with new voting thresholds, the availability of cross-class cram-down, and priority protection for interim financing. For transport companies, the reform also incorporates Commercial Code amendments affecting freight contract treatment during proceedings.
The reformed TRLC reorganises creditors into secured, general preferential, ordinary and subordinated classes. Transport-sector creditors with statutory liens on cargo may qualify as secured creditors, enjoying higher recovery and greater plan influence. Ordinary trade creditors, such as fuel suppliers and sub-carriers without security, are vulnerable to cross-class cram-down and should seek to establish security interests proactively.
Under the reformed TRLC, freight and transport contracts generally survive the insolvency declaration. Ipso facto termination clauses, those triggered solely by insolvency, are unenforceable. The insolvency administrator may terminate burdensome contracts with court approval, and counterparties may seek cargo release orders, assert statutory liens, and file priority claims for pre-insolvency services.
Transport companies can use the pre-insolvency communication period to prepare a restructuring plan in Spain under court protection. The plan must demonstrate viability, classify creditors correctly, and meet voting thresholds. If creditor approval is not unanimous, the debtor may seek cross-class cram-down, provided the plan satisfies the best-interest-of-creditors test and applicable priority rules.
Yes, the general rule under the reformed TRLC is contract survival. A carrier subject to restructuring proceedings remains bound by existing carriage obligations, including international shipments, unless the insolvency administrator obtains court authorisation to terminate. Cross-border performance obligations are further governed by the applicable international transport conventions (CMR, CIM, Montreal Convention) alongside Spanish insolvency law.
Cargo situated in Spain falls within the jurisdiction of the Spanish insolvency court once proceedings are opened. Foreign creditors seeking to enforce against cargo in Spain must respect the general enforcement stay. The EU Insolvency Regulation (recast) coordinates recognition of proceedings across member states, but local procedural rules on cargo release and lien enforcement apply within Spanish territory.
A logistics creditor should immediately document all outstanding claims and services performed, assert any statutory lien on goods or cargo in its possession, notify the insolvency administrator or the debtor in writing, and file a formal creditor claim within the statutory deadline under the TRLC. Engaging specialist insolvency counsel promptly is essential to preserve priority status and avoid claim subordination.

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How Spain's 2026 Insolvency Reform Changes the Treatment of Freight & Transport Contracts

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