Last reviewed: April 27, 2026
Spain’s reformed restructuring framework now gives financially distressed companies a realistic, court-supervised path to survival without the stigma and rigidity of traditional insolvency proceedings. Rooted in the transposition of the EU Restructuring Directive into Spain’s Consolidated Insolvency Act (Texto Refundido de la Ley Concursal, or TRLC), the Spanish restructuring regime 2026 allows debtors, and, in defined circumstances, creditors and shareholders, to propose binding restructuring plans (planes de reestructuración) that can override dissenting minorities once confirmed by the court. This Spain restructuring plan 2026 guide walks company directors, CFOs, in-house counsel, insolvency practitioners and creditor advisers through every practical stage: from the first diagnostic assessment to court confirmation and implementation, with checklists, timelines and negotiation strategies you can apply immediately.
In this guide you will learn:
Whether you are a debtor weighing your options, a creditor protecting your exposure or a shareholder assessing dilution risk, this guide provides the procedural roadmap you need.
Spain’s current restructuring plan regime is the product of successive legislative interventions that transposed the EU Directive on Restructuring and Insolvency (Directive 2019/1023) into domestic law. The reform replaced the earlier, narrower pre-insolvency tools, principally the acuerdos de refinanciación and acuerdos extrajudiciales de pagos, with a unified framework of restructuring plans embedded in Book II of the TRLC. The practical effect is a single, flexible vehicle that allows viable businesses to restructure debt while continuing to trade under the debtor-in-possession model.
| Date | Measure | Practical Effect |
|---|---|---|
| June 2022 | Law 16/2022 reforming the TRLC to transpose Directive 2019/1023 | Introduced planes de reestructuración (Book II TRLC), restructuring expert role, cross-class cram-down and debtor-in-possession framework |
| September 2022 | Entry into force of Book II TRLC provisions | Restructuring plans became available as a pre-insolvency tool; old acuerdos de refinanciación homologados regime repealed |
| 2023–2025 | Successive implementing regulations and court practice developments | Judicial interpretation of class formation rules, voting thresholds and restructuring expert appointments consolidated through commercial court decisions |
| 2026 | Mature operating regime; further regulatory clarifications anticipated | Market practice stabilised; increased use by SMEs; growing body of confirmation decisions guiding practitioners |
Under Book II of the TRLC, the debtor holds the primary right to propose a plan de reestructuración. This is the most common route in practice: the company’s directors prepare the plan, engage with creditors informally, and then seek formal approval and court confirmation. Industry observers note, however, that the legislation also permits creditors representing a significant proportion of affected liabilities, and, in certain circumstances, shareholders, to present alternative plans or to petition the court to open the restructuring process where the debtor has not acted. This creditor-initiation mechanism, while still less frequently used, is gaining traction as lenders become more familiar with the framework.
A critical innovation is the appointment of a restructuring expert (experto en reestructuración). The court appoints this independent professional, either at the debtor’s request or at a creditor’s request, to facilitate negotiations, value the business and, where required, issue a report supporting the plan’s feasibility. Early indications suggest that plans accompanied by a restructuring expert’s report face fewer objections at the confirmation stage.
Launching a restructuring plan is a sequential process that blends financial diagnosis, stakeholder management and legal procedure. The following checklist maps the critical steps from the first board discussion to the filing of the plan with the commercial court.
Before any plan is drafted, the debtor must understand its own position with precision. The diagnostic phase, typically completed within the first 30 days, covers three areas:
Once diagnostics are complete, the debtor enters a negotiation phase with key creditor groups. This is where the debtor-in-possession Spain model shows its value: the company continues to trade and manage its business while negotiating restructuring terms, without the displacement of management that characterised earlier concurso proceedings.
Practical steps in the negotiation phase include:
Creditors and their advisers will conduct their own due diligence before supporting any plan. Expect requests for:
Sample 90-day timeline:
| Period | Action | Responsible Party |
|---|---|---|
| Day 0–15 | Board resolution; engage counsel; commence liquidity analysis | Debtor / Directors |
| Day 15–30 | Complete diagnostics; request restructuring expert (if needed); prepare preliminary information package | Debtor / Advisers |
| Day 30–45 | Open creditor negotiations; request stay of enforcement (if needed); circulate plan summary | Debtor / Restructuring expert |
| Day 45–70 | Negotiate plan terms; finalise class formation; obtain independent valuations | All parties |
| Day 70–80 | Formal creditor vote on the plan | Debtor / Restructuring expert |
| Day 80–90 | File plan with commercial court for confirmation | Debtor / Counsel |
This 90-day estimate reflects a moderately complex case. Simpler bilateral restructurings may complete faster; multi-jurisdictional or multi-creditor-class cases frequently take longer. Find a restructuring lawyer in Spain to discuss timelines tailored to your situation.
The class formation and voting mechanics are the engine of the restructuring plan. Getting them right determines whether the plan can bind dissenting minorities and survive court scrutiny.
Under Book II of the TRLC, creditors whose claims are affected by the plan are grouped into classes based on a “sufficient commonality of interest” test. At a minimum, secured and unsecured creditors must form separate classes. Within each class, the plan must be approved by the requisite majority of the aggregate value of claims represented in that class. The legislation provides for different majority thresholds depending on the severity of the proposed treatment, higher majorities are required for deeper haircuts or longer maturity extensions.
The likely practical effect of these thresholds is that debtors must build consensus with at least two-thirds (by value) of each affected class in most scenarios, though industry observers note that the precise percentage depends on the specific measures proposed. Where the plan is approved by all classes, confirmation is more straightforward. Where one or more classes dissent, the debtor must rely on the cross-class cram-down mechanism, a critical innovation of the 2026 framework.
Negotiations between secured and unsecured creditor groups typically follow predictable patterns:
Dissenting creditors may challenge the plan at two points: during the voting process (by voting against) and at the confirmation hearing (by filing formal objections). Practical strategies to minimise objections include:
Sample calculation, three-creditor-class voting:
| Class | Total Claims (€m) | Votes in Favour (€m) | Approval (%) | Result |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Secured (banks) | 50 | 38 | 76% | Approved |
| Unsecured (trade) | 30 | 22 | 73% | Approved |
| Subordinated | 10 | 4 | 40% | Rejected, cross-class cram-down required |
In this example, if the debtor can demonstrate that the subordinated class receives at least as much under the plan as it would in a liquidation (the “best-interest-of-creditors” test) and that the plan satisfies the absolute priority rule or its statutory exception, the court may confirm the plan notwithstanding the subordinated class’s rejection.
The restructuring plan document (plan de reestructuración) must contain specific mandatory content prescribed by the TRLC. Drafting it correctly is not merely a matter of legal compliance, it is a strategic exercise that shapes negotiation dynamics and determines court confirmation prospects.
| Stakeholder Group | Typical Treatment in 2026 Plans | Key Drafting Considerations |
|---|---|---|
| Secured creditors | Maturity extension; margin renegotiation; partial debt-for-equity swap; enhanced or replacement security | Valuation of collateral must be supported by independent report; any impairment below the value of security triggers best-interest protections |
| Unsecured creditors | Haircuts (partial forgiveness); extended payment schedules; conversion to equity or subordinated instruments | Provide clear waterfall analysis showing unsecured recovery exceeds liquidation value; consider offering partial early payment to build support |
| Shareholders | Dilution through debt-for-equity conversion; cancellation of existing shares in severe cases; retention of residual equity stake where viable | Shareholders cannot block plans solely to preserve value they would not receive in liquidation; second chance law Spain provisions may offer owner-managers a fresh-start route |
Under the 2026 regime, shareholders are affected parties whose interests must be addressed in the plan, but they do not hold a veto. The TRLC’s second chance provisions (segunda oportunidad), while primarily aimed at natural-person insolvency, influence the treatment of owner-managers of SMEs. Where the restructuring plan results in a change of control or significant dilution, owner-managers may invoke the second chance mechanism to discharge personal guarantees, subject to meeting the statutory conditions of good faith and prior asset disclosure.
For companies with international creditors, the restructuring plan must address recognition and enforcement. Spain’s TRLC includes provisions aligned with the EU Recast Insolvency Regulation (Regulation 2015/848), meaning that a confirmed Spanish restructuring plan is generally recognised across EU member states without the need for separate proceedings. Non-EU creditors, however, may require parallel recognition proceedings under bilateral treaties or the debtor’s contractual arrangements. Industry observers expect this area to generate increasing litigation as cross-border restructurings become more common in the Spanish market.
Once creditors have voted, the plan must be confirmed (homologado) by the competent commercial court (juzgado de lo mercantil). Confirmation transforms a contractual agreement into a binding judicial order enforceable against all affected parties, including dissenters.
The court applies a multi-part test at the confirmation hearing:
After confirmation, the court order is published and notified to all affected parties. The plan’s implementation provisions take effect from the date specified in the order, typically immediately or within a short grace period. Key enforcement steps include:
Secured creditors who voted against the plan may challenge confirmation by arguing that their collateral value is not being adequately preserved. In practice, these challenges turn on valuation evidence. The debtor’s best defence is a robust, independent valuation, ideally one prepared or endorsed by the restructuring expert, that demonstrates the secured creditor receives at least the value of its collateral. Early indications from recent commercial court decisions suggest that courts are willing to defer to expert valuations where the methodology is transparent and the assumptions reasonable. Confirmation disputes, however, remain a source of litigation risk, as noted by leading practitioners analysing the developing case law.
A restructuring plan is only as good as the company’s ability to fund its operations during and after the process. The 2026 regime provides specific protections for new financing that encourage lenders to support distressed businesses.
Under the TRLC, new financing provided in connection with a restructuring plan, sometimes referred to as debtor-in-possession (DIP) financing, can be granted priority status over pre-existing unsecured claims if it is included in the plan and approved by the court. This super-priority protection is a powerful incentive for new lenders, though the scope and ranking of the priority depend on the terms of the plan and the court’s confirmation order.
| Financing Option | Advantages | Risks / Limitations |
|---|---|---|
| New bank facility (DIP loan) | Super-priority available under the plan; immediate liquidity; familiar instrument for Spanish banks | Requires court confirmation; existing secured lenders may oppose priming; pricing reflects distressed risk |
| Bondholder forbearance / amendment | Avoids new cash outlay; preserves existing capital structure; can be combined with maturity extension | Requires bondholder consent (may need majority per indenture terms plus plan approval); limited new liquidity |
| Equity bridge / shareholder injection | No increase in debt; signals shareholder confidence; can improve leverage ratios | Dilution of existing shareholders; may be insufficient for deep distress; tax treatment of equity contributions requires analysis |
The likely practical effect of the super-priority regime is that DIP financing will become increasingly available from specialist distressed-debt funds and Spanish banks with dedicated restructuring desks, particularly for mid-market and larger cases.
A restructuring plan does not operate in a regulatory vacuum. Directors must account for collateral compliance obligations that can derail implementation if overlooked.
The 2026 restructuring regime offers a powerful toolkit, but success depends on early action, rigorous preparation and skilled negotiation. Whether you are a debtor, creditor or shareholder, the following action points apply:
For tailored advice on structuring, negotiating or opposing a restructuring plan in Spain, find a qualified restructuring lawyer through the Spain legal experts directory.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Juan Font Servera at FONT MORA SAINZ DE BARANDA, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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