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subsidiary vs branch Spain tax

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Subsidiary vs Branch in Spain, Tax & Liability Comparison for Foreign Investors (2026)

By Global Law Experts
– posted 2 days ago

Foreign investors entering Spain face a binary structural choice that determines every downstream tax, liability and repatriation outcome: incorporate a local subsidiary or register a branch. The subsidiary vs branch Spain tax decision turns on five dimensions, headline corporate tax rate, withholding on profit repatriation, parent-company liability exposure, set-up cost and timing, and the new Pillar Two global minimum tax interactions that came into practical effect in 2024–2025 and now shape 2026 planning. This article delivers the quantified, dimension-by-dimension comparison that most advisory pages omit, together with an explicit decision framework.

For most long-term, capital-intensive operations, a subsidiary will be the stronger structure; for short-term, project-limited market tests, a branch remains viable, but only after modelling the repatriation and liability trade-offs set out below.

Option A, The Spanish Subsidiary

A subsidiary is a separate Spanish legal entity, typically a Sociedad de Responsabilidad Limitada (S.L.) or a Sociedad Anónima (S.A.), incorporated under the Ley de Sociedades de Capital (Real Decreto Legislativo 1/2010). It has its own legal personality, its own tax identification number (NIF), and is a Spanish tax resident from the date of incorporation.

As a tax resident, the subsidiary pays Corporate Income Tax (Impuesto sobre Sociedades) at the general rate of 25 % on worldwide income attributable to it, as established by Article 29 of Ley 27/2014 (Ley del Impuesto sobre Sociedades). Newly created entities carrying out economic activity may benefit from a reduced rate of 15 % during their first tax period in which they report a positive tax base and the following period. Small entities with net turnover below €1 million may apply a reduced rate of 23 %.

The parent company’s liability is limited to its share capital contribution. For an S.L., the statutory minimum share capital is €3,000 (though the practical capital deployed is usually far higher). Incorporation typically takes 4–8 weeks once documents are apostilled, requiring a notarial deed (escritura pública), registration at the Registro Mercantil, and tax registrations with the AEAT. Legal and notarial costs for a straightforward S.L. incorporation generally range between €2,000 and €5,000, excluding share capital.

Who should prefer a subsidiary:

  • Private equity buyers and multinational groups planning operations beyond two years.
  • Investors who require liability insulation between the Spanish operations and the parent.
  • Groups seeking access to Spanish R&D tax credits, patent-box regimes or tax consolidation.
  • EU/EEA parents that can eliminate repatriation withholding under the Parent–Subsidiary Directive.
  • Entities subject to Pillar Two where a clearly delineated local entity simplifies jurisdictional blending calculations.

Option B, The Spanish Branch

A branch (sucursal) is not a separate legal entity. It is an extension of the foreign parent company that operates in Spain through a permanent establishment. The branch is registered at the Registro Mercantil and must appoint a legal representative, but it does not have its own share capital and cannot contract independently of the parent.

Taxation falls under the Non-Resident Income Tax regime (IRNR, Impuesto sobre la Renta de No Residentes), regulated by Real Decreto Legislativo 5/2004. Profits attributable to the Spanish permanent establishment are taxed at the general IRNR rate of 25 % (matching the standard subsidiary CIT rate). A complementary withholding, effectively a branch profit tax, of 19 % may apply on the after-tax profit deemed repatriated, unless a double-tax treaty or the EU/EEA internal-market exemption reduces or eliminates it.

Because the branch has no separate legal personality, the parent is directly and unlimitedly liable for all branch obligations, including employee claims, supplier debts, tort liabilities and regulatory penalties. Creditors may pursue parent-company assets in the parent’s home jurisdiction to satisfy Spanish branch debts.

Branch registration is typically faster and cheaper than subsidiary incorporation, often achievable within 2–4 weeks with set-up costs of €1,500–€3,500, but ongoing compliance is more complex because Spanish filings must be reconciled with the parent’s home-country accounts.

Who should prefer a branch:

  • Companies testing the Spanish market for fewer than two years with minimal capital at risk.
  • Project-based operations (e.g., a single construction contract) where the presence is inherently temporary.
  • Parents that need to offset Spanish losses against home-country profits immediately.
  • Situations where the parent actively accepts direct liability exposure.

Subsidiary vs Branch in Spain, Side-by-Side Comparison Table

Dimension Subsidiary (S.L. / S.A.) Branch (Sucursal)
Legal personality Separate Spanish company; parent liability limited to share capital No separate legal personality, extension of parent; parent liable for all branch debts
Tax residency Spanish tax resident; pays CIT under Ley 27/2014 Non-resident; taxed under IRNR (RDL 5/2004) on profits attributable to Spanish PE
Headline tax rate (2026) 25 % general CIT (15 % for new entities in first two profitable periods; 23 % for turnover < €1 M) 25 % IRNR on attributable profits
Withholding on repatriation 19 % on dividends; 0 % if Parent–Subsidiary Directive conditions met (EU/EEA parent, ≥ 5 % holding, held ≥ 1 year); treaty rates may also reduce 19 % branch profit tax on after-tax earnings deemed repatriated; may be reduced/eliminated by treaty or EU/EEA exemption
Maximum combined tax on repatriated profit 25 % CIT + 19 % WHT = up to ~39.25 %; 25 % CIT + 0 % WHT = 25 % (EU/EEA exempt parent) 25 % IRNR + 19 % branch profit tax = up to ~39.25 %; reduced to 25 % if treaty/EU exemption eliminates branch tax
Liability & enforceability Parent shielded; subsidiary can be sued separately Parent directly exposed; enforcement can attach parent assets abroad
Transfer pricing / PE risk Manageable via arm’s-length intra-group contracts; clear entity boundaries Branch is the PE, high transfer-pricing scrutiny; profit-attribution disputes common
Accounting & compliance Local statutory accounts, annual corporate tax return (Modelo 200), VAT, payroll Branch accounts plus parent-company consolidation; dual filing burden
Set-up time & cost 4–8 weeks; €2,000–€5,000 + share capital (min €3,000 for S.L.) 2–4 weeks; €1,500–€3,500; no share capital
Pillar Two exposure Local entity included in jurisdictional top-up calculation; benefits from Spain’s generally compliant effective rate Profits attributed to parent jurisdiction, Pillar Two blending differs; requires specific modelling

Key takeaways from the comparison table:

  • When the EU Parent–Subsidiary Directive or an applicable tax treaty eliminates withholding, a subsidiary achieves an effective repatriated-profit rate of 25 %, identical to the branch IRNR rate, but with full liability insulation.
  • Without treaty or directive relief, both structures face a combined burden of approximately 39.25 % on repatriated earnings, making treaty analysis the pivotal variable.
  • The branch’s cost and speed advantages at set-up are modest (€500–€1,500 and 2–4 weeks) and are rapidly offset by ongoing compliance complexity and unlimited parent liability.

Dimension-by-Dimension Analysis: Tax Implications of a Branch vs Subsidiary in Spain

Tax implications, corporate tax, IRNR and effective rates

The headline rates for a subsidiary and a branch are now aligned at 25 %, which means the tax-rate advantage that branches once enjoyed has effectively disappeared. The operative difference lies in the layer of tax applied when profits leave Spain.

Item Subsidiary Branch
Tax on Spanish-source profits 25 % CIT (Art. 29, Ley 27/2014) 25 % IRNR (Art. 19, RDL 5/2004)
Reduced rate, new entities 15 % (first two profitable periods) Not available
Reduced rate, small company (turnover < €1 M) 23 % Not available
Withholding on repatriation 19 % dividend WHT (standard) 19 % branch profit tax (standard)
EU/EEA exemption available? Yes, 0 % under Parent–Subsidiary Directive (≥ 5 % holding, ≥ 1 year) Yes, 0 % for EU/EEA parent under domestic implementation
Treaty-reduced rate (example: UK, US) Typically 0–15 % depending on treaty Typically 0–10 % depending on treaty branch-profit article

A subsidiary is the clear winner for groups that qualify for the Parent–Subsidiary Directive exemption, because it delivers 25 % total taxation with zero repatriation friction. Branches can reach the same result under the EU/EEA exemption, but the administrative burden to demonstrate compliance is higher and the AEAT scrutinises branch-profit calculations more closely.

Repatriation and withholding, dividends vs branch distributions

The standard withholding rate on dividends paid by a Spanish subsidiary to a non-resident parent is 19 %, as set out in Article 25.1(f) of RDL 5/2004. However, three mechanisms can reduce this to zero:

  • Parent–Subsidiary Directive (Council Directive 2011/96/EU): 0 % withholding where an EU/EEA parent holds at least 5 % of the subsidiary’s capital for an uninterrupted period of at least one year.
  • Bilateral tax treaties: Spain’s treaty network (over 90 treaties) commonly reduces dividend withholding to 5–15 %, and certain treaties contain participation-exemption provisions yielding 0 %.
  • EU Interest and Royalties Directive: relevant for interest and royalty payments between associated companies.

Branch profit repatriation in Spain operates differently. There is no formal “dividend”, the parent simply withdraws after-tax profits. The 19 % complementary tax applies to the net profit attributable to the branch, reduced by any reinvested amounts, unless a treaty or the EU/EEA exemption removes it. Industry observers note that the AEAT applies this consistently to non-treaty, non-EU parent branches.

Liability and enforcement

This dimension frequently determines the structure choice for risk-averse investors, regardless of the tax arithmetic. A subsidiary’s corporate veil means the parent’s exposure is capped at its capital contribution (absent fraud, thin capitalisation abuse, or explicit parent guarantees). A branch offers no such protection: the parent is the legal counterparty to every contract, employment relationship and tort action the branch enters into. Spanish courts can issue judgments enforceable against the parent’s assets in its home jurisdiction under EU Regulation 1215/2012 (Brussels I Recast) or bilateral enforcement treaties.

For operations involving significant employee headcount, real-estate leases, or customer-facing liabilities (product liability, environmental exposure), a subsidiary is the only prudent choice.

Transfer pricing and permanent establishment risks

A branch is a permanent establishment by definition. While this eliminates the risk of an unintended PE classification, it amplifies transfer-pricing exposure. The AEAT requires branches to demonstrate arm’s-length profit attribution under the Authorised OECD Approach (AOA), and profit-attribution disputes are among the most heavily litigated issues in Spanish international tax. A subsidiary, by contrast, establishes a clear transactional boundary, arm’s-length pricing of intra-group services, IP licences, and management fees is more straightforward to document and defend.

Groups with material IP, shared services or centralised treasury functions should strongly prefer a subsidiary to avoid the complexity of branch profit-attribution calculations.

Cost and timing

The branch saves money at the front end but costs more over the medium term. The table below summarises representative figures:

Cost / timing item Subsidiary (S.L.) Branch
Formation time 4–8 weeks 2–4 weeks
Legal + notarial costs €2,000–€5,000 €1,500–€3,500
Minimum capital €3,000 (S.L.) None
Annual compliance (audit, filings) €3,000–€8,000 (depending on size) €4,000–€10,000 (dual-jurisdiction reconciliation)
Closure / winding-up cost €2,000–€6,000; 3–12 months €1,000–€3,000; 1–3 months

The branch’s ongoing compliance burden, maintaining branch accounts that reconcile with the parent’s home-country financials, dual-jurisdiction reporting, and the IRNR profit-attribution documentation, often exceeds the subsidiary’s simpler standalone filings within the first 18 months of operation.

Regulatory and sector-specific constraints

Certain sectors effectively mandate one structure over the other. Financial services firms seeking authorisation from the CNMV or Banco de España typically must operate through a locally capitalised subsidiary. Energy and infrastructure concessions frequently require a Spanish-incorporated vehicle to hold licences. By contrast, EU-regulated entities such as insurance or credit institutions may operate cross-border through a branch under passporting rules, but this is a regulatory convenience, not a tax optimisation. Investors targeting the Canary Islands’ special ZEC regime or the Basque Country’s own corporate-tax system must incorporate a local entity to access those incentives.

What Changes in 2026, Pillar Two, Withholding and Tax-Tech Compliance

Three overlapping developments make the subsidiary vs branch Spain tax analysis materially different in 2026 compared with even two years ago.

1. OECD Pillar Two is now operational. Spain transposed the EU Minimum Tax Directive (Council Directive 2022/2523) through legislation effective for fiscal years beginning on or after 28 December 2023, with the Undertaxed Profits Rule (UTPR) applying from 2025. For groups with consolidated revenue above €750 million, every constituent entity, including a Spanish branch, must be mapped into the jurisdictional effective-tax-rate (ETR) calculation. A subsidiary is a clear “constituent entity” in Spain; its ETR is computed on a standalone basis and, given Spain’s 25 % rate, typically meets the 15 % minimum without triggering a top-up.

A branch, however, is attributed to the parent’s jurisdiction for Pillar Two purposes under the GloBE Rules, and its profits feed into the parent-jurisdiction blending. If the parent is in a low-tax or incentive-heavy jurisdiction, including the Spanish branch profits in that pool could paradoxically trigger a top-up tax. Conversely, if the parent is in a high-tax jurisdiction, blending Spanish branch profits may have no adverse effect, but the modelling must be done case-by-case.

2. Withholding and directive interactions remain stable but enforcement tightens. The Parent–Subsidiary Directive conditions have not changed, but the AEAT has intensified substance-over-form reviews of EU holding structures claiming 0 % withholding. Groups relying on intermediate holding companies should expect increased documentation requirements. The likely practical effect will be longer processing times for withholding-exemption certificates for both subsidiaries and branches.

3. E-invoicing and tax-tech compliance. Spain is phasing in mandatory structured e-invoicing (the Verifactu system) for all taxpayers over 2025–2026. Both subsidiaries and branches will need compliant invoicing software. However, a branch’s requirement to reconcile Spanish e-invoicing records with the parent’s home-country ERP adds a layer of systems integration cost that a standalone subsidiary avoids.

The net effect of these 2026 changes is that the traditional branch advantage, slightly simpler formation and direct loss utilisation, is being eroded by rising compliance costs and Pillar Two complexity. For groups above the €750 million Pillar Two threshold, professional modelling of the jurisdictional ETR impact is essential before committing to either structure.

Decision Framework, When to Choose a Subsidiary vs Branch in Spain

Choose a subsidiary when:

  • You plan operations lasting more than two years and want liability insulation between the Spanish entity and the parent.
  • Your group is an EU/EEA parent that qualifies for 0 % dividend withholding under the Parent–Subsidiary Directive, achieving a 25 % total tax burden on repatriated profits.
  • You need access to Spanish domestic tax incentives (R&D credits, patent box, ZEC regime, tax consolidation).
  • Your group exceeds the €750 million Pillar Two threshold and needs a clearly delineated Spanish constituent entity for jurisdictional ETR calculations.
  • The Spanish operation involves significant employee headcount, customer-facing contracts, real-estate leases or environmental exposure.
  • Material IP, shared services or intra-group financing is involved, a subsidiary simplifies transfer-pricing documentation.
  • You may want to admit local co-investors, issue local debt, or list the Spanish entity independently in the future.

Choose a branch when:

  • The Spanish presence is temporary (under two years) and project-specific, for example, a single construction contract or a market-test phase.
  • Immediate cost sensitivity is paramount and the parent accepts full liability exposure.
  • The parent wants to offset Spanish start-up losses against home-country profits in the first years (where the parent’s home tax law permits).
  • Regulatory passporting (EU financial services, insurance) allows branch-based cross-border operation.
  • Capital deployment is minimal and the operation involves no significant third-party liabilities.
If your priority is… Choose
Limiting parent liability Subsidiary
Minimising tax on repatriated profits (EU/EEA parent) Subsidiary (0 % WHT via Directive)
Fastest and cheapest market entry Branch
Immediate cross-border loss utilisation Branch
Pillar Two compliance simplicity Subsidiary
Access to Spanish tax incentives Subsidiary
Short-term project (< 2 years) Branch
Sector requiring local capitalisation (finance, energy) Subsidiary

Reversibility note: converting a branch into a subsidiary is possible but not seamless. The standard route is to incorporate a new S.L. and transfer the branch’s assets, contracts and employees into it. This triggers potential capital-gains exposure on the transfer of assets, employee consultation obligations under the Estatuto de los Trabajadores, and re-registration of licences and permits. Industry observers note that the process typically takes three to six months and costs €5,000–€15,000 in professional fees, excluding any tax charge on asset transfers. Anticipating the likely final structure at the outset avoids these costs.

When to Engage a Lawyer for the Subsidiary vs Branch Decision

Not every Spanish market entry requires bespoke legal structuring, but most do, because the tax, liability and regulatory variables interact in ways that generic guidance cannot resolve. Engage specialist tax and corporate counsel when:

  • The planned investment exceeds €500,000 or involves real estate, IP transfers, or intra-group financing structures that require transfer-pricing analysis.
  • The parent group’s consolidated revenue exceeds €750 million, triggering Pillar Two obligations that require jurisdictional ETR modelling for the Spanish entity.
  • The operation involves regulated sectors (financial services, energy, telecoms, pharmaceuticals) where local licensing mandates a specific entity form.
  • Treaty-benefit analysis is needed, for example, a non-EU parent seeking to reduce the 19 % withholding via a bilateral tax treaty’s dividend or branch-profit article.
  • The group is considering restructuring an existing branch into a subsidiary (or vice versa), which raises asset-transfer, employee and contractual continuity issues.

A qualified Spanish tax lawyer can model the effective tax rate under each structure, confirm directive and treaty eligibility, and identify sector-specific requirements, typically within a single scoping engagement. The Global Law Experts lawyer directory can help identify qualified counsel for this analysis.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Gerard Marata at La Guard, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. Agencia Tributaria (AEAT), Corporate Tax and IRNR guidance
  2. Boletín Oficial del Estado (BOE), Ley 27/2014 del Impuesto sobre Sociedades; RDL 5/2004 IRNR
  3. OECD, Pillar Two (Global Anti-Base Erosion) guidance
  4. EUR-Lex, Parent–Subsidiary Directive (Council Directive 2011/96/EU) and EU Minimum Tax Directive (Council Directive 2022/2523)
  5. Euroaccounts, Subsidiary vs Branch in Spain (practical guide)
  6. Mariscal Abogados, Setting up a branch vs subsidiary in Spain
  7. Ferrer-Bonsoms & Sanjurjo, Legal and tax differences
  8. LegaltaxSpain, Branch vs subsidiary guide
  9. OECD, Model Tax Convention and Double Tax Treaties

FAQs

Which is better for tax in Spain: a subsidiary or a branch?
For EU/EEA parents qualifying for the Parent–Subsidiary Directive, a subsidiary is better, it achieves a 25 % total tax rate on repatriated profits with zero withholding. Branches can reach the same rate only if treaty or EU exemptions apply to the branch profit tax.
A branch pays 25 % IRNR on attributable profits (matching the subsidiary’s 25 % CIT), plus a 19 % complementary branch profit tax on repatriated earnings. A subsidiary pays 25 % CIT plus 19 % dividend withholding, but the withholding is more commonly eliminated via the Parent–Subsidiary Directive.
Yes. A registered branch is automatically classified as a permanent establishment in Spain. The parent is taxed on branch-attributable profits under the IRNR and faces heightened transfer-pricing scrutiny from the AEAT on profit-allocation methodology.
Incorporate a subsidiary when you plan operations lasting more than two years, need liability protection, seek access to Spanish tax incentives, or require a clean entity boundary for Pillar Two compliance and transfer pricing.
A subsidiary is treated as a separate constituent entity in Spain for Pillar Two jurisdictional ETR calculations. A branch’s profits are attributed to the parent’s jurisdiction, potentially changing the blending outcome. Groups above the €750 million threshold should model both scenarios before deciding.
Conversion from branch to subsidiary is feasible but involves incorporating a new S.L., transferring assets (with potential capital-gains tax), migrating contracts and employees, and re-registering permits. Costs typically range from €5,000 to €15,000 in professional fees, plus any applicable tax charges.
Both require apostilled corporate documents from the parent’s home jurisdiction, a tax identification number (NIF), and registration at the Registro Mercantil. A subsidiary additionally requires a notarial deed of incorporation, proof of share capital deposit, and articles of association.
Engage specialist counsel when the investment exceeds €500,000, the group is subject to Pillar Two, the sector is regulated, treaty-benefit analysis is needed, or you are considering converting an existing structure. A scoping engagement can model effective rates under each option.
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Subsidiary vs Branch in Spain, Tax & Liability Comparison for Foreign Investors (2026)

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