Choosing the Right Legal Structure in Spain
A strategic guide for international investors, multinational groups, and global entrepreneurs navigating Spain's corporate framework. Select the structure that aligns with your liability protection, tax objectives, and growth plans.
Why Structure Matters
The Foundation of Your Spanish Operations
Selecting the right legal structure is one of the most consequential decisions when entering the Spanish market. Your choice impacts liability exposure, tax treatment, governance flexibility, capital requirements, and the perception of your business among Spanish partners, banks, and regulators.
Spain offers several corporate vehicles, each designed for different business contexts. Whether you are a startup founder, a multinational expanding European operations, or a family office making a strategic investment, understanding these options is essential to building a compliant, tax-efficient, and operationally sound presence.
This guide provides an in-depth comparison of the five primary legal structures available to foreign investors in Spain:
- Sociedad Limitada (SL) — Limited Liability Company
- Sociedad Anónima (SA) — Public Limited Company
- Branch Office (Sucursal) — Extension of a foreign entity
- Subsidiary (Filial) — Independent legal entity under parent control
- Representative Office — Non-trading presence
Sociedad Limitada (SL)
Limited Liability Company
The Sociedad Limitada is Spain's most popular legal structure for small and medium enterprises, startups, and foreign investors seeking flexibility and limited liability. Approximately 90% of newly registered companies in Spain choose the SL format.
Key Characteristics
| Minimum Capital | €3,000 (must be fully paid at incorporation) |
| Shareholders | Minimum 1 (can be individual or corporate) |
| Liability | Limited to capital contribution |
| Governance | Sole administrator or board of directors |
| Share Transferability | Restricted (consent of other partners required) |
| Audit Requirement | Only if thresholds exceeded (assets >€2.85M, revenue >€5.7M, or >50 employees) |
Best For
- SMEs and startups
- Single-member companies
- Foreign investors seeking simplicity
- Joint ventures with defined partner groups
- Businesses prioritizing operational flexibility
Governance Notes
- • Partners can manage directly or appoint an administrator
- • Board meetings not mandatory for small SLs
- • Annual general meetings can be held by written resolution
- • Bylaws can restrict transfer of participation units
Sociedad Anónima (SA)
Public Limited Company
The Sociedad Anónima is Spain's equivalent of a public limited company and is required for businesses seeking stock market listings, large capital raises, or higher institutional credibility. It offers transferable shares and more formal governance.
Key Characteristics
| Minimum Capital | €60,000 (25% at incorporation, balance within defined period) |
| Shareholders | Minimum 1 |
| Liability | Limited to capital contribution |
| Governance | Board of directors mandatory above certain thresholds |
| Share Transferability | Freely transferable unless restricted by bylaws |
| Audit Requirement | Mandatory if thresholds exceeded or always for listed companies |
Best For
- Large corporations and holding structures
- Companies planning IPOs or significant capital raises
- Businesses requiring freely transferable shares
- Operations needing high institutional credibility
- Joint ventures with external investors
Governance Notes
- • Board required when capital exceeds €3M or more than 3 shareholders
- • Formal annual general meetings with notarial documentation
- • Share register maintained by the company
- • Complex governance suitable for institutional investors
Branch Office (Sucursal)
Extension of a foreign entity
A branch office is an extension of a foreign company operating in Spain. It is not a separate legal entity but operates under the parent company's legal personality. Branches are common for multinational corporations testing the Spanish market before committing to a full subsidiary.
Key Characteristics
| Minimum Capital | None (operates under parent company's capital) |
| Legal Personality | None (parent company is the legal entity) |
| Liability | Unlimited (parent company fully liable) |
| Governance | Local representative appointed by parent |
| Tax Treatment | Permanent establishment; taxed on Spanish-source income |
| Accounting | Separate accounts required for Spanish operations |
Best For
- Foreign companies testing Spanish market
- Short-to-medium term projects
- Operations with limited local liability exposure
- Companies wanting simpler administrative setup
Legal Requirements
- • Public deed of establishment executed before Spanish notary
- • Certified copy of parent company's incorporation documents
- • Board resolution authorizing Spanish branch
- • Apostille or legalization of foreign documents
Subsidiary (Filial)
Independent legal entity under parent control
A subsidiary is a fully independent Spanish legal entity owned by a foreign parent company. Unlike a branch, a subsidiary provides complete liability separation between parent and Spanish operations. Subsidiaries are ideal for long-term strategic investments.
Key Characteristics
| Minimum Capital | Depends on chosen form (€3,000 for SL, €60,000 for SA) |
| Legal Personality | Separate legal entity |
| Liability | Limited (parent not liable for subsidiary's debts) |
| Governance | Full Spanish corporate governance |
| Tax Treatment | Separate Spanish tax resident; may benefit from holding regimes |
| Autonomy | Full operational independence |
Best For
- Long-term strategic investments
- International holding structures
- Operations requiring liability firewall
- Businesses seeking local financing or incentives
- Groups needing separate audited financials
Tax Advantages
- • Access to ETVE (Spanish holding company) regime
- • Ability to apply double taxation treaties
- • Local tax incentives for R&D, patent box, reinvestment
- • Group consolidation possible with other Spanish entities
Representative Office
Oficina de Representación
A representative office is the lightest form of presence in Spain. It is strictly prohibited from conducting commercial activities, making sales, or entering into contracts. It serves exclusively for market research, liaison, and promotional purposes.
Key Characteristics
| Commercial Activity | Not permitted |
| Legal Personality | None |
| Liability | Parent company fully liable |
| Tax Treatment | Generally not a permanent establishment |
| Typical Use | Market research, client liaison, promotion |
| Governance | Minimal; local contact appointed |
Best For
- Pre-investment market analysis
- Liaison with Spanish clients or partners
- Brand promotion without sales activity
- Companies evaluating Spanish market entry
Limitations
- • Cannot invoice, sell, or sign commercial contracts
- • If commercial activity occurs, authorities may reclassify as branch/PE
- • Limited to preparatory and auxiliary activities
Pros & Cons Comparison
Compare all five Spanish legal structures at a glance to identify the best fit for your business objectives.
| Structure | Liability | Setup Complexity | Capital Required | Tax Efficiency | Flexibility | Best Use Case |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Sociedad | Limited | Low | €3,000 | Good | High | SMEs, startups, JVs |
Sociedad | Limited | High | €60,000 | Good | Medium | Large corps, IPO candidates |
Branch | Unlimited (parent) | Medium | None | Moderate | Medium | Market testing, projects |
Subsidiary | Limited | Medium-High | Per entity type | Excellent | High | Long-term investment |
Representative | Unlimited (parent) | Low | None | N/A | Very Low | Research, liaison only |
Your 6-Step Roadmap to Company Formation in Spain
Follow these essential steps to successfully register and launch your business entity in Spain
Choose Legal Structure
Select the right entity type for your business goals—SL, SA, or branch office.
Learn about entity types→Reserve Company Name
Secure your unique business name through the Central Commercial Registry.
See name requirements→Obtain NIE/NIF
Acquire tax identification numbers required for all shareholders and directors.
Start NIE application→Open Bank Account
Deposit share capital and set up your corporate banking in Spain.
View banking guide→Notary & Incorporation
Execute the public deed of incorporation before a Spanish notary.
Understand notarization→Register at Mercantile Registry
Complete the inscription at the Commercial Registry to finalize your company.
Learn about registration→Hover over each step to see more details
Typical Use Cases by Company Type
Find the recommended legal structure based on your company profile and strategic objectives.
Startups & Entrepreneurs
The SL offers the lowest capital requirement, maximum flexibility, and simplified governance. Perfect for founders launching tech ventures, consulting practices, or e-commerce businesses.
SMEs Expanding into Spain
Established SMEs benefit from limited liability and full operational control. An SL subsidiary creates clean liability separation from the parent while maintaining simple governance.
Large Multinationals
Large groups typically prefer the credibility and structure of an SA subsidiary. Branches work well for initial market testing before committing to a full subsidiary.
Private Equity & Holding Structures
The Spanish ETVE regime provides participation exemption on dividends and capital gains from qualifying foreign subsidiaries, making Spain attractive for European and Latin American holding structures.
Family Offices
Family offices investing in Spanish real estate or operating businesses typically choose SL for simplicity. SA may be preferred for larger portfolios requiring institutional governance.
Companies Testing the Market
For short-term projects or market research, a branch or representative office minimizes commitment while establishing local presence. Convert to subsidiary once market viability is confirmed.
Legal & Compliance Requirements
Essential documentation, registration steps, and ongoing compliance obligations for Spanish entities.
Documentation Required
- • Valid passport or national ID for all shareholders/directors
- • Proof of registered address (for individuals)
- • Certificate of incorporation and good standing (for corporate shareholders)
- • Board resolution authorizing Spanish entity
- • Power of attorney (if representatives act on behalf)
- • Apostille or legalization for all foreign documents
Registration Steps
- Obtain NIE/NIF — Tax identification for all parties
- Deposit Capital — Bank certificate for SL/SA
- Execute Public Deed — Before Spanish notary
- Commercial Registry Filing — Legal personality obtained
- Tax Authority Registration — VAT, corporate tax, payroll
- Social Security Registration — If hiring employees
Ongoing Compliance
- • Annual accounts filing with Commercial Registry
- • Corporate tax return (Modelo 200)
- • Quarterly VAT returns (Modelo 303)
- • Payroll withholding and Social Security contributions
- • Beneficial ownership declarations
Common Pitfalls & Best Practices
Common Pitfalls to Avoid
- Choosing SA when SL suffices — Unnecessary capital lockup and governance complexity
- Ignoring transfer pricing — Intercompany transactions with parent require arm's-length pricing
- Underestimating registration timelines — Commercial Registry processing takes 2-4 weeks
- Forgetting labour law compliance — Employment contracts must comply with Spanish labour code
- Using branch for long-term operations — Unlimited parent liability becomes a risk as operations grow
- Representative office engaging in sales — Risk of reclassification and back taxes
Best Practices
- Align structure with strategic objectives — Short-term vs. long-term presence
- Engage local legal counsel early — Avoid costly restructuring later
- Plan for growth — Choose a structure that scales without major changes
- Optimize tax position from day one — Structure intercompany financing appropriately
- Build compliance infrastructure — Accounting, payroll, and governance from incorporation
- Document everything — Board minutes, contracts, and transfer pricing policies
Download Our Legal Structure Comparison Guide
Get our comprehensive PDF comparing all five Spanish legal structures. Includes decision flowchart, capital requirements, governance checklists, and tax optimization tips.
Frequently Asked Questions
Common questions about Spanish legal structures for foreign investors.
Not Sure Which Structure Fits Your Business?
Our corporate advisory team can help you evaluate your options and select the optimal legal structure for your Spanish operations. We provide tailored recommendations based on your specific business objectives, tax position, and growth plans.
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