Corporate Tax 2024

Last Updated March 19, 2024

Spain

Law and Practice

Authors



RocaJunyent was established in 1996 and is one of the most prominent Spanish law firms. It has offices in Madrid, Barcelona and Gerona, as well as associated offices in Palma de Mallorca, Lérida, Tarragona, Málaga, Seville, Bilbao, Badajoz, Burgos and Valladolid. The firm offers advice in all areas of law, especially those related to commercial, banking and financial, procedural and tax law. RocaJunyent is the only Spanish member of the international network TerraLex. Taxes are levied on all kinds of entities and in many situations, which is why RocaJunyent’s tax department is prepared to respond to all kinds of problems – from large companies and their complex structures/operations to individual wealth/inheritance issues. The firm’s services include business taxation, tax wealth management, M&A, transactions taxation, transfer pricing and tax litigation.

Businesses in Spain are generally developed as corporate entities, of which the most common forms are:

  • joint stock companies (sociedades anónimas, or SA), requiring a minimum share capital of EUR60,000; and
  • limited liability companies (sociedades limitadas, or SL), requiring a minimum share capital of EUR3,000.

The responsibility of the shareholders is limited in both cases.

From a tax perspective, corporations ‒ including other types of commercial companies (not just the SA or SL) – are usually subject to corporate income tax (CIT) regulations, which are levied on all legal entities resident in Spain. Certain entities can be exempt from CIT. This exemption applies mainly to public entities and to certain income from non-profit organisations.

CIT rules are also applicable to non-corporations, such as partnerships or lying heritages, provided that they have a business purpose. In the event that they do not have a business purpose, their income will be allocated (transparently) to their partners or co-proprietors. This is also the case for economic interest groupings, where profits or losses are taxed at the level of their co-proprietors.

The most common types of transparent entities that are taxed under the income allocation regime (regimen de atribución de rentas) are civil partnerships without legal status or without commercial object.

The income allocation regime applies to the following entities.

  • Communities of property.
  • Lying heritages.
  • Civil partnerships – although since 1 January 2016, the system only applies to:
    1. civil partnerships without legal status; and
    2. civil partnerships with legal status that do not have a commercial object (ie, those engaged in agricultural activities, livestock activities, forestry activities, mining activities, and those of a professional nature subject to the law on professional societies).
  • Any entity that, not having legal status, constitutes an economic unit or separate assets liable to taxation.
  • Entities established abroad whose legal nature is identical or similar to that of entities attached to the income allocation regime constituted in accordance with Spanish law.

Moreover, the Spanish CIT Act provides for other special fiscal transparency regimes that are commonly adopted in particular business sectors.

Temporary Business Association

Under Spanish law, a Temporary Business Association (Unión Temporal de Empresas, or UTE) is a system of collaboration between companies for the purpose of carrying out a specific project or service for a specified or unspecified period of time.

The purpose of a UTE is business collaboration in order to achieve a result that, owing to its importance or volume, would be difficult to achieve by just one of the companies alone. In practice, UTEs are frequently used for the execution of public infrastructure project works (such as roads, a recycling plant, etc) in which each company member of the UTE is specialised in a specific part of the project. Though form of association is very common for engineering and construction projects, it can be used in other sectors as well.

Economic Interest Grouping

The aim of an Economic Interest Grouping (Agrupación de Interés Económico, or AIE) is to allow companies to join forces where they have common interests, while continuing to preserve their ultimate independence.

The AIE is a trading company whose sole purpose is to carry out an economic activity ancillary to that carried out by its members, without aiming to obtain any profit, who may be natural or legal persons engaged in business, agricultural or craft activities, non-profit entities engaged in research, or those exercising liberal professions.

It enables certain companies to carry out commercial activities that would be impossible to carry out on their own, such as market research, centralised purchasing, sales, information management or administrative services.

The AIE has its own legal personality and commercial character. However, it may not hold shares in companies that are members of the AIE – nor may it directly or indirectly manage or control the activities of its members or third parties.

This type of entity is used to transfer tax credits to investors in relation to R&D, movies and musical productions.

There are three tests for determining whether a company is resident for tax purposes in Spain:

  • whether the company was incorporated under Spanish law;
  • whether the registered office of the company is located in Spanish territory; or
  • whether the place of effective management (ie, direction and control of the company’s activity) is located in Spanish territory.

If any of the foregoing requirements is met, the company can be considered resident in Spain.

Under certain conditions, Spanish tax authorities can assume that an entity located in a tax haven – or in a country with no taxation – is a tax resident in Spain. In order for this assumption to be applicable, the main assets and rights of the entity must be (directly or indirectly) located in Spain or else its main activity must be carried out in Spain.

In the case of transparent entities (such as partnerships), taxation would depend on the partner’s residency. Spanish-resident partners are liable to pay tax in Spain on their share of the worldwide profits of the partnership. Non-resident partners are only liable to pay tax on profits that accrue in Spain.

The standard CIT tax rate is 25% and it applies to most companies – although there are other specific rates (23% as of 2023 for entities with a turnover of less than EUR10 million).

Special tax rates apply to certain activities – for example, banking, mining, and oil and gas are subject to a 30% tax rate. Non-profit entities are subject to a 10% tax rate, whereas investment funds and undertakings for collective investment in transferable securities (UCITS) are taxed at 1%.

As of 2023, entities with a turnover of more than EUR20 million cannot apply tax credits to reduce current-year tax below 15% (ie, minimum tax of 15% of the tax base).

There is a special 15% rate for newly created companies, which is applicable to the first tax period in which profit is obtained and the following period.

However, partnerships are transparent for corporate tax purposes, so that profits and losses are taxed at the partners’ level in proportion to their partnership interests.

The income of individuals who own a business (or who are partners in a transparent partnership carrying out business) – whether generated by themselves or through the partnership – could be taxed at a maximum tax rate ranging from 45.5% to 54%, depending on the autonomous community of residence.

The taxable profit is the company’s gross income for the tax period, minus certain deductions. It is determined by the annual financial statements prepared in accordance with Spanish generally accepted accounting principles (SGAAP) that mostly follow IFRS, as adjusted to certain statutory tax provisions. The tax authorities are legally authorised to modify accounting reports in order to determine taxable profit if they consider that the accounting reports have not been calculated according to the SGAAP.

All necessary expenses and costs connected to producing income may be deducted from gross income in order to arrive at a taxable income determination. Additionally, the Spanish CIT Law provides for certain items that are never deductible (permanent differences, such as penalties) or that are deductible in a different year (timing differences, such as differences between accounting depreciation and tax depreciation).

There is currently a patent box system in Spain. In this respect, a partial exemption can be applied to the income obtained by entities from the transfer of the right to use or exploit certain assets (eg, patents, utility models, registered advanced software, and complementary certificates for the protection of medicines, phytosanitary products and legally protected designs) that have been generated by the entity’s R&D and technological innovation activities. This partial exemption can amount to a maximum of 60% of the income and can also be applied to capital gains generated from the transfer of the above-mentioned assets to third parties. In the event that the transaction is carried out between related parties, the partial exemption will not apply.

Furthermore, a tax credit is available for R&D activities. The tax credit for carrying out R&D activities will be 25% of the R&D expenses incurred in the tax year and, if these expenses are higher than those incurred for the same concept in the two previous tax years, the deduction will be up to 42% of these expenses. In addition, the companies may apply a tax credit of 17% of the amount of the personnel costs for qualified researchers assigned exclusively to R&D activities. There is also a tax credit of 8% on investments in fixed assets used exclusively for these activities. However, the tax credit for technological innovation activities will be 12% of the expenses incurred in the tax year related to this concept.

Spain has several tax incentives for the production and financing of movies and TV series that are totally or partially shot in Spain. The incentive could amount to EUR20 million (EUR10 million in the case of TV series).

The tax credit provided for these activities will be 40% of the total cost of production, as well as the costs of obtaining copies and the costs of advertising and promotion to be borne by the producer of the movie – provided that more than 50% of the cost of production corresponds to expenses incurred in Spanish territory.

Tax losses may be carried forward indefinitely, although any deduction is limited to 70% of the positive taxable income before the application of the tax benefit for the capitalisation reserve and other specific items. Tax losses of at least EUR1 million can always be offset without limitation.

Additionally, as of 2023, offset of current-year tax losses obtained by a company in a tax group against tax profits of other entities in the group cannot exceed 50% of such losses.

As of 2016, the CIT introduced additional limitations for large companies and tax groups.

However, in January 2024 the Spanish Constitutional Court decided that the below limitations are not constitutional, and they should be regarded as non-applicable in relation to future taxable periods (2023 onwards) and to previous taxable periods that are being scrutinised or litigated.

The limitations voided by the Constitutional Court were those applicable to large companies when their turnover in the 12 months prior to the commencement of the taxable period had reached:

  • EUR20 million – the offsetting of tax losses would have not exceeded 50% of the yearly taxable income before the capitalisation reserve and tax losses were offset; and
  • EUR60 million – the offsetting of tax losses would have not exceeded 25% of the yearly taxable income before the capitalisation reserve and tax losses were offset.

As a final remark, the CIT Law provides anti-avoidance rules to prevent tax losses being utilised when there is a change in control.

As a general anti-avoidance rule, interest paid to a group entity incurred in order to acquire shares (when the seller is another group entity) or to increase equity interests in other group members is wholly non-deductible – ie, tainted financial expenses – unless the operation might pass a business-purpose test.

The remaining net finance cost (ie, the net amount of financial income and cost, excluding the above-mentioned tainted financial expenses) is deductible up to an amount equal to 30% of the operating profit. The definition of operating profit in accounting is similar to EBITDA, minus the effect of:

  • the amortisation of fixed assets;
  • the subsidies for non-financial fixed assets and others; and
  • the depreciation for impairment of fixed assets, as well as the gains or losses derived from the transfer of fixed assets.

The resulting amount should be increased with dividends derived from entities when the stake represents at least 5% of their share capital. This rule will not apply to dividends from subsidiaries that have been acquired from other companies of the group, with group debts generating the tainted non-deductible financial expenses referred to previously.

From the EBITDA should be excluded any income, costs or profit that are not part of the taxable income (ie, permanent or timing difference).

A net financial cost greater than 30% of the operating profit could be carried forward and deducted in the following tax years (with no term limitation), within the same limit of 30% of the annual operating profit. Conversely, if the net financial cost is below 30% of operating profit (eg, capacity excess), such excess of capacity may be carried forward to deduct more financial cost in the following five years.

The aforementioned limitation (30% of the operating profit) does not apply when:

  • the net financial cost does not exceed EUR1 million; or
  • the borrower is either an insurance or financial entity.

In the case of entities belonging to a tax unit or tax consolidation group, all these calculations (net financial cost, operating profit, etc) would be referred to the whole tax group.

The Spanish CIT Law allows Spanish tax-resident companies and Spanish permanent establishments (PEs) belonging to a Spanish or multinational group to be taxed as a single group and, therefore, to apply a special tax-consolidation regime for CIT purposes.

In order to apply this regime, the main requirements are as follows:

  • the Spanish companies should be owned – directly or indirectly – by the same parent company (either resident or non-resident);
  • the parent company (either resident or non-resident) of the tax group must hold a direct or indirect minimum holding of 75% (70% for quoted companies) and the majority of voting rights in the Spanish companies must belong to the group;
  • the above-mentioned participation should be maintained throughout the whole taxable period; and
  • the parent company cannot be tax-resident in a tax haven.

The tax consolidation regime follows a number of basic rules. The taxable income results from the sum of all the taxable incomes of each Spanish tax-resident company in the tax group, adjusted as outlined in the following points.

  • Participation exemption (ie, dividends and capital gains) is not affected by the tax consolidation tax grouping. 
  • Current tax losses of any of the companies in the tax group can be offset against any company’s current tax profits – but, as of 2023, only up to 50% of such losses.
  • Tax profits (other than intra-group dividends) generated from intra-group transactions are deferred and are only included in the consolidated taxable income when:
    1. they are carried out with third parties;
    2. one of the intra-group companies that is part of the transaction ceases to form part of the group; and
    3. the consolidation regime is no longer applied.
  • Specific limitations apply concerning the offsetting of tax losses or the application of tax credits generated by the group companies before they formed part of the tax group or joined the group.
  • No withholding applies on payments made at intra-group level.

Capital gains are normally classed as ordinary income taxable at the standard CIT rate (generally 25%) during the tax period in which they arise.

However, a 95% participation exemption currently applies to capital gains arising from the transfer of shares (either of resident or foreign entities) when:

  • at least a 5% participation is held for an interrupted period of at least one year;
  • the transferred entity is an operating entity; and
  • certain other requirements are met.

In the case of a foreign subsidiary, an additional condition must be met. In order for the exemption to apply, the foreign subsidiary should have been effectively subject to (and not exempt from) a tax similar to CIT at a nominal rate of at least 10% in each and every year of holding the stake. This requirement is understood to be met when a tax treaty is applicable and it includes an exchange of information clause.

Capital losses from shares that could benefit from the participation exemption are not tax-allowed, unless they come from liquidation (subject to certain conditions).

Depending on the nature of the operations carried out by the business, the following taxes may be payable by an incorporated business on a transaction.

Value Added Tax (VAT)

Spanish VAT regulation implements the EU directives on VAT. In Spain, VAT is levied on:

  • the supply of goods and services provided by entrepreneurs and professionals;
  • intra-community acquisitions; and
  • the importation of goods into Spain.

The concept of entrepreneurs and professionals encompasses a large number of assumptions, but basically refers to those persons (physical or legal) who carry out business or professional activities – ie, activities that involve the commissioning of material and/or human means of production on their own behalf to intervene in the production or distribution of goods or services.

The territory in which the tax applies is the Iberian Peninsula and the Balearic Islands. In the Canary Islands, Ceuta and Melilla, other indirect taxes are applied – respectively, the Canaries General Indirect Tax (Impuesto General Indirecto de Canarias, or IGIC) and the Tax on Production, Services and Imports (Impuesto sobre la Producción, los Servicios y la Importación, or IPSI). The IGIC operates in a similar way to VAT, albeit with some differences when it comes to exemptions. Conversely, the IPSI is a basic sales tax.

There are three different rates of VAT:

  • 21% (general rate applied to regular deliveries of goods and services);
  • 10% (reduced rate applied to basic needs); and
  • 4% (super-reduced rate applied to basic needs other than those classified in the reduced rate).

In order to mitigate inflation, the following special VAT rates apply (on a temporary basis):

  • 5% for oil and pasta (until 30 June 2024);
  • 10% for electricity; and
  • 0% for milk, bread, eggs, cheese, cereals, bread-making flour, fruits and vegetables.

The ordinary rate of the IGIC is 7%. The other rates are 0%, 3%, 9.5%, 15% and 20%.

Property Transfer Tax

Property Transfer Tax (Transmisiones Patrimoniales Onerosas, or TPO) applies to the transfer of goods and rights when the transferor is a private individual. It also applies to real estate transfers and real estate leases when the seller is an entrepreneur, but the transfer is either exempt from or beyond the scope of VAT.

The transfer of shares is exempt from both VAT and TPO. However, when the transfer is aimed at dissimulating the transfer of real estate owned by the company, the actual taxation of transfer of real estate is applied.

TPO tax rates are as follows:

  • 6% for the transfer of real estate (as well as for the establishment and transfer of rights in rem over the real estate);
  • 4% in the case of the transfer of movable property and livestock; and
  • 1% in the case of establishment of rights in rem of guarantee, pensions, bonds or loans.

The aforementioned rates may change from one region to another, as regional authorities have competence to increase those tax rates.

Tax on Certain Digital Services

The Tax on Certain Digital Services (known as the “Google tax”) is an indirect tax that applies to the provision of certain digital services involving users located in Spain. This tax applies to companies with a worldwide turnover of more than EUR750 million and to Spanish income of more than EUR3 million.

The tax rate amounts to 3% of income resulting from rendering digital services as defined in the law. The taxable persons are the companies that provide digital services as defined in the law and that exceed the above-mentioned thresholds.

Tax on Financial Transactions

The Tax on Financial Transactions (TFT) is an indirect tax that applies to the acquisition of shares in traded Spanish companies when they have a market capitalisation above EUR1 billion on December 1st of the year prior to the acquisition.

There are numerous cases of exemption, including for:

  • acquisition of shares issued in the primary market;
  • acquisition of shares acquired as a result of the execution of a takeover bid;
  • acquisition of shares derived from transactions between entities of the same group;
  • acquisition of shares carried out within an operation to which the Special Regime for Mergers applies (Chapter VII, Title VII of the CIT Law);
  • acquisitions of treasury stock; and
  • acquisitions in execution of a stock option plan by employees.

The tax rate amounts to 0.2% of the consideration paid exclusively for the shares, not including the expenses related to the transaction. The liable person is the intermediary acting in the operation, while the taxable person is the acquirer.

Stamp Tax

Stamp tax (document duties and registration fees) is levied on notarial instruments and records documenting transactions that need to be registered in public registries. The tax rates range from 0.5% to 1.5% of the operation value.

Tax on the Increase in the Value of Urban Land

The tax on the increase in the value of urban land is a local tax applied by local councils. This tax applies when urban real estate is transferred and when there is a gain for the transferor.

Tax on Non-reusable Plastic Packaging

As of January 2023, a new tax on non-reusable packaging entered into force in Spain. This tax is due on imports and intra-community acquisitions, for an amount of EUR0.45 per kilogram of non-recycled plastic in non-reusable packaging.

Incorporated businesses are also subject to the following notable taxes.

Tax on Economic Activities

The Tax on Economic Activities (Impuesto sobre las Actividades Económicas, or IAE) is a direct tax. The IAE’s taxable event is the mere exercise – on Spanish territory – of business, professional or artistic activities.

Local Property Tax

The Local Property Tax (Impuesto sobre Bienes Inmuebles, or IBI) is a direct municipal tax on the value of real estate. It is periodic, real and mandatory in all councils. The rate of taxation will vary depending on the city council, ranging from 0.3% to 1.1% of the cadastral value.

Most closely held local businesses operate in corporate form in order to be taxable by the CIT and to separate liabilities between the company and its holders.

In order to prevent individual professionals from carrying out very personal activities through companies to avoid the application of personal income tax rates, the Spanish tax authorities use the rules for piercing the corporate veil and qualify transactions to ensure that they are actually carried out by individuals and not by the company.

There is no specific rule in Spain to prevent corporations from accumulating earnings for investment purposes. In fact, to encourage entities to increase their own funds, Spanish CIT provides a tax incentive for the capitalisation reserve. This tax relief is aimed at companies increasing their own funds, which entails a lower distribution of dividends to shareholders in exchange for lower taxation.

Entities that are taxed under the general tax rate can apply a special reduction to their positive taxable base in an amount equal to 10% of the increase in their net equity. The following conditions must be met in order to apply this reduction:

  • there must be an increase in the entity’s net equity that must be maintained during a five-year period; and
  • a reserve for the amount of the reduction must be booked separately in the account balance and should be recorded as a restricted reserve for at least a period of five years.

However, this reduction cannot exceed 10% of the entity’s positive taxable base prior to certain adjustments. Excess over the aforementioned limit can be carried forward for application in the following two years.

Dividends paid by closely held corporations are taxed as income from movable capital for Personal Income Tax (PIT) purposes.

Conversely, the sale of shares may produce a capital gain for the individual. This capital gain is calculated as the difference between the transfer value and the acquisition value. The transfer value will be the higher of these two values:

  • the value of the net worth corresponding to the transferred securities resulting from the balance sheet corresponding to the last fiscal year closed prior to the date of accrual of the PIT; or
  • the result of capitalising at the rate of 20% the average of the results of the three fiscal years closed prior to the date of accrual of the PIT.

Both dividends and capital gains form part of the savings base of the PIT, which is taxed on the basis of a tax-rate scale of between 19% and 28%, depending on the amount of the savings base (from EUR0 to more than EUR300,000).

Individuals are taxed on dividends and capital gains from the sale of shares in publicly traded corporations on the same basis as that previously explained regarding closely held corporations in 3.1 Closely Held Local Businesses. The only difference concerns the calculation of the capital gain. In the case of publicly traded corporations, this is determined by the difference between the transfer value and the acquisition value – ie, the transfer value would be the list value at the time of the transfer.

If no double-tax treaty applies, or a limit of taxation is not envisaged in the relevant double-tax treaty, payments made by a Spanish taxpayer to a non-resident entity will be subject to withholding tax in Spain at the following general rates:

  • 19% on dividends and interest; and
  • 19% on royalties paid to residents in the EU, Iceland and Norway (and 24% in all other cases).

For the application of a reduced rate or one of the exemptions described here, the taxpayer must be in possession of a tax-residence certificate issued by the tax authorities of the country of the recipient.

Domestic Law Exclusions or Exemptions

Dividends

According to the domestic law, dividends paid by a subsidiary to its EU parent company are exempt from withholdings when:

  • the parent company holds at least a minimum of 5% in the Spanish subsidiary and the interest in the Spanish subsidiary has been held for at least one year before the dividend distribution (or will be held, up to completing the one-year period);
  • both the entity paying the dividends and the beneficial owner are subject to and not exempt from one of the corporate taxes mentioned in Article 2(c) of the Council Directive 2011/96/EU of 30 June 2011 on the common system of taxation applicable in the case of parent companies and subsidiaries of different member states (the “Parent-Subsidiary Directive”);
  • the payment is not the consequence of the liquidation of the subsidiary; and
  • both the entity paying the dividends and the beneficial owner have one of the legal forms listed in the Annexes to the Parent-Subsidiary Directive.

This exemption will not be applicable where the majority of voting rights of the receiving entity is directly or indirectly owned by non-residents in the EU, unless it is proven that the incorporation of the receiving entity is based on valid economic reasons and sound business reasons.

Interest

Interest paid to an EU resident is exempt from withholding. This exemption does not apply when the recipient is tax-resident in a tax haven.

Royalties

Royalties paid in an EU member state are exempt from withholding when the following requirements are met.

  • Both the entity paying royalties and the beneficial owner have one of the legal forms listed in the Annexes to the Council Directive 2003/49/EC of 3 June 2003.
  • Both the entity paying royalties and the beneficial owner are subject to and not exempt from one of the corporate taxes mentioned in Article 3(a)(iii) to Council Directive 2003/49/EC of 3 June 2003.
  • Both entities are resident in the EU and neither of them is resident in a third country with a double-taxation agreement (DTA). In addition, both entities must be associated companies – ie, one has a direct minimum holding of 25% in the capital of the other or else a third company has a direct minimum holding of 25% in the capital of both entities. This holding should be held for a minimum holding period of one year, which could be completed after the payment. The entity that receives those royalties should receive them for its own benefit and not as an intermediary (eg, an agent, trustee or authorised signatory) for some other person. If the recipient is a permanent establishment (PE), the received royalties should effectively be connected with the PE’s activity and should be a taxable income for the PE.

This exemption on royalties will not apply if the majority of voting rights of the receiving entity is directly or indirectly owned by a non-resident in the EU – unless it is proven that the receiving entity was incorporated on the basis of valid economic reasons and sound business reasons.

Currently, Spain has entered into double-taxation treaties with more than 90 countries – the main aim of which is to eliminate double taxation and provide for reduced rates of withholding taxes of dividends, interests and royalties. Double-taxation treaties concluded by Spain are generally compliant with the provisions set forth by the OECD.

Owing to the favourable taxation of EU corporations, most foreign investors invest via EU member states. Luxembourg and the Netherlands are the primary tax-treaty countries used by foreign investors for making investments.

The use of treaty-country entities by non-treaty country residents may be challenged by the Spanish Tax Agency, based on the argument that the recipient is not the beneficial owner of the relevant income. This approach is supported both by the OECD Multilateral Convention to Implement Tax Treaty-Related Measures to Prevent Base Erosion and Profit Shifting (the “Multilateral Instrument”, or MLI) and the jurisprudence of the ECJ.

The General Guidelines of the 2024 Annual Tax and Customs Control Plan approved by the Spanish Tax Agency establishes as a priority area of attention the verification of the correct declaration of the withholdings applied to dividends, interest and royalties paid to non-residents. Likewise, whether the recipient of this income is the beneficial owner will be checked, in order to verify that there is no abuse of the EU regulations aimed at facilitating free movement of capital within the territory of the EU.

In line with the SGAPP, the CIT Act clearly specifies that controlled transactions carried out by related parties must be valued on an arm’s length basis. In this sense, the burden of proof falls on the taxpayer, who must provide documentation to prove to the tax authority that the values applied in the transactions with related parties comply with the principle of valuation at fair market value or on an arm’s length basis.

In recent years, the Tax Control Plan published by the tax authorities has included transfer pricing as one of the essential points for attention in the review of multinational groups – especially operations carried out with high-value intangibles, intra-group services, corporate restructurings and intra-group financing operations.

In Spain, tax authorities usually check transfer pricing during the normal course of CIT tax audits, rather than conduct specific transfer pricing audits. These CIT tax audits are mainly oriented towards understanding the role of the Spanish companies under scrutiny in the group’s value chain in order to check the consistency of the transfer pricing methods applied and the results of the benchmark analysis. These audits are also designed to detect and regularise the PEs of non-resident entities – an issue that may arise in certain operating structures of multinational groups, such as contracts for the provision of marketing, agencies, commissionaires and similar services. Therefore, the review of transfer pricing policies covers not only the quantification of operations but also the structure of the operations (and their different tax effects).

Spanish authorities challenge the use of related-party limited risk distribution arrangements – especially when there has been a change to the transfer pricing model and when, consequently, the Spanish entity has reduced its taxable base.

One significant point on which the Spanish transfer pricing regulations differ from the OECD Guidelines for Multinational Enterprises (the “OECD Guidelines”) is their broader parameters for related or associated parties. This requires the preparation of documentation and the application of transfer pricing principles to operations that would not be regarded as related operations in other countries.

The use of mutual agreement procedures (MAPs) in Spain has increased in past years. International transfer pricing disputes are, in some cases, resolved through a MAP. According to the statistics published at the end of 2022 by the OECD, more than 1,064 MAPs had taken place since January 2016. Around 631 of these MAPs were transfer pricing cases. Generally, the Spanish tax authorities are open to MAPs and willing to co-operate in these procedures.

If a transfer pricing adjustment is made by the tax authorities, they are obliged to execute the relevant bilateral adjustment to the counterparty in the transaction – if it is a Spanish company.

Whenever a MAP is filed, any domestic transfer pricing claim is suspended (in exchange for a warranty covering tax and interests) until its final resolution. If the solution offered at the end of the MAP procedure is accepted, the claim will be withdrawn. Otherwise, if the MAP resolution is not accepted, the domestic transfer pricing claim can be successfully continued until its final resolution.

There are no significant differences between the taxation of local branches (PEs) and local subsidiaries of non-local corporations. However, the following items in the tax regime applicable to a local branch of a foreign corporation should be considered:

  • application of the rules for related-parties’ transactions to operations carried out by the PE with the head office;
  • deductibility of the management and general administrative expenses charged by the head office to the PE if these are included in the accounting statements of the PE and charged on a regular basis in accordance with rational principles; and
  • payments made to the head office for royalties, interest, commissions and technical assistance services – or for the use or transfer of goods or rights – are generally not deductible.

Non-residents’ capital gains on the sale of stock in local corporations are normally considered as ordinary income, taxable at the rate of 19% during the tax period in which they arise.

However, domestic law provides several exemptions, including on capital gains obtained without a PE in Spain by a resident in another member state of the EU or European Economic Area (EEA) Agreement if there is an effective exchange of tax information. The exemption does not apply to capital gains arising from the sale of stocks in the following cases:

  • when the assets of that entity are mainly – directly or indirectly – real estate situated in Spanish territory;
  • when individuals have directly or indirectly held at least 25% of the capital or assets of the entity at any time during the 12 months prior to the sale; and
  • when the sale does not satisfy the requirements for the application of the exemption under Article 21 of the CIT Law in the case of non-resident entities (see 6.3 Taxation on Dividends From Foreign Subsidiaries).

Nevertheless, according to the DTAs, taxation of these gains normally corresponds exclusively to the state of residence, and they are exempt in Spain. However, when it comes to stocks or shares in real estate entities, many DTAs contain exceptions that allow taxation in the state where the real estate is located. Therefore, in order to determine the taxation of non-residents’ capital gains on the sale of shares, it is necessary to analyse the applicable DTAs.

The change of control resulting from the disposal of an indirect holding should not generate taxable income under the CIT Act. In this respect, Spanish law provides anti-abuse rules that seek to eliminate the tax impact of losses arising from the disposal of shareholdings in the event of a change of control of some companies. See also 5.3 Capital Gains of Non-residents with regard to the taxation of non-residents’ capital gains on the sale of stock in a Spanish entity.

In general terms, Spanish tax law follows the criteria set out in the OECD Guidelines. Therefore, apart from the arm’s length principle, no specific formulas are used to determine the income of foreign-owned local affiliates selling goods or providing services.

There are no specific rules for determining the proportion of common expenses that a non-local affiliate must re-invoice to the local affiliates. Consequently, the calculation of the expenses chargeable to the local affiliates must be made on an arm’s length basis and according to a reasonable criterion.

Once the proportion has been calculated based on the aforementioned criteria, there are no specific rules regarding the deductibility. Therefore, the management and administrative expenses incurred by a non-local affiliate will be deductible if they are ordinary costs of the local affiliates’ productive activity and if they have been calculated in accordance with arm’s length principles.

There are no specific rules applicable to related-party borrowing. However, as with any other related-party transaction, it is necessary to obey the arm’s length principle.

For that reason, local affiliates are not allowed to grant interest-free loans or a loan at below-market interest rates. In addition, the deductibility of interest expenses is subject to the interest limitation rules, as explained in 2.5 Imposed Limits on Deduction of Interest.

The CIT regulations subject resident companies to taxation on all their worldwide income, regardless of the country of source. However, profits obtained abroad through a PE located outside Spanish territory will be 95% exempt from taxation when it has been subject to (and is not exempt from) a tax similar to CIT at a nominal rate of at least 10% under the terms of Article 21 of the CIT Law (see 6.3 Taxation on Dividends From Foreign Subsidiaries). Losses incurred by a PE abroad will immediately cease to be tax-deductible, unless they are due to the PE finally ceasing activity and under certain circumstances.

The profits exempted by application of the process described in 6.1 Foreign Income of Local Corporations are calculated by attributing to the PE all the income and expenses associated with it, together with the part of the common expenses that is allocated to it. Consequently, local expenses attributable to the PE would hardly be deductible in Spain if they do not comply with the general deductibility requirements.

In accordance with the provisions of Article 21 of the CIT Law, dividends obtained by Spanish entities from foreign subsidiaries may be 95% exempt from taxation under the current participation exemption regime. Foreign subsidiaries dividends will generally be 95% exempt when either of the following conditions are met:

  • the recipient owns at least 5% of the distributing entity; or
  • that stake has at least one year’s seniority (the one-year seniority could be fulfilled afterwards).

For a foreign subsidiary, an additional condition is required. In order for the exemption to apply, the foreign subsidiary should be effectively subject to (and not exempt from) a tax similar to CIT at a nominal rate of at least 10%. This requirement is understood to be met when a tax treaty is applicable and includes an exchange-of-information clause.

Furthermore, capital gains resulting from the sale of shares – in both Spanish and foreign entities – would generally be 95% exempt from taxation when requirements for participation exemptions are fulfilled. In the case of the sale of foreign subsidiaries, the minimum taxation requirement must be met during all the years in which the participation has been held. Specific requirements apply in the case of indirect participation through a holding entity.

If the sold company was subject to CFC rules and/or if it was a passive income entity, the participation exemption would be limited.

Transactions between related parties are subject to the arm’s length principle. This principle requires that transactions be valued at fair value and satisfy the obligations under transfer pricing rules. Consequently, the local corporation must recognise income arising from the transfer of intangibles that is taxable according to the local corporation’s CIT regime. However, any such income from the use of intangibles may benefit from the regime described in 2.2 Special Incentives for Technology Investments.

According to Spanish law, a foreign company is considered a controlled foreign corporation (CFC) when 50% or more of its equity, capital, profits or voting rights is controlled directly or indirectly by Spanish shareholders, and if the CIT paid by that company is less than 75% of the CIT that would have been paid in Spain.

Under the Spanish CFC rules, the following income must be allocated to the Spanish company:

  • income obtained by foreign subsidiaries without material or personal resources (substance); or
  • passive income (eg, property, shares, insurance and loans) obtained by foreign subsidiaries.

It should be noted that the CFC rules do not apply to companies or PEs resident in the EU or in a state that is part of the EEA Agreement if it can be proved that they carry out a business activity or are collective investment institutions (CIIs) regulated in EU Directive 2009/65/CE.

With effect from 2021, the scope of the CFC rules applies to dividends and capital gains obtained by foreign holding companies that have held at least a 5% stake in foreign operating subsidiaries for more than one year.

Although Spanish law does not contain any rules relating to the substance of non-local affiliates, the interpretative approach adopted by the Spanish tax authorities – following the OECD Guidelines and EU jurisprudence – is to require an examination of the economic substance.

Consequently, in order to determine the application of the tax advantages envisaged in a specific DTA, not only is the identity of the formal owner of the income ascertained but so too is the identity of the person who actually receives the income from an economic perspective. This means analysing both the form and the substance of the transaction in order to determine whether the person applying for the DTA advantages is the beneficial owner of the income.

Accordingly, the criterion followed by the Spanish tax authorities requires that a structure in which a non-local affiliate is interposed be designed for commercial and economic purposes. Otherwise, the situation should be regularised. This means that any tax advantage obtained should be eliminated and the DTA between Spain and the country of residence of the interposed non-local affiliate will no longer apply.

Capital gains accrued by the Spanish entity on the sale of shares in non-resident subsidiaries could qualify for the 95% exemption envisaged in Article 21 of the CIT Law (see 6.3 Taxation on Dividends From Foreign Subsidiaries). Capital losses from shares that could benefit from the participation exemption are not tax-allowed unless they come from liquidation (with certain requirements).

In order to enable the Spanish tax authorities to tackle situations in which a taxpayer artificially avoids the payment of taxes, the Spanish General Tax Law provides the following General Anti-Avoidance Rules (GAAR):

  • the substance over form or requalification rule;
  • the rule for conflicts in the application of the law; and
  • the rules for simulated schemes.

According to the Anti-Tax Avoidance Directive (ATAD), EU member states must implement a GAAR. However, Spain already had such a rule, meaning that there was no need to introduce a new rule. Therefore, no modification was required.

Additionally, the Spanish legislation has numerous Specific Anti-Avoidance Rules (SAAR), of which the most frequently applied are:

  • the transfer pricing anti-avoidance rule;
  • the limitation of financial interest paid to group entities’ deductibility;
  • the anti-abuse rule for mergers, spin-offs and the exchange of shares;
  • the rule for preventing the transfer of companies with carry-forward tax losses; and
  • the rules preventing hybrid mismatches.

The Spanish Tax Agency has long applied the GAAR to recharacterise transactions in accordance with the underlying substance or to disregard operations when they are believed to lack genuine commercial reasons other than tax reasons. Spanish courts have also applied an “economic substance” or “business purpose” (qualification principle) doctrine to disregard transactions that have no appreciable effect on the taxpayer other than the reduction of income taxes.

The application of the GAAR is commonly litigated, given that its application requires many subjective considerations, and the Spanish Tax Agency’s position is not always followed by courts.

Furthermore, following the BEPS Action 6 Report and the ratification of the MLI, affected Spanish DTAs would incorporate the Principal Purpose Test (PPT) clause.

Companies that are required to have their accounts audited by a statutory auditor must annually provide the auditors with all the information necessary to carry out the aforementioned audit.

An audit of accounts consists of an exhaustive review of the financial statements of a company, with the aim of accrediting the reasonableness of the veracity and reliability of its content to third parties.

According to the provisions of the Spanish Law on Corporations, the obligation to audit the accounts applies only to a company that exceeds – for two consecutive years at year-end – two of the following three parameters:

  • the total amount of asset items exceeds EUR2.85 million;
  • the total amount of its annual turnover exceeds EUR5.7 million; or
  • the company has a workforce of more than 50 employees.

The main recommendations resulting from the BEPS Actions, developed by the OECD/G20 Base Erosion and Profit Shifting (BEPS) Project, have been already implemented.

In fact, Spain is one of those countries where OECD conventions and guidelines are directly applicable when compatible with domestic legislation – given that it declares that Spanish CIT must be interpreted based on OECD principles.

The main principles of BEPS have been implemented as follows.

  • BEPS Action 2 – introducing ATAD II regulations.
  • BEPS Action 3 – the Spanish CFC regime was amended in accordance with BEPS principles.
  • BEPS Action 4 – Spain had already implemented interest-stripping rules that limit allowed interests (in excess of EUR1 million) to 30% of EBITDA (EUR1 million threshold).
  • BEPS Action 5 – Spain has strengthened mechanisms for exchanging advance pricing agreements and advance tax rulings.
  • BEPS Action 6 – furthermore, DTAs concluded after BEPS (eg, with China and Japan) already included provisions to prevent the abusive use of DTAs. Finally, Spain accepting the MLI would affect most DTAs in this sense.
  • BEPS Action 7 – Spain’s approach to PEs has been traditionally ahead of even the more aggressive OECD and EU countries. Hence, a BEPS-style approach towards PEs had been applied in Spain, even before BEPS. Furthermore, as a result of the MLI, Spanish DTAs are even more aligned with BEPS principles.
  • BEPS Actions 8, 9 and 10 – before the BEPS initiative, Spain had already declared directly applicable transfer pricing guidelines and principles approved by the OECD.
  • BEPS Action 12 – as an EU member state, Spain implemented DAC 6 (Council Directive (EU) 2018/822), which introduced aggressive tax-planning reporting obligations on EU member states and third parties. In 2023 the Supreme Court approved a precautionary measure whereby tax advisers and lawyers will not be subject to DAC 6 while the court is analysing whether DAC6 violates professional secret duty.
  • BEPS Action 13 – Spain has applied Country-by-Country (CbC) reporting.
  • BEPS Action 14 – Spain is committed to making ADR mechanisms more effective, not only because (as an EU member state) it is obliged to apply arbitration mechanisms within EU territory, but also because (as a signatory of the MLI) any EU member state may find that most DTAs end up featuring alternative mechanisms to correct double-taxation scenarios.
  • BEPS Action 15 – Spain has ratified the MLI, which will enter into force during 2023 and may affect 88 of the nearly 103 double-taxation agreements signed by Spain.

Spain also participates in the work resulting from the OECD Inclusive Framework, which aims to establish Global Anti-Base Erosion (GloBE) rules and an Undertaxed Payments Rule (UTPR) that would likely result in the implementation of a minimum taxation level for large multinational enterprises (MNEs) before the end of 2024.

In December 2023, the Spanish Tax Agency published a draft of the GloBE domestic law.

Overall, Spanish tax authorities are extremely supportive of the OECD’s tax-related works where there is a large consensus. This has been the case for the OECD-BEPS outcome as well as for the launch of Pillar 2 of the OECD Inclusive Framework. It is worth mentioning that, as a member state of the EU, Spain has a legal obligation to implement EU Directives that are fully aligned with OECD initiatives.

Recent economic geopolitical and pandemic crises have resulted in a public deficit increase, which has drawn special attention to MNE taxation and harmful profit-shifting practices. Consequently, Spanish authorities have become more committed to tackling tax avoidance. This situation is boosting the implementation of BEPS and similar international recommendations.

Spain’s current administration is more focused on artificially fighting profit-shifting than attracting investments by means of tax competition. Spain relies on the premise that a common approach to taxation (across Europe and beyond) would lead to a more accurate allocation of profits and taxes, based on economic factors other than taxes.

Legal uncertainty has usually been the Achilles heel of the Spanish tax system, given that special tax regimes have frequently been frustrated owing to aggressive interpretation by tax-inspector bodies. Thus, trying to gain legal certainty is a must when it comes to tax-planning investment in Spain.

The Spanish CIT regime has implemented the EU Directive preventing hybrid mismatches. As such, the new Spanish tax system is a perfect implementation of the ATAD II EU Directive (Council Directive (EU) 2017/952) (ATAD II).

Spain does not have a territorial tax regime. Only Spanish branches of foreign companies are taxed exclusively for Spanish-sourced income.

As mentioned in 9.7 Territorial Tax Regime, Spain does not have a territorial tax system. However, as of 1995, it does have CFC rules. These have been modified slightly to adapt them to OECD-BEPS outcomes and to ATAD II.

There is a high consensus on CFC rules resulting from the OECD. However, based on a recent cut to the participation exemption, CFC rules in Spain could create unwanted double taxation if a Spanish company controls another foreign holding company whose participation exemption is more generous than the Spanish one.

Spain approving the MLI places a broad limitation on tax benefits resulting from DTAs where it is reasonable to conclude – in light of all facts and circumstances – that obtaining such benefit was the main purpose of the transactions. This limitation, together with the existing GAAR, would make artificial inbound or outbound tax structures easy to challenge for the Spanish Tax Agency. Hence, it becomes critical to gather a defence file justifying the business grounds for any tax structure.

Transfer pricing rules in Spain were already very detailed and broad. Consequently, almost no changes have been introduced after BEPS, apart from the CbC reporting requirements.

For financial years starting after 22 June 2024, CbC reports must be made public by companies belonging to a group with a total worldwide turnover of more than EUR750 million.

Spain supports all internationally accepted reporting requirements, such as CbC reporting or aggressive tax planning resulting from EU Council Directive 2011/16 in relation to cross-border tax arrangements (DAC6). Spain will likely make a big effort towards implementing any new transparency requirements.

Spain has introduced a Digital Service Tax (often known as the “GAFA tax” or “Google tax”) aimed at applying a 3% tax on the revenues of tech giants such as Google, Facebook, Apple and Amazon on Spanish territory (see 2.8 Other Taxes Payable by an Incorporated Business). It only applies to companies belonging to a group with a total worldwide turnover of more than EUR750 million and with Spanish operations amounting to more than EUR3 million.

Spain will surely align its domestic legislation with international OECD digital economic taxation, as soon as there is sufficient consensus on this. In the meantime, it is important to bear in mind that the Spanish approach to PEs is still one of the most aggressive approaches, leading to the existence of a Spanish PE as soon as there is a virtual presence in Spain (without the need for a clear physical presence).

Spain has not introduced specific provisions or benefits dealing with offshore taxation of intellectual property.

RocaJunyent

José Abascal Street, 56
6th Floor
28003
Madrid
Spain

+34 619 015 251

+34 917 81 97 64

r.salas@rocajunyent.com www.rocajunyent.com/en/firm
Author Business Card

Trends and Developments


Authors



RocaJunyent was established in 1996 and is one of the most prominent Spanish law firms. It has offices in Madrid, Barcelona and Gerona, as well as associated offices in Palma de Mallorca, Lérida, Tarragona, Málaga, Seville, Bilbao, Badajoz, Burgos and Valladolid. The firm offers advice in all areas of law, especially those related to commercial, banking and financial, procedural and tax law. RocaJunyent is the only Spanish member of the international network TerraLex. Taxes are levied on all kinds of entities and in many situations, which is why RocaJunyent’s tax department is prepared to respond to all kinds of problems – from large companies and their complex structures/operations to individual wealth/inheritance issues. The firm’s services include business taxation, tax wealth management, M&A, transactions taxation, transfer pricing and tax litigation.

In the authors’ opinion, the following areas would be of importance in 2024 and should be taken into account by investors in Spain.

Limits to the Application of Carry-Forward Tax Losses

Like many other countries, Spain has approved (after various crises since 2007) limitations on the offsetting of carry-forward tax losses (CFTL).

The purpose of these limitations was to ensure a reasonable collection from corporate income tax (CIT), as accumulated CFTL since 2007 were so large that their full offsetting would lead to a minimum CIT collection. For this reason, in 2014 a limit was established for CFTL offsetting; and in 2016 two specific additional limitations for CFTL offsetting were established in the case of large and very large entities. None of those limitations apply if the offsetting does not exceed EUR1 million:

  • in 2014, a first limitation was provided to all companies regardless of their size and which prevented the offsetting of an amount exceeding 70% of the taxable income for the period;
  • in 2016, a second limit was approved, which was applicable only to large companies (those entities that in the previous financial year had a turnover of at least EUR20 million), which would determine that such companies would be subject to a stricter limit of 50% of the amount of the previous income; and
  • also in 2016, a third limit was established for very large companies whose turnover in the previous financial year reached EUR60 million, whereby they could not offset more than 25% of the positive taxable income for the period with CFTL.

As mentioned, the last two limitations (applicable only to large and very large companies) were established by an exceptional legal instrument such as the Royal Decree-Law, which is characterised as a law approved by the government and executive power (breaking the “separation of powers” principle) and which the Spanish Constitution allows to be used only in situations of “extraordinary and urgent need”.

In January 2024, the Spanish Constitutional Court concluded that the legislative instrument used by the government (a Royal Decree-Law) was not an adequate means for amending the CIT.

Owing to the Constitutional Court’s ruling, the 25% and 50% limitations mentioned above would disappear, and the only existing limitation would be that of the first point above – ie, 70% of the current-year taxable income, applicable to all companies, regardless of their size.

Unless the effects of the Court’s declaration of unconstitutionality are limited by the legislature or the Constitutional Court itself, this will have a very significant effect on CIT collection. In the authors’ view, the main effects would be the following.

In relation to the fiscal year 2023

The immediate consequence of the Constitutional Court’s ruling would be that for the CIT for the year 2023 (which is mostly declared and paid in July 2024), large and very large companies would be able to offset the taxable bases of previous years under the same conditions as the remaining companies (ie, 70% or EUR1 million).

Unless the government introduces some regulatory modification (which is under consideration at the time of writing), the collection of CIT will be greatly reduced, and large and very large companies with CFTL will pay much lower amounts than those initially foreseen.

Large companies with CFTL currently subject to a tax audit

The effect of the Constitutional Court’s ruling would be that the limitations established in 2016 would cease to exist. Hence, in the event that a large company were being audited (especially if the tax audit were nearing an end) the possible contingencies claimed or to be claimed should be re-assessed to the extent that the amount claimed by the tax inspectorate would have changed if the CFTL limitations had not existed.

The result would be that the Tax Authorities’ claim would be lower than the amount initially assessed.

Ongoing litigation in relation to the fiscal year 2016 and following

Similar to the above, in the event that a large or very large company were in a litigation against the Tax Authorities as a consequence of a CIT claim, and as long as in the determination of the claimed amount the Tax Authorities had applied the CFTL limitations approved in 2016 (now sentenced as unconstitutional), the court could foreseeably order the Tax Authorities to re-assess the amount claimed, taking into consideration the existing CFTL that could not have been applied by virtue of the limitations approved in 2016 and that have now been declared unconstitutional by the Constitutional Court.

Accounting for deferred income tax assets (DTA) recognition

Another aspect in which the Constitutional Court’s ruling may be of relevance relates to the capitalisation of tax credits resulting from pending CFTL.

Owing to the limitations for offsetting CFTL, statutory auditors are often very reluctant to admit the accounting record of a DTA representing the CFTL tax credit to be offset in the future.

Following the declaration of unconstitutionality, and unless new limitations are approved, large and very large companies will be able to offset CFTL more quickly. This could result in the recording of higher DTA and, if applicable, in an improvement of the accounting results for the fiscal year 2023 and subsequent years.

Given the great impact of the declaration of unconstitutionality, it is very possible that during 2024 there will be legislative amendments aimed at establishing new rules to limit the effects of the Constitutional Court’s ruling.

Tax Residence Determination and Computation

Owing to recent resolutions from the Central Spanish Economic-Administrative Tax Court (TEAC), private individuals’ tax residence will likely become a hot topic in Spanish taxation.

The primary criteria for determining tax residence is the “183 days rule”.

In relation to these criteria, on 25 April 2023 the TEAC issued a resolution differentiating three categories or groups of days for the purposes of calculating the 183 days in Spain:

  • days of certified presence – those in which the physical presence of the subject in Spanish territory can be reliably proven;
  • presumed days – those which, in terms of reasonable calculation, pass between two days of certified presence of the subject in Spanish territory; and
  • sporadic absences – these will be integrated into the calculation of days, provided that the subject cannot be reliably located in a third country on specific dates.

Days of Certified or Accredited Presence

The calculation of a day of certified presence in Spain requires the Tax Authorities to be able to prove the location of the person in Spanish territory.

For these purposes, the TEAC has ruled that certified presence does not require the individual to remain for a certain number of hours, but that “when the taxpayer is present in a State for part of a day, no matter how small, the day will be considered as a day of presence in said State for the purposes of calculating the 183-day period”.

The TEAC admits circumstances of a varied nature as means of proof of certified presence in Spain, such as:

  • card transactions (at physical locations);
  • use of means of transport;
  • health and medical visits;
  • performance of actions before a notary;
  • access to sports, banking venues and others:
  • payments with Via-T;
  • contract signatures;
  • presence in courses;
  • car parking in public car parks; and
  • cash withdrawal at physical cash machines, etc.

Presumed Days

These types of days are where more conflicts will arise, owing to the high degree of uncertainty that they may present.

The interpretation of the TEAC is that the set of days that “reasonably” elapses between two dates of certified presence in Spanish territory must – unless proven otherwise – be included in the 183-days calculation.

The introduction of the “reasonableness” requirement for the calculation may cause conflict, since it turns the category of presumed days into an eminently indeterminate concept. Depending on the circumstances, the length of the stay and the time of year in which the stay occurs, the assessment of reasonableness could be quite debatable.

Either way, the TEAC accepts proof of presence in a third country during the possible period of presumed presence as an element of rupture. Thus, if the taxpayer proves their presence in foreign territory at any time between two days of certified presence in Spain, the Tax Authorities could not include these dates as effective presence in Spanish territory.

Sporadic Absences

If a taxpayer temporarily leaves Spanish territory for a few days, such absence could be counted as time spent in Spain for the 183-days rule.

On the basis of the above interpretative criteria, the Tax Authorities have more flexibility for considering that a person spends most of the year in Spanish territory – in the authors’ view, this will likely lead to a higher level of litigation involving the Tax Authorities.

Implementation of the Global Minimum Level of Taxation

Following the work of the OECD’s inclusive framework and Council Directive (EU) 2022/2523 dated 14 December 2022 on ensuring a global minimum level of taxation for multinational enterprise groups and large-scale domestic groups in the Union, in December 2023 a Draft Bill was published and is expected to be submitted to the Spanish Parliament and approved during 2024.

The Draft Bill envisages a supplementary tax through two interconnected rules – the income inclusion rule and the under-taxed profits rule (the latter supporting the former) – ensuring that income obtained by large domestic groups also operating in Spain or by Spanish multinational groups whose parent company is located in Spain is effectively taxed at an overall minimum rate of 15%. According to the Draft Bill, this supplementary tax is expected to be applicable as of 1 January 2024.

As in the other jurisdictions where GloBE has already been approved, in Spain this implementation will mean a greater tax burden for a large number of entities, as they will see an increase in complexity and – in many cases – CIT bills.

Of particular relevance will be the specification of those jurisdictions where parent companies are domiciled, which may or may not be considered to have approved rules of equivalent effect. In this respect, the treatment to be attributed to parent companies resident in the United States of America is of great importance, since they are among the main investors in Spain and have their own rules (US GILTI rules) which are not totally aligned with those of GloBE.

Additionally, special care must be taken regarding deferred tax assets accounting, as those assets recorded or itemised in the financial statements at the beginning of the first period of the new rules’ application will be exceptionally taken into account in calculation. Thus, a careful review of the accounting situation of these assets is highly advisable for this beginning period, as this would have an impact on future periods’ calculations.

In-Depth Scrutiny of Tax Credits Structures Through Schemes Concerning Economic Interest Grouping Incentives for Cinema and R&D Activities

These schemes, allowing investors, commonly large companies and high net worth individuals to reduce their tax bill in exchange for providing funding for cinema and R&D projects, are recently being closely scrutinised by the Tax Authorities.

Despite the fact that successive governments have made efforts to ensure these types of incentives, which promote activities of strategic interest to the State, the tax inspectorate is increasingly insisting on challenging these investment schemes, whose returns are materialised in the form of tax credits.

The Tax Authorities are particularly focusing on structures generating high profitability, by considering that in a large number of cases there is abusive use of these schemes and, in many cases, a lack of actual substance at the level of the material developer of the activities. In such cases, investors are being obliged to refund taken tax credits, and are finding themselves assessed regarding third-party behaviours, with limited room for defence.

As mentioned, this is mainly happening in schemes involving high levels of profitability and is putting large investments at risk as well as affecting the view of new investors of these types of investing structures.

Transfer of the Totality of CIT Collection to the Region of Catalonia

The last elections, held in July 2023, resulted in a very fragmented Spanish Parliament without a clear majority. The current government has reached agreements with Catalan pro-independence parties to obtain their support.

One of the conditions demanded by the Catalan parties is the transfer of 100% of CIT collection to the regional authorities of Catalonia. This agreement is expected to be finalised during 2024, and could foreseeably result in the establishment of a different tax burden for companies in Catalonia.

Another demand of the Catalan pro-independence parties was that the legal formalities necessary for the change of companies’ legal domicile be stricter. Said rules were relaxed in 2017, a circumstance that was used by numerous companies to move their legal and tax domicile out of Catalonia.

RocaJunyent

José Abascal Street, 56
6th Floor
28003
Madrid
Spain

+34 619 015 251

+34 917 81 97 64

r.salas@rocajunyent.com www.rocajunyent.com/en/firm
Author Business Card

Law and Practice

Authors



RocaJunyent was established in 1996 and is one of the most prominent Spanish law firms. It has offices in Madrid, Barcelona and Gerona, as well as associated offices in Palma de Mallorca, Lérida, Tarragona, Málaga, Seville, Bilbao, Badajoz, Burgos and Valladolid. The firm offers advice in all areas of law, especially those related to commercial, banking and financial, procedural and tax law. RocaJunyent is the only Spanish member of the international network TerraLex. Taxes are levied on all kinds of entities and in many situations, which is why RocaJunyent’s tax department is prepared to respond to all kinds of problems – from large companies and their complex structures/operations to individual wealth/inheritance issues. The firm’s services include business taxation, tax wealth management, M&A, transactions taxation, transfer pricing and tax litigation.

Trends and Developments

Authors



RocaJunyent was established in 1996 and is one of the most prominent Spanish law firms. It has offices in Madrid, Barcelona and Gerona, as well as associated offices in Palma de Mallorca, Lérida, Tarragona, Málaga, Seville, Bilbao, Badajoz, Burgos and Valladolid. The firm offers advice in all areas of law, especially those related to commercial, banking and financial, procedural and tax law. RocaJunyent is the only Spanish member of the international network TerraLex. Taxes are levied on all kinds of entities and in many situations, which is why RocaJunyent’s tax department is prepared to respond to all kinds of problems – from large companies and their complex structures/operations to individual wealth/inheritance issues. The firm’s services include business taxation, tax wealth management, M&A, transactions taxation, transfer pricing and tax litigation.

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