⚡ 2026 Update: The EU’s new corporate transparency directives are now in effect, introducing enhanced beneficial ownership disclosure requirements for both branches and subsidiaries registered in Spain. Structures established before Q1 2026 may need to be reviewed for compliance.
Expanding to Spain: Understanding the Basics (Branch vs. Subsidiary)
Quick definition for decision-makers: A branch office (sucursal) is a legally dependent extension of a foreign parent company — it has no separate legal personality and the parent bears full liability. A subsidiary (filial) — typically an S.L. (Sociedad Limitada) or S.A. (Sociedad Anónima) — is an independent Spanish legal entity, owned by the foreign parent but shielded by limited liability. Both must register with the Spanish Commercial Registry (Registro Mercantil), but their tax treatment, control dynamics, and risk profiles differ significantly.
Choosing between a branch and a subsidiary is one of the first — and most consequential — decisions any foreign company faces when entering Spain. Get it right, and you have a tax-efficient, operationally agile structure aligned with your growth plan. Get it wrong, and you may face unnecessary withholding taxes, unexpected parent-company liability, or a costly restructuring down the road.
This guide cuts through the complexity. We cover the legal, tax, and operational differences in plain language, with specific reference to Spanish law — including how Tax Treaties (Convenios de Doble Imposición) interact with each structure and what the “Beckham Law” means for your relocated executives.

Key Differences Between a Branch and a Subsidiary in the Spanish Market
Legal Entity Status and Liability
This is the foundational difference. A branch (sucursal) has no independent legal existence in Spain. It is simply the Spanish arm of the foreign parent. The parent company signs contracts, owns assets (in practice), and — critically — is fully exposed to liabilities arising from the branch’s operations in Spain. If the branch incurs a debt it cannot pay, Spanish creditors can pursue the foreign parent’s global assets.
A subsidiary, by contrast, is a fully autonomous Spanish company. Its liability is legally ring-fenced: the parent’s exposure is limited to the capital it has contributed. This is a fundamental advantage for risk management, particularly for companies entering a new market where trading outcomes are uncertain.
Tax Obligations and Profit Repatriation
Subsidiaries pay Spanish Corporate Income Tax (Impuesto sobre Sociedades, IS) at the standard rate of 25% on their worldwide profits generated in Spain. Dividends paid to the foreign parent may be subject to withholding tax, reduced by Treaties or EU Directives.
Branches are taxed under the Non-Resident Income Tax (IRNR) as Permanent Establishments (PE). The rate is also 25%. However, Spain imposes an additional branch profits tax of 19% on profits repatriated, unless the parent is in the EU/EEA or a Treaty country.
“For non-EU companies without a favorable tax treaty with Spain, the branch profits tax creates a significant cost disadvantage compared to the subsidiary structure.”
Understanding the specific tax treaties between your home country and Spain is crucial to avoid double taxation. For a deeper dive into these frameworks, you can explore our insights on international taxation.
Operational Control and Administrative Costs
Branches are administratively lighter. They do not require a separate board of directors or statutory capital. Subsidiaries carry higher overhead: annual accounts, corporate governance, and transfer pricing documentation are mandatory.
Tax compliance in Spain can be complex due to local regulations and EU directives. Ensure your structure is tax-efficient from day one.
Pros and Cons: Which Structure Fits Your Strategy?
- No minimum share capital
- Direct parent control
- Losses can consolidate in parent accounts
- No branch profits tax for EU parents
- Full parent liability exposure
- Branch profits tax (19%) for non-EU/non-treaty
- Less “local” brand perception
- Limited liability protection
- Full local credibility
- Access to Spanish R&D tax credits
- Easier local investment
- Minimum capital (€3k S.L. / €60k S.A.)
- Statutory filings and annual accounts
- Strict transfer pricing rules
Choosing the entity is only the first step of your journey. Once your strategy is clear, you will need to follow the formal procedures to start a business in Spain and ensure full regulatory compliance.
Our experts in Mallorca provide tailor-made advice for international firms — combining Spanish law with your home country’s tax position.
The “Representative Office”: A Third Alternative Gap Content
A representative office (oficina de representación) cannot generate revenue. It is strictly for market research and promotion. It does not constitute a Permanent Establishment, making it a zero-tax presence for market testing.
Tax Implications in Spain: Comparison Table
| Tax / Factor | Branch (PE) | Subsidiary (S.L.) | Rep. Office |
|---|---|---|---|
| Primary Tax | IRNR (25%) | IS (25%) | None |
| VAT (IVA) | ✓ Registered | ✓ Registered | ✗ No |
| Beckham Law | ✓ Eligible | ✓ Eligible | ✓ Eligible |
Setting Up in Mallorca: Local Insights
Mallorca is a preferred gateway for technology and real estate. The Balearic Islands have regional tax competences, such as specific transfer taxes (ITP) that differ from mainland Spain.
Your Success in Spain Starts with the Right Foundation.
Setting up the wrong entity leads to unnecessary costs. We specialise in helping foreign companies navigate the Spanish fiscal landscape.
