Spain: Participation exemption for real estate rental entities

International Tax Review is part of Legal Benchmarking Limited, 1-2 Paris Garden, London, SE1 8ND

Copyright © Legal Benchmarking Limited and its affiliated companies 2026

Accessibility | Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Modern Slavery Statement

Spain: Participation exemption for real estate rental entities

intl-updates

Background: one-employee rule

According to the Spanish Corporate Income Tax Act, an entity that carries out real estate rental activities must have at least one employee with a full-time labour contract to be deemed an entity performing a 'business activity' (i.e. its income is substantially derived from activities other than passive investment).

In addition, Spanish companies are entitled to a participation exemption on capital gains arising from the disposal of qualifying entities. To benefit from this regime, a company must have a holding for at least one year and a 5% stake in the capital (or an acquisition value over €20 million ($24 million)) in a subsidiary which performs a business activity.

Since 2015 when the new regime entered into force, certain court and administrative pronouncements have reviewed the fulfilment of the business activity requirement for entities holding rental-generating real estate ('prop-cos') and have delimited the so-called 'one-employee rule', particularly in cases of participation exemptions on the disposal of prop-co shares.

Sufficient condition?

In a case where it was examined if having one single employee was a sufficient condition for a prop-co to be deemed a business activity entity, the Spanish Supreme Court (judgment of December 7 2016) concluded restrictively. For the court, the relevant question was whether there was a 'minimum charge of work' as regards the intensity of the activity of the employee in relation to the management of the real estate asset.

Necessary condition?

On the contrary, according to several tax rulings issued by the Spanish Directorate General for Taxes, there are situations in which, based on economic reasons, an entity could manage real estate assets without having employees, by subcontracting material and human resources with a non-related professional rental manager. Consequently, contracting an employee would not be a necessary condition either. Please note that as the latter is an extensive interpretation which moves away from the literality of the Corporate Income Tax Act, future tax rulings – including decisions from the Central Economic-Administrative Tribunal – could amend the criteria and conclude more restrictively.

In these cases, where the prop-cos referred to had no employees and held properties in shopping malls, hotels or offices, some indicators of the activity of the real estate manager (such as the number of leased properties and tenants or the volume of income of the outsourcing contract) were compared to those which would correspond to a full-time employee. And when according to that evidence the substance of the rental activity was relevant, the Directorate General for Taxes concluded that the prop-co had performed a business activity and thus, the participation exemption would apply in the case of a transfer of that prop-co's shares.

What´s next?

Despite these permissive outsourcing criteria, the minimum charge of work concept does not provide full tax certainty to all investment structures in real estate implemented through prop-cos, as the absence of a safe harbour rule may permit tax authorities to reassess the situation according to the facts involved in each particular case.

In addition, there is a precedent (tax ruling V2909-16) in which the Directorate General for Taxes stated that a principal purpose test – anticipating some BEPS provisions – should be done in order to determine whether the principal aim of a prop-co structure was to indirectly avoid taxation on the disposal of real estate.

While new pronouncements do not clarify the situation, real estate structures through prop-cos in Spain, including those held by non-resident investors, should focus on strengthening their economic substance, in accordance with new post-BEPS taxation paradigms.

calatayud.jpg

Javier Calatayud

Apellániz

Javier Calatayud Apellániz (javier.calatayud@garrigues.com)

Garrigues Valencia – Taxand Spain

Website: www.garrigues.com

more across site & shared bottom lb ros

More from across our site

Taxpayers should support the MAP process by sharing accurate information early on and maintaining open communication with the competent authorities, the OECD also said
The Fortune 150 energy multinational is among more than 12 companies participating in the initiative, which ‘helps tax teams put generative AI to work’
The ruling excludes vacation and business development days from service PE calculations and confirms virtual services from abroad don’t count, potentially reshaping compliance for multinationals
User-friendly digital tax filing systems, transformative AI deployment, and the continued proliferation of DSTs will define 2026, writes Ascoria’s Neil Kelley
Case workers are ‘still not great’ but are making fewer enquiries, making the right decision more often and are more open to calls, ITR has heard
There is a shocking discrepancy between professional services firms’ parental leave packages. Those that fail to get with the times risk losing out in the war for talent
Winston Taylor is expected to launch in May 2026 with more than 1,400 lawyers across the US, UK, Europe, Latin America and the Middle East
They are alleging that leaked tax information ‘unfairly tarnished’ their business operations; in other news, Davis Polk and Eversheds Sutherland made key tax hires
Overall revenues for the combined UK and Swiss firm inched up 2% to £3.6 billion despite a ‘challenging market’
In the first of a two-part series, experts from Khaitan & Co dissect a highly anticipated Indian Supreme Court ruling that marks a decisive shift in India’s international tax jurisprudence
Gift this article