Sebastián Dorado
May 10, 2026

Limited company (SL): everything you need to know

Limited company in Spain (SL) - Everything you need to know

This guide covers the Spanish limited company, called an SL (short for Sociedad Limitada). Think of it as Spain's version of an LLC. It walks through what an SL is, what it costs to set up and run, the 2026 tax rates that apply, when an SL beats autónomo, and the steps to register. Last verified: May 2026.

The two big things to know upfront: minimum share capital is €1 since the 2022 Crea y Crece law (no longer €3,000), and corporate tax rates were cut for small companies in 2026 by Ley 7/2024.

Quick answer

What is a Sociedad Limitada (SL)?

An SL is a limited liability company. The company owes the business debts, not you personally. You contribute share capital (€1 minimum, more recommended), file annual accounts with the Mercantile Registry, and pay corporate tax on profits.

The headlines:

What an LLC is called

The Spanish equivalent is the Sociedad Limitada (SL). You'll also see:

2026 corporate tax rates

Ley 7/2024 introduced a phased reduction for small entities. The 2026 numbers:

If you withdraw profits as dividends, the savings-income tax applies on the personal side: 19% on the first €6,000, 21% €6,000 to €50,000, 23% €50,000 to €200,000, 27% €200,000 to €300,000, 30% above €300,000.

SL costs in 2026

Setup costs:

Annual running costs:

Total first-year all-in cost for a sole-director SL: around €5,000 to €8,000 depending on whether you outsource accounting and how complex the activity is.

The €1 minimum capital and the legal reserve

Since 28 September 2022, Real Decreto Legislativo 1/2010 (the Capital Companies Law) was modified by Ley 18/2022 ("Crea y Crece"). Minimum SL capital is now €1.

But two protections kick in when capital is below €3,000:

  1. Reinforced legal reserve. At least 20% of annual profit must go to the legal reserve until reserve + capital reach €3,000. Until that point, the company can't fully distribute profit.
  2. Joint and several liability. If the company is liquidated and assets aren't enough to cover creditors, the shareholders are jointly liable for the difference between the actual capital and €3,000.

Practical reading: incorporating with €1 is legal and fast, but for any company expected to have outside creditors or to retain profits, contributing €3,000 from day one is cleaner.

Who can register an SL

Any adult can incorporate an SL. Foreigners can own 100% of one. The practical filters:

Can a foreigner own an SL?

Yes, fully. Foreigners can own 100% of an SL with no nationality cap. The mechanics:

No special tax applies to non-resident shareholders. Dividends paid abroad are subject to standard withholding (19% for EU residents, varying for treaty countries). For US founders, the Spain to US tax treaty handles double taxation.

How to register an SL: step by step

  1. Reserve the company name (certificación negativa) at the Central Mercantile Registry. Up to five name proposals; valid for 6 months.
  2. Open a company bank account, deposit the share capital, and keep the bank certificate.
  3. Draft the articles of association (estatutos) and shareholder agreements.
  4. Sign the public deed before a notary. Bring NIE, bank certificate, name certificate, and the articles.
  5. File the deed at the Mercantile Registry of the province. The company exists legally once registered.
  6. Get the CIF (company tax ID) and file Modelo 036 with AEAT to register for VAT and corporate tax.
  7. Enrol the administrator for social security (autónomo societario regime, if working).
  8. Set up Verifactu-compliant invoicing for use by 1 January 2027.

Full procedural guide: how to register a company. To get this done end-to-end, see renn's company setup service.

Name check and VAT registration

  1. Reserve your company name. Order the certificación negativa from the Central Mercantile Registry. Confirms the name isn't taken.
  2. Register for VAT and the company census. File Modelo 036. Tick the EU VAT box (VIES) if you'll sell to other EU countries.
  3. File VAT returns. Modelo 303 every quarter, Modelo 390 annual summary in January.

Spain has no VAT turnover threshold. You must register before issuing your first invoice.

SL vs SLU: running solo

If you're the only owner, you can form an SLU (Sociedad Limitada Unipersonal). Same taxes, same liability, same minimum €1 capital. The only difference is that every public document must mention the single-shareholder status, and the sole shareholder's contracts with the company need to be formalised in a special book to be enforceable.

For the full comparison see SL vs SLU.

SL vs autónomo: which saves more

Autónomo is the self-employed-individual regime. You pay personal income tax (IRPF, progressive 19% to 47%) plus the monthly RETA cuota (€207 to €605 depending on income bracket, full breakdown here).

SL pays the tiered corporate tax (19% to 25%) on profits. You then pay personal tax only on the salary and dividends you draw.

Rough rule of thumb (test with real numbers before deciding):

You can also run both in parallel, see combining autónomo and SL.

Why an SL can save on taxes

Verifactu and B2B e-invoicing for SLs

The 2027 Verifactu rollout applies to all SLs from 1 January 2027 (postponed from 2026 by Real Decreto-ley 15/2025). Each invoice must carry a QR code, a chained-hash digital signature, and either real-time submission to AEAT (Verifactu mode) or a tamper-evident local audit trail.

Penalty for using non-certified software once the deadline lands: €50,000 per fiscal year under article 201 bis of the Ley General Tributaria.

The Crea y Crece B2B e-invoicing rollout is separate and phased. Pick invoicing tools that support both flows. For the full mechanics see the Verifactu guide.

FAQ

What's the difference between SL, SLNE, and SA?
SL is the standard limited company (€1 minimum capital). SLNE (Sociedad Limitada Nueva Empresa) is a streamlined SL with notary speedups, but it's rarely used now that Crea y Crece sped up regular SLs. SA (Sociedad Anónima) is the Spanish PLC, with €60,000 minimum capital and used for larger or listed companies.

Can I run an SL from abroad?
Yes. The registered office must sit on Spanish territory, but day-to-day management can happen anywhere. The company's tax residency stays Spanish as long as it's incorporated locally.

Do I need a Spanish accountant?
Effectively yes. SL accounts must be in Spanish format and filed at the Mercantile Registry in Spanish. Non-resident accountants almost always struggle with the local forms.

How long does it take to incorporate?
2 to 6 weeks, depending on the bank account opening, the notary slot, and the Mercantile Registry queue in your province. Faster through CIRCE / DUE digital flows for sole-shareholder SLs.

Can I convert an autónomo activity into an SL?
Yes. You incorporate the SL, then either close the autónomo (baja en RETA + Modelo 036, see the deregistration guide) or keep both running for different activities.

Do I need to deposit the €1 in a bank?
Yes, the share capital (whatever amount) must be deposited and certified by a bank. The certificate goes to the notary at signing.

Bottom line

Setting up an SL is straightforward once the jargon clicks. You can incorporate with €1 of capital, but most founders contribute €3,000 to skip the legal-reserve constraint. The 2026 corporate tax rates are friendlier than they used to be for small companies (19% / 21% for micro), and the rate keeps dropping for SMEs through 2029.

Open an SL when net profit heads past €40,000 with retention, or when you simply want the limited-liability shield. For setup help, see renn's SL service, or book a tax chat to model SL vs autónomo for your specific numbers.

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