Spain has temporarily lowered fuel VAT from 21% to 10% under Real Decreto-ley 7/2026, a measure set to expire on 30 June 2026. The EU Commission warned that the cut breaches EU rules, but no formal infringement has been initiated. The temporary relief is expected to cost Spain about €507 million in revenue loss.
The fuel VAT rate is reduced to 10% and is scheduled to remain in force until 30 June 2026.
The Real Decreto-ley 7/2026 was approved on 20 March 2026, lowering fuel VAT from 21% to 10%.
The Commission warned that cutting fuel VAT breaches EU rules and has not yet initiated a formal infringement procedure.
The cut is expected to reduce revenue by about €507 million up to 30 June 2026.
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Fintua · about 4 hours ago
Spain has introduced mandatory B2B e‑invoicing under Royal Decree 238/2026, effective from 31 March 2026 but operationally deferred until the public e‑invoicing platform regulation takes effect. The decree sets phased implementation: large businesses with turnover over €8 million must comply within 12 months, while all other businesses follow within 24 months. It also imposes strict invoice status reporting within four calendar days and allows four electronic formats.
Euro Weekly News · 1 day ago
Spain has temporarily lowered fuel VAT from 21% to 10% as part of a €5 billion emergency package, a move that the European Commission says violates the EU VAT Directive. The reduction is set to expire at the end of June 2026, after which the standard 21% rate will resume unless Madrid extends the measure. Brussels has issued a formal warning and warned of potential infringement proceedings if the policy persists.
BDO · 3 days ago
Spain’s Royal Decree‑Law 7/2026 introduces a temporary 10% reduced VAT rate on selected energy supplies, effective from 22 March 2026 until 30 June 2026, subject to a CPI threshold. The measure covers electricity (for small‑scale and vulnerable consumers), natural gas, biomass briquettes, firewood, and certain fuels and biofuels, and applies to supplies, imports and intra‑Community acquisitions.
International Tax Review · 3 days ago
Spain's Royal Decree 238/2026 introduces mandatory B2B e‑invoicing, with implementation timelines of 12 months for firms over €8 million and 24 months for others, pending a ministerial order on technical specifications. The decree expands the scope to non‑resident suppliers, raising compatibility concerns with the EU VAT Directive. The new system will overlay Spain's existing real‑time reporting and VeriFactu regimes, potentially conflicting with the forthcoming EU ViDA Directive.
Seeburger · 8 days ago
Spain has approved a draft bill that will extend mandatory e‑invoicing from the B2G sector to B2B transactions. The new law requires companies to use certified invoicing software from 1 January 2024 and sets a phased implementation schedule based on turnover thresholds. Non‑compliance can lead to fines up to €10,000.
Agencia Tributaria · 10 days ago
Spain's Tax Agency has enacted Royal Decree 238/2026, mandating electronic invoicing for businesses and professionals. The decree takes effect 20 April 2026, with high‑volume firms (VAT turnover > €8 million) required to comply 12 months after the ministerial order, and others 24 months later. A free application will be provided, and the public e‑invoicing platform must be available at least two months before the first effective application.