Personal & Family — UK Divorce Recognition

Recognise a UK divorce in Spain — post-Brexit procedure

Since Brexit, UK divorces are no longer automatically recognised in Spain under EU rules. They need registration through exequatur or simplified procedures depending on the facts. Our bar-registered family lawyers handle UK divorce recognition for British expats daily.

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Before Brexit, UK divorces flowed automatically into Spain under Brussels II bis (Regulation 2201/2003). Since 1 January 2021, the UK is a third country and automatic EU recognition no longer applies. For British expats in Spain — particularly those divorced in the UK who now want to remarry, inherit, or update Spanish records — recognition is essential.

The good news: the routes to recognition are well-trodden, most applications succeed, and the work is procedural rather than contentious in the vast majority of cases. We handle UK divorce recognition every week.

UK divorce recognition services

Full UK divorce recognition in Spain — post-Brexit procedure

From initial assessment to final Civil Registry entry, we handle every step.

Why recognition matters

Without Spanish recognition, your UK divorce has no Spanish legal effect. You're still considered married for Spanish purposes — which affects your ability to remarry here, inheritance positions, tax filings, and any legal matter requiring proof of civil status.

Specifically, without recognition: you cannot remarry in Spain; your Spanish will may still name your ex-spouse as heir; Spanish property registry records still show you as married; tax filings can't reflect your actual status; and any legal proceeding requiring status proof will be disrupted.

Recognition fixes all of these. It makes your UK divorce effective in Spain as if it had been a Spanish divorce. A one-off procedural step that sets up the rest of your expat life cleanly.

What changed with Brexit

Pre-Brexit, the UK was in Brussels II bis (now II ter). Any UK divorce was automatically recognised in Spain without further procedure. A British expat could simply present the decree absolute and it was effective.

From 1 January 2021, the UK exited the regulation. UK divorces after that date need formal recognition through Spanish procedures — principally exequatur, which is the judicial recognition of foreign decisions.

Divorces obtained before 31 December 2020 — even if not yet registered in Spain — may benefit from transitional provisions and automatic recognition. We check the specific facts to identify which regime applies to your case.

Exequatur — the main post-Brexit route

Exequatur is a streamlined judicial procedure that checks whether the foreign decision meets Spanish requirements for recognition. It's not a re-litigation of the divorce — Spanish courts don't reopen the merits. They check procedural integrity: was jurisdiction properly taken, was the respondent served, was the decision final, does it conflict with Spanish public policy.

The process: application filed at the Juzgado de Primera Instancia in the applicant's domicile with decree absolute, apostille, sworn translation and supporting documents. The Ministerio Fiscal (public prosecutor) reviews. If everything is in order, the court grants exequatur — usually without a hearing.

Timeline: 4-9 months typically. Longer in busy courts. Cost: usually €800-1,500 in legal fees plus court and translation costs. Straightforward and successful in the vast majority of cases.

What can go wrong — and how to avoid it

Exequatur is granted in the vast majority of UK divorce cases, but refusals happen. Common grounds: jurisdiction of the UK court not properly established (rare — the UK's jurisdictional rules are generally acceptable), improper service on the respondent (particularly default judgments where the absent spouse wasn't properly notified), decisions not yet final (decree nisi rather than decree absolute), and clear public policy conflicts (very rare for standard divorces).

The single biggest issue is missing documents or defects in the application. We prevent this by preparing a complete, properly legalised, professionally translated pack from the start. DIY applications frequently fail on paperwork grounds.

Simplified recognition — limited availability

Some uncontested UK divorces where both parties are in Spain and agree to Spanish recognition can use a simplified procedure — essentially a joint application for registration without full exequatur review.

This is less common post-Brexit but still occasionally applicable. We assess at the start whether it's available. Where it is, it's faster and cheaper than exequatur.

Decrees from Scotland, Northern Ireland and Gibraltar

Scottish divorces, Northern Irish divorces and Gibraltar divorces follow broadly the same rules as English and Welsh divorces post-Brexit. Gibraltar has a specific relationship with Spain and some additional considerations apply — recognition is available but requires careful handling.

All UK jurisdictions' decrees are accepted as appropriate foreign decisions for exequatur purposes in Spanish courts.

Children and financial orders alongside the divorce

Pre-Brexit, UK custody and maintenance orders were also automatically recognised. Post-Brexit, they need separate recognition — custody orders under the 1996 Hague Child Protection Convention, maintenance orders under the 2007 Hague Maintenance Convention.

These routes are in fact similar in effect to the pre-Brexit EU procedures — the UK and Spain are both parties to both Hague conventions. Recognition is streamlined, typically quicker than exequatur, and well-established. We coordinate divorce recognition with recognition of related orders in a single package.

If you were divorced in the UK and now live in Spain, don't assume your divorce 'counts here' without formal recognition. Six to nine months of procedure now prevents a decade of complications — starting with remarriage, inheritance and Spanish records.
How We Work

Our Four-Step Process

Our approach to UK divorce recognition.

01

Case assessment

Review the UK divorce, identify the right recognition route (exequatur or simplified), confirm timeline and cost. Clear answer at first consultation.

02

Document pack

Decree absolute obtained, apostilled, sworn-translated. Marriage certificate, identity documents, Spanish residence proof compiled.

03

Application & prosecution

Formal application filed, court liaison, response to any prosecutor or court queries, final order obtained.

04

Civil Registry & follow-up

Recognised divorce registered at the Civil Registry. Will review and update where needed. Tax status notified.

UK divorce not yet recognised in Spain? Let's fix that.

Consultation with a bar-registered family lawyer. Clear feasibility, fixed fees in most cases, and English throughout.

Book a Confidential Consultation
Why Platinum Legal Spain

Why Clients Choose Us

Why British expats choose PLS for UK divorce recognition.

Daily UK recognition caseload

We handle UK divorce recognition every week — we know each English court's quirks and which Spanish courts process quickly.

Full document chain

UK document sourcing, apostille coordination, sworn translation — the full chain handled in-house.

Bar-registered family lawyers

Not paralegals or administrative services — qualified lawyers conducting court proceedings properly.

Fixed fees

Most recognition cases are fixed-fee. Clear quote at the first consultation, no surprise costs.

Post-recognition planning

We don't stop at recognition — wills, tax, inheritance, potential remarriage all addressed in a joined-up plan.

Full English service

Every document explained, every step walked through in English. No translation gaps.

What to Avoid

Common Mistakes

Common errors in UK divorce recognition.

Assuming the UK divorce already counts

Post-Brexit it doesn't. Every British expat divorced in the UK needs to check recognition status — delay creates downstream problems.

Using the decree nisi

Only the decree absolute is final. Decree nisi is interim and won't be recognised. We confirm which document you have.

Weak translation

Only sworn translators (traductores jurados) appointed in Spain produce valid translations. UK 'certified' translations are rejected.

Missing apostille

UK decrees need Hague apostille for Spanish use. Cheap to obtain but essential.

DIY filings

Applications must follow specific Spanish procedural rules. DIY applications are routinely rejected on procedural grounds.

Filing in the wrong court

Territorial competence depends on residence. The wrong court will dismiss or transfer — weeks lost.

Forgetting the ex-spouse

The ex-spouse must be notified of the exequatur application. Attempts to skip notification cause refusal.

Ignoring related orders

UK custody or maintenance orders need their own recognition (via Hague conventions). Failing to do this separately leaves them unenforceable in Spain.

Post-recognition inaction

Recognition without updating wills, Spanish records and tax status leaves the practical benefits unrealised.

Who We Help

Clients We Regularly Represent

British expats we help with UK divorce recognition.

Expats planning to remarry

Recognition is the gateway to a Spanish expediente matrimonial and remarriage.

Expats concerned about inheritance

Without recognition, Spanish inheritance records may still show you as married — critical to fix.

Recently divorced expats

Fresh UK decrees brought into Spanish recognition promptly.

Long-divorced expats

Divorces from years ago never recognised in Spain — still possible and often urgent.

Expats updating Spanish property records

Sole ownership, joint ownership changes — recognition needed before property registry updates.

Expats with children subject to UK custody orders

Divorce recognition plus Hague convention recognition of custody orders.

Expats with UK maintenance orders

2007 Hague Maintenance Convention recognition coordinated with divorce recognition.

Expats seeking Spanish nationality

Clean civil status record required — recognition addresses any gaps.

Expats returning to the UK

Ensuring Spanish records reflect UK status before leaving — avoids problems on return.

Frequently Asked Questions

UK divorce recognition — frequently asked questions

Does my UK divorce automatically count in Spain?

If finalised before 31 December 2020 — usually yes under transitional EU rules. If finalised after that date — no, formal recognition through exequatur or equivalent is needed post-Brexit.

How long does UK divorce recognition take?

Exequatur proceedings typically take 4-9 months from filing to final order. Document preparation (apostille, sworn translation) adds 2-4 weeks upfront. Simplified recognition (when available) is faster.

How much does recognition cost?

Typically €800-1,500 in legal fees plus €100-300 for document coordination (apostille, sworn translation, court fees). Fixed-fee in almost all cases.

What documents do I need?

Decree absolute (not decree nisi), apostille from the UK, sworn Spanish translation, original marriage certificate, your passport or NIE, proof of Spanish residence, and your ex-spouse's last known contact details.

Does my ex-spouse need to be involved?

They must be notified of the exequatur application. They can object — but objections are limited to specific grounds (jurisdiction defects, service issues, public policy). In practice, most recognition proceedings are uncontested.

Can my ex-spouse block recognition?

Only on specific legal grounds — not because they don't want it recognised. Exequatur doesn't re-examine the divorce merits. If the UK court had proper jurisdiction and the process was procedurally sound, objection will fail.

What if I can't find my ex-spouse?

Reasonable efforts to locate and notify must be documented. If truly untraceable, service by publication or through the last known address is generally accepted. The court sometimes appoints a defensor judicial to represent the absent party.

I've already remarried in the UK after my divorce. Is my second marriage valid in Spain?

Yes — your second UK marriage is generally recognised in Spain on its own terms once your first divorce is recognised. Both recognitions are often handled together.

What about custody orders from my UK divorce?

UK custody orders need separate recognition under the 1996 Hague Child Protection Convention. We coordinate both recognitions in one package.

What about UK maintenance orders?

UK maintenance orders are recognised under the 2007 Hague Maintenance Convention — both Spain and the UK are parties. Process is similar to divorce recognition but streamlined.

Do I need to be present in Spain during recognition?

Not usually. With a power of attorney we handle most of the procedure without your attendance. Some specific situations may require brief attendance.

What happens after recognition?

Your UK divorce is Spanish-effective. We register it at the Civil Registry, update your Spanish status, and address related matters — will updates, tax status, remarriage preparation if planned.

Ready to get your UK divorce recognised?

Consultation with a bar-registered family lawyer. Fixed-fee recognition. Complete document handling. English throughout.

General information about recognition of UK divorces in Spain post-Brexit. Not a substitute for advice on your specific situation. Platinum Legal Spain — regulated by the Ilustre Colegio de Abogados de Málaga.