How SaaS founders, software developers and technology startups structure their Spanish business — SL formation, Beckham Law for founders, stock options and phantom shares, IP holding, R&D tax credits, EU parent-subsidiary structures and scaling to multi-country operations.
SaaS and software businesses are Spain's most structurally interesting sector for tax planning. The combination of 25% corporate tax, strong R&D tax credits (deducción por I+D+i, up to 42% of qualifying expense as tax credit), EU Parent-Subsidiary Directive access, Beckham Law for founders and a deep pool of technical talent has made Spain a credible location for venture-backed software businesses — not just a lifestyle destination for remote-working coders.
For early-stage SaaS, the structure question is usually 'can I run this out of my home-country entity' (typically no, once founder is Spanish-resident), 'should I form a Spanish SL' (usually yes), and 'how do I handle options for my team'. For growth-stage, the questions become transfer pricing, IP migration, investor-readiness of the cap table, and cross-border employment of remote developers.
This page walks through the tax and structural decisions for software businesses at each stage — early-stage founders relocating to Spain, growth-stage companies opening Spanish engineering teams, and venture-backed companies restructuring their cap table for Spanish tax residency.
Tax structuring, entity formation and sector-specific compliance for SaaS founders, software developers, app developers and technology startups. Scoped at the outset with a written fee proposal.
Four commercial realities shape every SaaS & Software Founders engagement in Spain.
25% corporate tax on retained profit (or 23% for small companies), deferred taxation on retained earnings, clean IP-holding structure, eligibility for Beckham, EU Parent-Subsidiary Directive access for future group flows. Autónomo doesn't support any of the above.
Share capital minimum €3,000, share classes possible via SL bylaws, option pool structuring via phantom shares or cash-settled equivalents (true share options require SA — Sociedad Anónima — for full flexibility).
Spain has one of the most generous R&D regimes in the EU. Qualifying R&D expense generates a tax credit of up to 25% (ordinary R&D) plus up to 17% on salary costs, with additional 8% tax credit on new R&D fixed assets.
Certification process via accredited bodies (AENOR, CDTI) provides legal certainty. For a typical SaaS with €500k engineering payroll, the R&D credit can exceed €100k/year — offset against corporate tax or, in some cases, refunded.
Direct stock options in an SL are structurally limited. Most Spanish SaaS use phantom shares — cash-settled awards tracking equity value — which provide the economic exposure without share register complexity.
Tax timing: phantom share payouts are ordinary employment income at payout. Beckham employees: 24% flat. Non-Beckham: progressive up to 47-54%. Qualifying stock option regimes exist but require careful structuring and usually SA entity.
Software IP developed in Spain is Spanish-situs for tax purposes. Moving it out later (e.g., to a Delaware parent ahead of US funding) triggers exit taxation. Plan IP location at inception, not at fundraise.
Cross-border development (Spain engineering team, US parent) requires transfer pricing — arm's-length fee between entities, documented with benchmarking. The OECD's cost-plus and PSM methods are both applicable; we engage transfer-pricing specialists where needed.
Every engagement is scoped in writing with a named point of contact.
Full SL incorporation tuned to the sector's capital and governance profile.
IVA classification, corporate tax, Modelo filings, regime analysis.
Six-year 24% regime for qualifying founders and directors. Election window tight.
Digital Nomad, Self-Employment, Non-Lucrative — sector-appropriate routes.
Client MSAs, employment contracts, licensing agreements drafted and reviewed.
Quarterly and annual filings, handover to ongoing gestor, compliance calendar.
Spanish business banking setup for foreign founders, multi-currency where needed.
Employment contracts, Social Security, payroll, convenio compliance.
Six-step structured process — typically 4-6 weeks end to end.
60-minute call walking through your sector-specific situation, revenue profile, client base and residence status.
Written report with tax modelling and sector-specific recommendations before you engage.
NIE and residence registration where not already in place.
SL or autónomo registration with sector-appropriate IAE codes, licences and registrations.
OSS, ROI, CASP register, vivienda de uso turístico, etc. — specific to your activity.
Named gestor or in-house compliance partner, written compliance calendar, 12-month handover plan.
Illustrative client profiles across the sector.
The situation. UK founder, €600k ARR SaaS, solo operator, relocated with family.
How we'd handle it. Spanish SL with Beckham Law. Director's contract at €200k taxed at 24%; retained ARR at 25% corporate. R&D credit on founder's development time (requires product documentation and CDTI certification). Phantom share pool drafted for future hires.
The situation. Two founders — American and British — relocated to Valencia, $1.8M ARR, Delaware C-Corp parent with US investors.
How we'd handle it. Spanish SL subsidiary of Delaware C-Corp. Transfer pricing at cost plus 12% between Spain (engineering) and Delaware (HQ, sales). Beckham for both founders on Spanish salary. US Form 5471 coordination. R&D credit certified in Spain.
The situation. Berlin-HQ SaaS at €8M ARR hiring 12 engineers in Barcelona, no founders in Spain initially.
How we'd handle it. Spanish SL subsidiary owned by German GmbH. Parent-Subsidiary Directive eliminates dividend withholding. Convenio-compliant engineering contracts. R&D credit on Spanish salary costs applied against Spanish corporate tax. Spanish country manager hired as SL director.
The situation. US founder of Series-B SaaS ($12M raised) considering relocation to Spain; investor approval required.
How we'd handle it. Pre-move structuring: Spanish SL subsidiary, IP holding retained in Delaware, cost-plus-12% transfer pricing, Beckham for founder's Spanish-source director compensation. 409A considerations on US side reviewed with US counsel. Investor consent obtained.
Recurring errors specific to this sector — and how we prevent each.
Most Spanish SaaS don't claim R&D credit because they don't know it exists or think the documentation is onerous. It's worth €80-€300k/year for a typical engineering-heavy SaaS.
Forming Spanish SL, building IP in Spain, then later wanting Delaware parent for funding — exit tax on IP migration is punitive. Plan structure before writing code.
Autónomo progressive IRPF kills retained profit. SaaS reinvestment economics break down on autónomo; SL is right from €100k.
Spanish tax treats cash-settled awards as employment income at payout; equity-settled awards differently. Misclassification creates payroll compliance issues.
Founders arriving and waiting to set up the SL until Q2 can miss the six-month Beckham window. Sequence the steps tightly.
Founders with international banking miss Modelo 720. Spanish Hacienda enforces; penalties compound.
Most saas & software founders engagements start with a structure call where we understand the specifics — revenue, client geography, operational setup, existing entities, residency status. We don't start recommending entity types before we understand the numbers.
After the call we send a written recommendation with sector-specific tax modelling. You see actual numbers — SL vs autónomo, Beckham vs progressive, R&D credit where applicable, VAT treatment per client geography.
If you engage, we issue a written scope and fixed fee. Scope is specific to the sector — OSS registration for e-commerce, CASP registration for crypto, vivienda de uso turístico for property, image-rights licence for creators. Fee is fixed, in writing, before work begins.
We execute. You get a named point of contact. Weekly status during active phases. English-language throughout. Coordinated with your home-country advisor where applicable.
We hand over to an ongoing compliance provider — typically a gestor or small accounting firm — with a written 12-month compliance calendar. You don't lose visibility after setup, and we stay available for follow-up questions indefinitely.
Spain has thousands of gestores who can register an SL. What's scarce is sector-specific commercial capability — lawyers who understand how saas & software founders actually operate, what goes wrong in your sector, and how to structure setup to prevent it.
Speak to a specialist who has structured saas & software founders engagements before. Written scope. Fixed fee. Named point of contact.