Bill of Lading Spain (Carta de Porte)
CARTA DE PORTE — BILL OF LADING
[Transport Type]
Nº de referencia / Reference number: [Carta de Porte Number]
Fecha de emisión / Date of issue: [Issue Date]
Lugar de emisión / Place of issue: [Issue Place]
1. PARTIES / PARTES
SHIPPER / CARGADOR:
Name: [Shipper Name]
NIF/CIF: [Shipper NIF]
Address: [Shipper Address]
Contact: [Shipper Contact]
CARRIER / TRANSPORTISTA:
Name: [Carrier Name]
NIF/CIF: [Carrier NIF]
Address: [Carrier Address]
Transport Licence (Autorización de Transporte): [Carrier Licence Number]
Vehicle Registration: [Vehicle Registration]
Driver: [Driver Name]
CONSIGNEE / DESTINATARIO:
Name: [Consignee Name]
Delivery Address: [Consignee Address]
Contact: [Consignee Contact]
2. COLLECTION AND DELIVERY / RECOGIDA Y ENTREGA
Collection Address (Lugar de recogida): [Collection Address]
Collection Date and Time (Fecha y hora de recogida): [Collection Date]
Delivery Address (Lugar de entrega): [Consignee Address]
Agreed Delivery Date (Fecha de entrega acordada): [Delivery Date]
3. DESCRIPTION OF GOODS / DESCRIPCIÓN DE MERCANCÍAS
Commercial Description: [Goods Description]
Number of Packages (Nº de bultos): [Number of Packages]
Packaging Type (Tipo de embalaje): [Packaging Type]
Gross Weight (Peso bruto): [Gross Weight] kg
Volume (Volumen): [Volume]
Declared Value (Valor declarado): [Declared Value]
Special Classification: [Special Goods Classification]
Special Handling Instructions: [Special Instructions]
4. FREIGHT AND PAYMENT / FLETE Y CONDICIONES DE PAGO
Agreed Freight Rate (Precio del porte): [Freight Amount]
Payment Terms: [Freight Payment]
5. LIABILITY AND CLAIMS / RESPONSABILIDAD Y RECLAMACIONES
For domestic transport: The carrier's liability for loss or damage to the goods is limited to the declared value, or where no value is declared, to approximately 1/3 of the IPREM per kilogram of gross weight, pursuant to Article 57 of Ley 15/2009 (LCTTM). Claims for apparent damage must be reserved in writing on this carta de porte at the time of delivery. Claims for non-apparent damage must be submitted within 7 calendar days of delivery. The prescription period for all claims is 1 year from the delivery date under Article 79 LCTTM.
For international transport under the CMR Convention: Carrier liability is limited to 8.33 SDR per kilogram of gross weight of goods lost under Article 23 CMR. Claims for apparent damage must be reserved on the consignment note at delivery; non-apparent damage must be reported within 7 calendar days (Article 30 CMR). Prescription period: 1 year under Article 32 CMR (3 years for wilful misconduct).
6. SIGNATURES / FIRMAS
SHIPPER (CARGADOR) — Signature upon handover of goods:
[Shipper Name]
Signature: _________________________ Date: _________________________
CARRIER / DRIVER (TRANSPORTISTA / CONDUCTOR) — Signature upon collection, confirming goods received in apparent good order and condition:
[Carrier Name] — Driver: [Driver Name]
Signature: _________________________ Date: _________________________
Reservations noted at collection: _________________________
CONSIGNEE (DESTINATARIO) — Signature upon delivery, confirming goods received:
[Consignee Name]
Signature: _________________________ Date of delivery: _________________________
Reservations noted at delivery: _________________________
Shipper / Cargador
________________
Signature
Carrier / Driver
________________
Signature
Consignee / Destinatario
________________
Signature
What Is a Bill of Lading Spain (Carta de Porte)?
A Bill of Lading Spain (Carta de Porte) is a formal transport document that serves simultaneously as the contract of carriage, a receipt of the goods delivered to the carrier, and evidence of the terms on which road freight transport is to be performed between the shipper (cargador), the carrier (transportista), and the consignee (destinatario). In Spain, the Carta de Porte is governed principally by Ley 15/2009, de 11 de noviembre, del Contrato de Transporte Terrestre de Mercancías (LCTTM), which consolidated and modernised the regulation of domestic road freight transport, replacing the earlier fragmented regime under the Ley 16/1987, de 30 de julio, de Ordenación de los Transportes Terrestres (LOTT) and the Reglamento de Ordenación de los Transportes Terrestres (ROTT — Real Decreto 1211/1990).
Article 10 of Ley 15/2009 establishes the specific mandatory contents of the carta de porte (the transport document) for domestic Spanish road freight. The LCTTM defines the rights and obligations of each party: the shipper's obligation to provide accurate goods information under Article 20 LCTTM, the carrier's obligation to deliver the goods within the agreed time under Articles 33 through 36 LCTTM, and the consignee's rights and obligations upon delivery under Articles 44 through 50 LCTTM.
For international road transport within Europe and to and from third countries, the applicable instrument is the Convention on the Contract for the International Carriage of Goods by Road (CMR Convention — Convención CMR, Ginebra 1956), ratified by Spain through Instrumento de Adhesión de 12 de septiembre de 1973. The CMR Convention establishes a uniform regime for the international carta de porte, including carrier liability limits of 8.33 SDR (Special Drawing Rights) per kilogram of gross weight of goods lost under Article 23 CMR. Spain also participates in the Interbus Agreement governing international occasional passenger transport.
The Comité Nacional del Transporte por Carretera (CNTC) and the Ministerio de Transportes, Movilidad y Agenda Urbana (MITMA) regulate the domestic road transport sector in Spain. Carriers must hold a valid licencia de transporte (transport licence) issued by MITMA or the relevant communidad autónoma transport authority, and must display the Número de Autorización de Transporte on all transport documents. The Agencia Estatal de Seguridad Vial (DGT — Dirección General de Tráfico) enforces road traffic and transport compliance.
The Ley de Ordenación de los Transportes Terrestres (Ley 16/1987 — LOTT) and its Reglamento (ROTT) continue to apply as framework legislation for transport authorisations, licensing, and administrative sanctions. The LOTT establishes the Spanish transport authorisation framework — licencias de transporte público de mercancías (LPTM) for public freight carriers and licencias de transporte privado (LPRIV) for companies transporting their own goods. The ROTT was substantially updated by Real Decreto 70/2019 to align with EU Regulation 1071/2009 on access to the occupation of road transport operator.
EU Regulation 1072/2009 on common rules for access to the international road haulage market and EU Regulation 1073/2009 on common rules for access to the international market for coach and bus services form the European regulatory framework for cross-border transport operations, establishing the conditions for cabotage (transporte de cabotaje) — the temporary carriage of goods within Spain by a carrier established in another EU Member State. Infringement of cabotage rules is sanctioned by MITMA under the LOTT.
The Real Decreto 97/2014, de 14 de febrero, regulates the transport of hazardous goods (mercancías peligrosas) by road under the ADR Agreement (Accord européen relatif au transport international des marchandises Dangereuses par Route), requiring specific documentation, labelling, and driver certification for ADR-classified substances.
When Do You Need a Bill of Lading Spain (Carta de Porte)?
A Carta de Porte Spain is needed whenever goods are transported by road under a contract of carriage — whether for domestic Spanish transport or for international road transport where Spain is the country of dispatch or destination.
The document is required for all domestic road freight transport operations, both public (transporte público — carrying goods for third parties for remuneration) and private (transporte privado — a company carrying its own goods). Article 10 of Ley 15/2009 makes the carta de porte the standard transport document for these operations, and transport inspectors from MITMA and autonomous community transport authorities may require it during roadside checks.
A Carta de Porte is needed for international road freight transport to or from Spain under the CMR Convention — all international road freight movements in Europe require a CMR consignment note (carta de porte CMR), which serves as evidence of the contract of carriage and is recognised by courts and customs authorities across all CMR signatory states.
The document is required when transporting goods across Spanish customs — for imports and exports outside the EU, the carta de porte accompanies the customs declaration (DUA — Documento Único Aduanero) submitted to the Agencia Estatal de Administración Tributaria (AEAT — Spanish customs authority) and provides evidence of the transport contract for customs valuation purposes under EU Regulation 952/2013 (Union Customs Code).
A Carta de Porte is needed when transporting perishable goods under the ATP Agreement (Agreement on the International Carriage of Perishable Foodstuffs — Acuerdo ATP, Geneva 1970), ratified by Spain, which requires specific temperature-controlled transport equipment and documentation certified by MITMA.
The document is required for all ADR hazardous goods transport operations under Real Decreto 97/2014 — the carta de porte must include the ADR goods declaration specifying the UN number, proper shipping name, hazard class, packing group, and emergency information as required by ADR Chapter 5.4.
A Carta de Porte is needed when the shipper or consignee wishes to insure the goods in transit — the transport document is required by Spanish cargo insurers (aseguradoras) to identify the goods, their value, the transport route, and the carrier's identity for the purposes of the insurance policy under Ley 50/1980 de Contrato de Seguro.
Under the Ley de Sociedades de Capital (LSC) RDL 1/2010, the Registro Mercantil maintains the register of Spanish companies. The Código de Comercio 1885 governs commercial obligations. The Agencia Estatal de Administración Tributaria (AEAT) administers Impuesto sobre Sociedades (IS) under Ley 27/2014. The Comisión Nacional de los Mercados y la Competencia (CNMC) enforces competition law. The Código Civil governs general contractual obligations under Article 1255.
What to Include in Your Bill of Lading Spain (Carta de Porte)
A valid Carta de Porte Spain under Article 10 of Ley 15/2009 must contain the following mandatory elements to be legally effective as a transport document.
Date of Issue and Place: The date and place where the carta de porte is issued, which establishes the moment at which the carrier takes over the goods and the transport contract is formed.
Shipper Identification (Cargador): Full name or company name, NIF/CIF, and complete address of the party who is contracting the transport and delivering the goods to the carrier. The shipper's contact telephone number and email are recommended for operational purposes.
Carrier Identification (Transportista): Full name or company name, NIF/CIF, and address of the carrier. The carrier's transport licence number (Número de Autorización de Transporte — LPTM or LPRIV) issued by MITMA or the relevant autonomous community must be stated, as this is a mandatory field under the LOTT compliance framework.
Consignee Identification (Destinatario): Full name or company name and delivery address of the party to whom the goods are to be delivered. The consignee's contact details for delivery notification should be included.
Place and Date of Collection: The address where the carrier is to collect the goods (lugar de recogida) and the date and time window for collection. For time-sensitive deliveries, the precise collection window should be specified.
Place and Date of Delivery: The agreed delivery address (lugar de entrega) and the contracted delivery date or time window. Under Article 33 LCTTM, the carrier must deliver within the agreed time or, where no time is agreed, within a reasonable time. Late delivery gives rise to a claim for damages under Article 57 LCTTM.
Description of Goods: A precise description of the goods — commercial description (descripción comercial), number of packages (número de bultos), type of packaging (tipo de embalaje), gross weight (peso bruto) in kilograms, and volume (volumen) in cubic metres. For food products, the temperature regime and expiry date should be included. For ADR goods, the full ADR declaration must be included.
Declared Value: The commercial value of the goods (valor declarado de las mercancías) in euros — this is essential for calculating the carrier's maximum liability under Article 57 LCTTM (8.33 SDR per kilogram for domestic transport) and for insurance purposes. Without a declared value, recovery is limited to the statutory cap.
Freight and Payment Terms: The agreed freight rate (precio del porte) and payment terms — whether freight is prepaid (porte pagado) by the shipper or collect (porte a cobrar) by the consignee on delivery. Any surcharges for fuel, waiting time, or special handling should be itemised.
Special Instructions: Any specific instructions for handling, storage temperature, delivery notification, or customs clearance. For dangerous goods, the emergency contact number (número de teléfono de emergencias) required under ADR Chapter 5.4 must be included.
Signatures: The carta de porte must be signed by the shipper (or their representative) and countersigned by the carrier's driver upon collection, confirming the goods have been received in apparent good order and condition. The consignee signs upon delivery to confirm receipt.
Forms-legal.com provides this Carta de Porte Spain template as a starting point for Spanish freight operations. For international transport, the CMR consignment note format should be used. Carriers operating under ADR, ATP, or other special regimes should seek guidance from their transport operator association (ASTIC, FENADISMER, or CETM) to confirm compliance with sector-specific requirements.
Under the Ley de Sociedades de Capital (LSC) RDL 1/2010, the Registro Mercantil maintains the register of Spanish companies. The Código de Comercio 1885 governs commercial obligations. The Agencia Estatal de Administración Tributaria (AEAT) administers Impuesto sobre Sociedades (IS) under Ley 27/2014. The Comisión Nacional de los Mercados y la Competencia (CNMC) enforces competition law. The Código Civil governs general contractual obligations under Article 1255.
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"Bill of Lading Spain (Carta de Porte) (Spain)." Forms Legal, 2026, https://forms-legal.com/espana/business/shipping/bill-of-lading-spain.
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year = {2026},
howpublished = {\url{https://forms-legal.com/espana/business/shipping/bill-of-lading-spain}},
note = {Free legal document template}
}Frequently Asked Questions
Conforme al artículo 57 de la Ley 15/2009 (LCTTM), la responsabilidad del transportista por pérdida o avería de mercancías en el transporte nacional por carretera queda limitada al valor declarado de las mercancías, o, si no se hubiera declarado valor, a un importe equivalente a 1/3 del IPREM (Indicador Público de Renta de Efectos Múltiples) por kilogramo de peso bruto de las mercancías perdidas o averiadas. Para el transporte internacional bajo el Convenio CMR, el límite de responsabilidad es de 8,33 DEG (Derechos Especiales de Giro) por kilogramo de peso bruto. La responsabilidad del transportista queda excluida cuando la pérdida o avería se deba a vicio propio de las mercancías, culpa del cargador o fuerza mayor (artículo 48 LCTTM). Las reclamaciones por pérdida total deben presentarse en el plazo de prescripción de 1 año establecido en el artículo 79 LCTTM.
Conforme al artículo 10 de la Ley 15/2009 (LCTTM), la carta de porte es obligatoria para el transporte público de mercancías por carretera — transporte realizado por un transportista autorizado a cambio de remuneración. Para el transporte privado — en el que una empresa transporta sus propias mercancías en sus propios vehículos — el documento no es legalmente obligatorio, aunque se recomienda encarecidamente como prueba del acuerdo de transporte y a efectos de seguro, aduana e inspección administrativa. Los inspectores de transportes de MITMA y de las comunidades autónomas están facultados para detener vehículos y solicitar documentación de transporte. La ausencia de carta de porte en el transporte público constituye infracción leve según el artículo 140 LOTT. Para el transporte internacional bajo el Convenio CMR, la carta de porte es obligatoria en todos los desplazamientos transfronterizos entre estados parte del CMR.
La Carta de Porte según la Ley 15/2009 es el documento de transporte nacional utilizado para el transporte de mercancías por carretera enteramente dentro de España. La carta de porte CMR es el documento de transporte internacional utilizado bajo el Convenio CMR (ratificado por España en 1973) para el transporte de mercancías por carretera entre dos países, de los cuales al menos uno es Estado parte del CMR. El formato de la carta de porte CMR está normalizado en todos los países CMR e incluye campos específicos no exigidos en la carta de porte nacional, como referencias a artículos del CMR, puntos de cruce de frontera y la declaración de responsabilidad del transportista según el artículo 23 CMR. Los transportistas españoles que operan tanto en el ámbito nacional como internacional deben mantener ambos tipos de documentos.
Conforme al artículo 79 de la Ley 15/2009 (LCTTM), el plazo de prescripción para las reclamaciones derivadas del contrato de transporte terrestre nacional es de 1 año desde la fecha de entrega o desde la fecha en que debería haberse efectuado. Para reclamaciones de transporte internacional bajo el Convenio CMR, el plazo también es de 1 año (artículo 32 CMR), ampliable a 3 años en caso de dolo o culpa equivalente del transportista. Las reservas por daños aparentes o pérdida deben consignarse por escrito en la carta de porte en el momento de la entrega — si no se formulan reservas, las mercancías se presumen entregadas en buen estado (artículo 50 LCTTM; artículo 30 CMR para el internacional). Las reclamaciones por daños no aparentes deben presentarse en los 7 días naturales siguientes a la entrega. La falta de reservas escritas en plazo puede hacer perder el derecho de reclamación frente al transportista.
Según el artículo 10 de la Ley 15/2009 (LCTTM), la carta de porte debe ser firmada por el cargador y el transportista en el momento de la recogida de las mercancías, confirmando la entrega de los bienes y las condiciones del transporte. El conductor del transportista suele firmar en representación del transportista en la recogida. La firma del destinatario en el momento de la entrega sirve como recibo y, si no se formulan reservas, crea la presunción de que las mercancías fueron recibidas en las condiciones descritas. Bajo el artículo 9 del Convenio CMR, la carta de porte hace fe del contrato de transporte y del estado de las mercancías salvo que el transportista haya consignado reservas. Las firmas electrónicas son válidas en España conforme al Reglamento (UE) 910/2014 (eIDAS) y la Ley 6/2020 de Servicios Electrónicos de Confianza — las cartas de porte digitales con firma electrónica cualificada tienen el mismo efecto jurídico que las firmas manuscritas.
This template is provided for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Laws vary by jurisdiction and change over time. Consult a qualified attorney for advice specific to your situation.Full disclaimer
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