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Daily Working Hours Log Spain (Registro de Jornada)

Daily Working Hours Log Spain (Registro de Jornada)

REGISTRO DE JORNADA LABORAL

Daily Working Hours Log — Spain

Article 34.9 Estatuto de los Trabajadores (RDL 2/2015) | Real Decreto-Ley 8/2019

1. EMPLOYER AND WORKER IDENTIFICATION

EMPLOYER (EMPRESARIO):

Name: [Employer Name]

NIF/CIF: [Employer NIF]

TGSS Contribution Account (CCC): [Employer CCC]

Workplace Address (Centro de Trabajo): [Workplace Address]

WORKER (TRABAJADOR/A):

Name: [Worker Name]

DNI / NIE: [Worker DNI/NIE]

Position: [Worker Position]

Contract Type: [Contract Type]

Agreed Weekly Hours: [Agreed Weekly Hours] hours/week

2. LOG PERIOD

Month / Year: [Log Month] [Log Year]

3. LEGAL BASIS

This register is maintained pursuant to Article 34.9 of the Estatuto de los Trabajadores (Real Decreto Legislativo 2/2015, de 23 de octubre), as amended by Real Decreto-Ley 8/2019, de 8 de marzo. Records must be preserved for four years from the date of each entry. Records must be made available to the worker, their legal representatives, and the Inspección de Trabajo y Seguridad Social (ITSS) upon request. Failure to maintain compliant records constitutes a serious infraction (infracción grave) under Article 7.5 of the LISOS (RDL 5/2000).

4. DAILY TIME ENTRIES

Instructions: Record the exact start time (hora de entrada) and end time (hora de salida) for each working day. For split-shift days (jornada partida), record both sessions. Leave rest break duration blank if breaks are excluded from working time under the applicable convenio colectivo.

| DATE (DD/MM) | START TIME | END TIME | BREAK (min) | TOTAL HRS | OVERTIME HRS | WORKER INITIALS |

|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|

| 01/[Log Month] | : | : | | | | |

| 02/[Log Month] | : | : | | | | |

| 03/[Log Month] | : | : | | | | |

| 04/[Log Month] | : | : | | | | |

| 05/[Log Month] | : | : | | | | |

| 06/[Log Month] | : | : | | | | |

| 07/[Log Month] | : | : | | | | |

| 08/[Log Month] | : | : | | | | |

| 09/[Log Month] | : | : | | | | |

| 10/[Log Month] | : | : | | | | |

| 11/[Log Month] | : | : | | | | |

| 12/[Log Month] | : | : | | | | |

| 13/[Log Month] | : | : | | | | |

| 14/[Log Month] | : | : | | | | |

| 15/[Log Month] | : | : | | | | |

| 16/[Log Month] | : | : | | | | |

| 17/[Log Month] | : | : | | | | |

| 18/[Log Month] | : | : | | | | |

| 19/[Log Month] | : | : | | | | |

| 20/[Log Month] | : | : | | | | |

| 21/[Log Month] | : | : | | | | |

| 22/[Log Month] | : | : | | | | |

| 23/[Log Month] | : | : | | | | |

| 24/[Log Month] | : | : | | | | |

| 25/[Log Month] | : | : | | | | |

| 26/[Log Month] | : | : | | | | |

| 27/[Log Month] | : | : | | | | |

| 28/[Log Month] | : | : | | | | |

| 29/[Log Month] | : | : | | | | |

| 30/[Log Month] | : | : | | | | |

| 31/[Log Month] | : | : | | | | |

5. MONTHLY SUMMARY

Total Ordinary Hours Worked: [Total Ordinary Hours] hours

Total Overtime Hours (Horas Extraordinarias): [Total Overtime Hours] hours

Summary prepared on: [Summary Date]

This monthly summary has been made available to the worker and their legal representatives in accordance with Article 34.9 of the Estatuto de los Trabajadores.

SIGNATURES

EMPLOYER / REPRESENTATIVE:

[Employer Name] — [Employer Representative]

Signature: _________________________ Date: _________________________

WORKER (TRABAJADOR/A):

[Worker Name] — DNI/NIE: [Worker DNI/NIE]

Signature: _________________________ Date: _________________________

I, [Worker Name], confirm that the working hours recorded above are accurate.

Signature: _________________________ Date: _________________________

Employer / Representative

________________

Signature

Worker

________________

Signature

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What Is a Daily Working Hours Log Spain (Registro de Jornada)?

The Daily Working Hours Log Spain (Registro de Jornada) is the mandatory written record that every Spanish employer must maintain documenting each worker's daily start time, end time, and total hours worked, governed by Article 34.9 of the Estatuto de los Trabajadores (Real Decreto Legislativo 2/2015, de 23 de octubre) as amended by Real Decreto-Ley 8/2019, de 8 de marzo. Spain introduced this obligation in 2019 following a landmark ruling of the Tribunal de Justicia de la Unión Europea (TJUE) in Case C-55/18 (CCOO v. Deutsche Bank) holding that European Union member states must require employers to implement an objective, reliable, and accessible working time recording system to give effect to Directive 2003/88/EC on working time.

Prior to the 2019 reform, Article 34.9 ET only required recording of overtime hours (horas extraordinarias). The Real Decreto-Ley 8/2019 expanded the obligation to cover all ordinary working time — every day, for every employee, regardless of contract type or working modality. The Registro de Jornada must record the exact hour and minute at which each worker starts and ends their working day, as specified in the instrucción of the Dirección General de la Inspección de Trabajo y Seguridad Social (DGITSS). Partial entries — recording only total hours without specifying start and end times — do not satisfy the legal requirement under the ITSS inspection criteria.

The Inspección de Trabajo y Seguridad Social (ITSS) enforces compliance with the registro de jornada obligation through workplace inspections. Failure to maintain the register, or maintaining it in an incomplete or irregular manner, constitutes a serious infraction (infracción grave) under Article 7.5 of the Real Decreto Legislativo 5/2000, de 4 de agosto, por el que se aprueba el texto refundido de la Ley sobre Infracciones y Sanciones en el Orden Social (LISOS), sanctioned by fines ranging from €626 to €6,250 per infraction. Systematic or deliberate non-compliance may be classified as a very serious infraction (infracción muy grave) under Article 8 LISOS with fines up to €187,515.

The Registro de Jornada must be preserved by the employer for a minimum of four years from the date of each entry, pursuant to Article 34.9 ET in fine. The records must be made available to workers, their legal representatives (representantes legales de los trabajadores — delegados de personal or comité de empresa), and the ITSS upon request. Workers have the right to receive a copy of their own daily time records.

Spanish employers may use any format for the Registro de Jornada — paper sheets, Excel spreadsheets, dedicated HR software (software de control horario), biometric systems, card readers, or mobile applications — provided the system produces an objective and reliable record that cannot be retroactively altered without leaving an audit trail. The Agencia Española de Protección de Datos (AEPD) has issued guidance on the use of biometric systems for working time registration, requiring a legitimate legal basis under the Reglamento General de Protección de Datos (RGPD) — Reglamento (UE) 2016/679 — and Ley Orgánica 3/2018 (LOPDGDD). The AEPD has clarified that biometric data constitutes special category data under Article 9 RGPD, and its use for time recording must comply with the proportionality principle.

For remote workers (teletrabajadores) covered by Ley 10/2021, de 9 de julio, de trabajo a distancia, the time recording obligation applies in full. The acuerdo de trabajo a distancia must address the mechanism for recording working time remotely. The Criterio Técnico CT 101/2019 of the ITSS provides detailed guidance on acceptable recording methods for telework.

The obligation covers all workers in Spain regardless of their contract modality — indefinite (indefinido), fixed-term (temporal), part-time (a tiempo parcial), or on-call (fijo-discontinuo). Part-time workers are subject to an enhanced recording obligation under Article 12.4(c) ET — employers must also record the distribution of ordinary hours worked per day for part-time employees, and workers must receive a monthly summary of actual hours worked compared to contracted hours.

When Do You Need a Daily Working Hours Log Spain (Registro de Jornada)?

A Daily Working Hours Log Spain is required by every employer (empresario) in Spain from the first day any worker is employed, regardless of the size of the company, the number of employees, or the sector of economic activity. There are no exemptions from Article 34.9 ET — sole traders (autónomos) with employed staff, microenterprises, SMEs (pymes), large corporations, and public administrations are all covered.

The Registro de Jornada is specifically required for each individual worker — a single aggregate company log is not sufficient. The ITSS inspection criteria require records identifying the specific worker, the specific date, and the specific start and end times of the working day. Where a worker performs split shifts (jornada partida), both the morning and afternoon sessions must be recorded with their respective start and end times.

A Registro de Jornada is needed when a company undergoes an ITSS labour inspection (inspección de trabajo) — inspectors routinely request working time records to verify compliance with maximum working hour limits under Article 34 ET, overtime hour caps under Article 35 ET, mandatory rest period observance under Articles 36 and 37 ET, and minimum daily rest under Article 34.3 ET. Absence of records is treated as non-compliance.

The log is required when an employee files a claim for unpaid overtime (horas extraordinarias no pagadas) before the Juzgado de lo Social or through SMAC (Servicio de Mediación, Arbitraje y Conciliación) proceedings — the Tribunal Supremo and various Tribunales Superiores de Justicia have held that the burden of proof of actual hours worked rests with the employer when a Registro de Jornada is required but not maintained.

A Registro de Jornada is needed when a company applies for ERTE (Expediente de Regulación Temporal de Empleo) reductions under the SEPE — working time records are required to calculate the reduction in hours and to verify reported figures against actual productivity. The SEPE and TGSS cross-reference registro de jornada data with social security contribution bases.

The log is also required for inspection by the comité de empresa or delegados de personal — workers' representatives have a statutory right to access working time records under the Estatuto de los Trabajadores.

Under the Estatuto de los Trabajadores (ET) RDL 2/2015, Spanish employment law governs contracts, dismissals, and working conditions. The Tesorería General de la Seguridad Social (TGSS) administers social security contributions. The Servicio Público de Empleo Estatal (SEPE) manages unemployment benefits. The Inspección de Trabajo y Seguridad Social enforces labour compliance. The Juzgados de lo Social hear employment disputes under the Ley Reguladora de la Jurisdicción Social (Ley 36/2011).

What to Include in Your Daily Working Hours Log Spain (Registro de Jornada)

A valid Daily Working Hours Log Spain under Article 34.9 of the Estatuto de los Trabajadores (RDL 2/2015) and Real Decreto-Ley 8/2019 must contain the following elements to withstand ITSS scrutiny and satisfy the legal retention and disclosure obligations.

Worker Identification: Full name and DNI/NIE of the employee, and the employer's name, NIF/CIF, and Código de Cuenta de Cotización (CCC) assigned by the Tesorería General de la Seguridad Social (TGSS). Records must be maintained per individual worker — a single company-wide sheet does not comply.

Date of Work: The calendar date (DD/MM/YYYY) of each working day. Consecutive days without entries must be accounted for — the system should record non-working days (weekend rest, public holidays, annual leave) so that gaps are explicable, not suspicious.

Start Time: The exact time (hour and minute) at which the worker began their working day. For split-shift workers (jornada partida), the start time of each session must be recorded separately.

End Time: The exact time (hour and minute) at which the worker ended their working day or each session. Rounding to the nearest quarter-hour is not recommended — ITSS inspectors have challenged records that systematically show exact quarter-hour entries as lacking reliability.

Total Daily Hours: The total ordinary hours worked per day, calculated from start and end times. Where rest breaks are excluded from working time under the applicable convenio colectivo or company agreement, the break duration must also be recorded so that the net working time calculation is transparent.

Overtime Hours: Any hours worked beyond the agreed ordinary working day must be identified separately as horas extraordinarias and their compensation method noted (monetary payment or compensatory rest), pursuant to Article 35 ET. The annual overtime cap of 80 hours must be monitored and reflected in cumulative totals.

Worker Signature or Digital Confirmation: The ITSS Criterio Técnico CT 101/2019 recommends that workers acknowledge or confirm their daily time entries — through physical signature on paper records, or through a digital confirmation in electronic systems. This creates an evidence trail for disputes.

Monthly Summary: At the end of each month, a cumulative summary of total ordinary hours and overtime hours worked must be prepared, signed by the employer (or their representative), and made available to the worker and their legal representatives within the following five working days.

Retention Notice: The records must be stored for a minimum of four years and be immediately accessible to the ITSS upon inspection visit. Both paper and digital records are acceptable provided they are readable, accurate, and unalterable without an audit trail.

Forms-legal.com provides this Daily Working Hours Log Spain template as a compliant starting point for employers. Companies with more than five employees should consider implementing dedicated control horario software validated by the AEPD for RGPD compliance.

The Inspección de Trabajo y Seguridad Social (ITSS), operating under the Ministerio de Trabajo y Economía Social, enforces Article 34.9 ET. The Tesorería General de la Seguridad Social (TGSS) cross-references time records with cotización bases. The Agencia Española de Protección de Datos (AEPD) regulates biometric and digital recording systems. The Juzgados de lo Social resolve disputes about unpaid overtime using registro de jornada records as primary evidence. Workers' representatives — comités de empresa and delegados de personal — have statutory access rights under the Estatuto de los Trabajadores.

Additional compliance elements for a Daily Working Hours Log Spain (Registro de Jornada) used in Spain include: Under the Estatuto de los Trabajadores (ET) RDL 2/2015, Spanish employment law governs contracts, dismissals, and working conditions. The Tesorería General de la Seguridad Social (TGSS) administers social security contributions. The Servicio Público de Empleo Estatal (SEPE) manages unemployment benefits. The Inspección de Trabajo y Seguridad Social enforces labour compliance. The Juzgados de lo Social hear employment disputes under the Ley Reguladora de la Jurisdicción Social (Ley 36/2011). Forms-legal.com provides this template as a starting point for Spain-compliant documentation.

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APA

Forms Legal. (2026). Daily Working Hours Log Spain (Registro de Jornada) (Spain) [Legal document template]. Forms Legal. https://forms-legal.com/espana/employment/forms/daily-working-hours-log-spain

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BibTeX
@misc{formslegal-daily-working-hours-log-spain,
  author       = {{Forms Legal}},
  title        = {Daily Working Hours Log Spain (Registro de Jornada) (Spain)},
  year         = {2026},
  howpublished = {\url{https://forms-legal.com/espana/employment/forms/daily-working-hours-log-spain}},
  note         = {Free legal document template}
}

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Statute-referenced template — Template last modified June 2026

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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