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Employee Warning Letter Spain (Carta de Advertencia)

Employee Warning Letter Spain (Carta de Advertencia al Empleado)

CARTA DE ADVERTENCIA AL EMPLEADO

Employee Warning Letter — Spain

Pursuant to Estatuto de los Trabajadores (RDL 2/2015), Article 58

1. PARTIES

EMPLOYER (EMPRESA):

Company Name: [Employer Name]

NIF: [Employer NIF]

Signatory: [Employer Representative]

Applicable Collective Agreement: [Convenio]

EMPLOYEE (TRABAJADOR/A):

Name: [Employee Name]

DNI / NIE: [Employee DNI]

Professional Category: [Employee Category]

Department / Workplace: [Employee Department]

2. DESCRIPTION OF INFRACTION (DESCRIPCIÓN DE LA FALTA)

Date of Infraction: [Infraction Date]

[Infraction Description]

The above conduct is classified as a [Infraction Classification] under [Convenio Article].

Prior Disciplinary Record:

[Prior Warnings]

3. WARNING AND REQUIRED CONDUCT

By this letter, the employer formally warns [Employee Name] that the conduct described above is unacceptable and must not be repeated. The employee is required to comply fully with all contractual obligations, workplace rules, and the provisions of the applicable convenio colectivo and the Estatuto de los Trabajadores (RDL 2/2015).

The employee is informed that repetition of the same or similar conduct, or escalation to more serious misconduct, may result in formal disciplinary sanctions (sanciones disciplinarias) including suspension without pay (suspensión de empleo y sueldo) under ET Article 58.1, or dismissal (despido disciplinario) under ET Article 54, in accordance with the scale established in the applicable convenio colectivo.

4. EMPLOYEE'S RIGHTS

The employee has the right to present written allegations (descargos o alegaciones) in response to this warning within [Response Deadline] from the date of receipt of this letter. Allegations should be submitted in writing to the HR department.

Where the employee is a union member (afiliado sindical) or a workers' representative (delegado de personal, miembro del comité de empresa), the relevant union section or workers' committee will also be notified in accordance with the Ley Orgánica de Libertad Sindical (LOLS, Ley Orgánica 11/1985).

SIGNATURES

Issued in [Warning City], on [Warning Date].

EMPLOYER:

[Employer Name]

Signed by: [Employer Representative]

Signature: _________________________ Date: _________________________

ACKNOWLEDGEMENT OF RECEIPT (ACUSE DE RECIBO — EMPLEADO/A):

I, [Employee Name], acknowledge receipt of this warning letter on the date stated above.

Signature: _________________________ Date: _________________________

Note: The employee's refusal to sign does not invalidate this warning. The employer's representative and witnesses present will document any refusal in writing.

Employer / HR Representative

________________

Signature

Employee — Acknowledgement of Receipt

________________

Signature

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What Is a Employee Warning Letter Spain (Carta de Advertencia)?

An Employee Warning Letter Spain (Carta de Advertencia al Empleado) is a formal written disciplinary communication issued by an employer (empresario) to an employee (trabajador) under the framework established by Article 58 of the Estatuto de los Trabajadores (ET, Real Decreto Legislativo 2/2015, de 23 de octubre), formally notifying the employee of a workplace infraction (falta laboral), classifying it by severity, and placing on record that the conduct has been identified and is unacceptable — creating the disciplinary documentation required to support subsequent sanctions or dismissal proceedings before the Juzgado de lo Social (Labour Court) if the conduct continues or escalates.

Article 58 of the Estatuto de los Trabajadores is the foundational provision governing the disciplinary regime (régimen disciplinario) of Spanish employment law. Article 58.1 ET establishes that workers may be sanctioned (sancionados) by the employer for breaches of labour discipline (faltas en el trabajo) or non-compliance with their contractual obligations, in accordance with the scale of infractions and sanctions established in the applicable convenio colectivo (collective bargaining agreement) and the ET. Article 58.2 ET prohibits certain categories of sanction — including salary reductions, rest period reductions, and fines — that are not available under Spanish employment law. Article 58.3 ET establishes the prescription (lapsing) periods for different categories of infraction: minor infractions (faltas leves) — 10 days; serious infractions (faltas graves) — 20 days; very serious infractions (faltas muy graves) — 60 days, all running from the date the employer has knowledge of the infraction (conocimiento empresarial).

The Spanish disciplinary system requires a gradual and proportionate approach (principio de proporcionalidad y graduación de sanciones) confirmed by decades of Tribunal Supremo and Sala de lo Social jurisprudencia: a first warning letter for minor conduct, an escalating amonestación for repeated or serious conduct, and suspension or dismissal only for very serious infractions or a documented pattern of repeated breaches. Employers who jump immediately to dismissal without prior warning documentation risk having the dismissal classified as improcedente (unfair) by the Juzgado de lo Social under ET Article 55, exposing the employer to reinstatement or severance pay of 33 days per year of service up to 24 months under ET Article 56.

The applicable convenio colectivo (sector collective bargaining agreement) supplements the ET's framework with sector-specific classification of faltas leves, graves, and muy graves, and the applicable sanctions. Each sector's convenio — negotiated between the relevant employers' association (asociación empresarial) and the sector trade unions (sindicatos) — sets out specific examples of conduct constituting each category of infraction. The convenio may also establish additional procedural requirements before a sanction can be imposed — for example, prior notification to the workers' legal representatives (representantes legales de los trabajadores — comité de empresa or delegados de personal), or a mandatory hearing (expediente contradictorio) for serious and very serious sanctions of protected worker representatives (delegados de personal, representantes sindicales, or trabajadoras embarazadas).

The Carta de Advertencia is an informal disciplinary measure — not itself a formal sanción in the strict ET Article 58 sense, but a documented warning that forms the foundation for progressive discipline and subsequent formal sanctions. Its legal significance lies in the paper trail (expediente disciplinario) it creates: employers who dismiss workers for repeated misconduct without documented prior warnings face a high risk of the Juzgado de lo Social finding the dismissal improcedente for failure to demonstrate the gradual escalation of discipline required by the proportionality principle.

When Do You Need a Employee Warning Letter Spain (Carta de Advertencia)?

An Employee Warning Letter Spain is required whenever an employer needs to formally document an employee's workplace infraction, place the employee on notice that the conduct is unacceptable, and create a disciplinary record that supports subsequent sanctions or dismissal proceedings.

A Carta de Advertencia is needed when an employee commits a minor infraction (falta leve) under the applicable convenio colectivo — such as unjustified tardiness (retrasos injustificados), minor insubordination, personal use of company resources, or failure to comply with internal procedures — and the employer wishes to formally document the conduct rather than address it only informally.

The warning letter is required when documenting a pattern of repeated minor infractions — what the Tribunal Supremo describes as reincidencia — where each individual incident may be minor but the cumulative pattern supports escalation to a formal suspension (suspensión de empleo y sueldo) under ET Article 58.1 or ultimately dismissal under ET Article 54.2(a) for repeated and unjustified non-compliance with contractual obligations.

A Carta de Advertencia is needed before imposing a formal disciplinary suspension (suspensión de empleo y sueldo) to demonstrate the employer followed progressive discipline. Juzgados de lo Social consistently require evidence of prior warnings before upholding suspensions or dismissals for conduct that would not independently constitute very serious misconduct.

The warning letter is required when an employee is approaching the end of a probationary period (período de prueba) and has exhibited performance or conduct issues — the written documentation supports a decision not to confirm the employee if the probationary period is still ongoing, or supports a subsequent dismissal for objective grounds (despido objetivo) under ET Article 52 if the probation has ended.

A Carta de Advertencia is also needed in cases involving misuse of sick leave (baja médica), where the employer suspects the employee's absence is not genuinely medically justified — the letter formally puts the employee on notice that further suspicious absences will be investigated and may result in formal disciplinary action.

Parties in Spain should prepare a Employee Warning Letter Spain (Carta de Advertencia) proactively rather than waiting for a dispute to arise. Courts interpret agreements based on the written terms rather than oral representations. 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). Where the transaction involves regulated activities, prior approval from the relevant authority may be required before execution.

What to Include in Your Employee Warning Letter Spain (Carta de Advertencia)

A legally effective Employee Warning Letter Spain under Estatuto de los Trabajadores Article 58 must contain the following elements to create a valid disciplinary record and withstand scrutiny before the Juzgado de lo Social.

Identification of Parties: Full name and NIF of the employer entity (empresa) and the name, DNI, professional category (categoría profesional), and workplace (centro de trabajo) of the employee receiving the warning.

Date and Place: The date and place of issue of the warning letter — the prescription period under ET Article 58.3 runs from the date the employer has knowledge of the infraction, so prompt issuance is critical for preserving the right to sanction.

Description of Infraction: A precise and factual description of the specific conduct or omission that constitutes the infraction — including the date(s) it occurred, the location, and any witnesses. Vague descriptions are routinely challenged before the Juzgado de lo Social and may invalidate a subsequent sanction. The description should avoid opinion and focus on objective, verifiable facts.

Classification of Infraction: The classification of the conduct as a falta leve, falta grave, or falta muy grave under the applicable convenio colectivo and its corresponding provision number — e.g., Article 47.1 of the convenio for the sector. Where the convenio does not cover the specific conduct, the ET's general provisions apply.

Contractual Obligation Breached: Reference to the specific employment contract clause, workplace regulation (reglamento interno), or ET provision that the employee's conduct violated — establishing the legal basis for the warning.

Prior Warnings and History: Where relevant, reference to any prior warnings or sanctions issued to the same employee for similar or related conduct, supporting the reincidencia (recidivism) element where applicable under the convenio.

Employee's Right to Respond: A statement informing the employee of their right to present written allegations (descargos o alegaciones) within a specified period — typically 5 to 7 working days. While the ET does not require this for warnings in all cases, including this right demonstrates procedural fairness and may be mandatory under the applicable convenio for certain infraction categories.

Right to Workers' Representative: Where the employee is a union member (afiliado sindical) or a workers' representative (delegado de personal, miembro de comité de empresa), a note that their union or representative will also be notified, as required by the Ley Orgánica de Libertad Sindical (LOLS, Ley Orgánica 11/1985) and the applicable convenio.

Consequences of Recurrence: A clear statement that repetition of the same or similar conduct within the prescription period, or escalation to more serious misconduct, may result in formal disciplinary sanction including suspension (suspensión de empleo y sueldo) or dismissal (despido disciplinario) under ET Articles 54 and 58.

Acknowledgement of Receipt: A signature block for the employee to acknowledge receipt of the letter — the employee's refusal to sign does not invalidate the warning, but the employer should document the refusal with a witness present.

Forms-legal.com provides this Employee Warning Letter Spain template as a practical starting point. Employers dealing with complex disciplinary situations involving protected workers (representantes sindicales, trabajadoras embarazadas, workers on medical leave) should consult a qualified abogado laboralista before issuing formal disciplinary communications.

Additional compliance elements for a Employee Warning Letter Spain (Carta de Advertencia) 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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Reference this free template in an article, syllabus, or research note:

APA

Forms Legal. (2026). Employee Warning Letter Spain (Carta de Advertencia) (Spain) [Legal document template]. Forms Legal. https://forms-legal.com/espana/employment/letters/employee-warning-letter-spain

MLA

"Employee Warning Letter Spain (Carta de Advertencia) (Spain)." Forms Legal, 2026, https://forms-legal.com/espana/employment/letters/employee-warning-letter-spain.

BibTeX
@misc{formslegal-employee-warning-letter-spain,
  author       = {{Forms Legal}},
  title        = {Employee Warning Letter Spain (Carta de Advertencia) (Spain)},
  year         = {2026},
  howpublished = {\url{https://forms-legal.com/espana/employment/letters/employee-warning-letter-spain}},
  note         = {Free legal document template}
}

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Frequently Asked Questions

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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