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Promissory Note Spain (Pagaré)

Promissory Note Spain (Pagaré)

PAGARÉ

Lugar de emisión: [Issuance City], [Issuance Date]

Importe: [Principal Amount]

Por este PAGARÉ, el/la abajo firmante, [Issuer Name] (NIF/DNI: [Issuer NIF]), con domicilio en [Issuer Address], se obliga incondicional e irrevocablemente a pagar, a la orden de [Payee Name] (NIF/DNI: [Payee NIF]), con domicilio en [Payee Address], la cantidad de:

[Principal Amount Words] ([Principal Amount])

Vencimiento (Maturity): [Maturity Date] — Tipo de vencimiento: [Maturity Type]

Lugar de pago (Place of Payment): [Place Of Payment]

Cláusula de intereses (Interest): [Interest Clause]

[Sin Protesto Clause]

Este pagaré está sujeto a la Ley 19/1985, de 16 de julio, Cambiaria y del Cheque, artículos 94–97. Su impago puede dar lugar al procedimiento cambiario conforme a los artículos 819–827 de la Ley de Enjuiciamiento Civil (Ley 1/2000).

FIRM DEL LIBRADOR (ISSUER'S SIGNATURE)

Nombre / Name: [Issuer Name]

NIF / DNI: [Issuer NIF]

Domicilio / Address: [Issuer Address]

Firma / Signature: _________________________

ENDOSO / ENDORSEMENT (if applicable)

Páguese a la orden de: _________________________

Firma del endosante / Endorser's signature: _________________________ Fecha / Date: _________________________

Issuer (Librador)

________________

Signature

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What Is a Promissory Note Spain (Pagaré)?

A Promissory Note Spain (Pagaré) is a formal written negotiable instrument under Spanish law by which the issuer (librador del pagaré) makes an unconditional promise to pay a specified sum of money (cantidad determinada en euros) to a named payee (tenedor or beneficiario) or to the bearer (al portador), on a fixed maturity date (fecha de vencimiento) or on demand (a la vista). The Pagaré is governed by the Ley 19/1985, de 16 de julio, Cambiaria y del Cheque (LCC), which is Spain's unified statute on negotiable instruments — bills of exchange (letras de cambio), cheques (cheques), and promissory notes (pagarés). Articles 94 through 97 of the LCC provide the specific legal framework for promissory notes, which incorporate by reference the provisions applicable to bills of exchange (artículos 1–92 LCC) to the extent compatible with the nature of the pagaré.

The Ley 19/1985 Cambiaria y del Cheque implements the Geneva Conventions of 1930 on bills of exchange and promissory notes (Convenios de Ginebra de 1930 sobre la letra de cambio y el pagaré), to which Spain is a party, and aligns Spanish negotiable instrument law with other civil law European legal systems including France, Germany, Italy, and Belgium. This international uniformity makes Spanish Pagarés recognised instruments in cross-border commercial transactions within the eurozone.

The Pagaré differs fundamentally from a simple loan agreement (contrato de préstamo) under Articles 1740–1757 of the Código Civil. A Pagaré is an abstract negotiable instrument — its enforceability is independent of the underlying commercial relationship that gave rise to it. Once a Pagaré is validly issued, the issuer (librador) cannot, in general, raise defences derived from the underlying contract against a third-party holder in due course (tenedor de buena fe). This abstract character makes the Pagaré a powerful credit instrument in Spanish commercial practice.

The Pagaré is the most widely used negotiable instrument in Spanish commercial practice, preferred over the letra de cambio (bill of exchange) because it does not require stamp duty (timbre) — the letra de cambio must be executed on official stamp paper (papel timbrado) issued by the Agencia Tributaria and bears a proportional stamp duty under the Real Decreto Legislativo 1/1993 on Impuesto sobre Transmisiones Patrimoniales y Actos Jurídicos Documentados (ITP-AJD). The Pagaré avoids this tax entirely, making it the instrument of choice for inter-company financing, supplier credit, and bank-client credit relationships.

Spanish banks — supervised by the Banco de España under Ley 10/2014 de ordenación, supervisión y solvencia de entidades de crédito — regularly discount (descontar) Pagarés as part of commercial credit facilities (líneas de descuento). When a company holds a Pagaré from a client, it can present it to its bank for advance payment (at a discount), and the bank then collects directly from the issuer on maturity. This commercial discount practice (descuento comercial) is a key short-term financing mechanism for Spanish SMEs (PYMEs) as recognised by the Banco de España's statistics on financial instruments.

Enforcement of a Pagaré in Spain is carried out through the procedimiento cambiario — a special summary enforcement procedure established by Articles 819–827 of the Ley de Enjuiciamiento Civil (Ley 1/2000). The procedimiento cambiario is one of the most effective debt recovery tools in Spanish law: upon presentation of the original Pagaré to the Juzgado de Primera Instancia, the court issues an auto despacho de ejecución (enforcement order) within 24–48 hours without prior hearing, and the debtor's assets are immediately embargoed. The debtor has only 10 days to pay or raise specific cambiario defences.

When Do You Need a Promissory Note Spain (Pagaré)?

A Promissory Note Spain (Pagaré) is required in commercial and financial transactions where a party needs to formalise a payment obligation in a legally enforceable negotiable instrument that can be collected through the expedited procedimiento cambiario.

A Pagaré is needed when a supplier delivers goods or provides services to a buyer on deferred payment terms — the buyer issues a Pagaré with a maturity date corresponding to the agreed payment term (30, 60, 90, or 120 days). The Ley 3/2004, de 29 de diciembre, por la que se establecen medidas de lucha contra la morosidad en las operaciones comerciales (implementing EU Directive 2011/7/EU on combating late payment) limits payment terms in commercial transactions between businesses to 60 days and between businesses and public administrations to 30 days — Pagarés with longer maturities issued in violation of these limits may be subject to legal challenge.

A Pagaré is required when a bank extends a commercial credit facility (línea de descuento or póliza de crédito) to a business client. The business issues Pagarés from its debtors, which the bank discounts (advances funds against) immediately, collecting from the debtor on the maturity date. The Banco de España tracks the volume of discounted commercial paper as part of its monthly statistics on financial instruments held by monetary financial institutions.

A Promissory Note is needed when a real estate developer (promotor inmobiliario) receives stage payments from buyers of off-plan properties — the developer may issue Pagarés as security for refund obligations if construction is not completed. The Ley 20/2015, de 14 de julio (which replaced the former Ley 57/1968 on advance payments for housing) requires developers to guarantee refund of advance payments through bank guarantees or insurance — Pagarés may be used as supplementary instruments.

A Pagaré is required in franchise arrangements, distribution agreements, and joint venture structures where one party needs to defer payment for a licence fee, distribution margin payment, or capital contribution — the Pagaré provides stronger enforcement rights than a simple acknowledgement of debt (reconocimiento de deuda) under Article 1233 of the Código Civil.

A Promissory Note is needed when an autónomo (self-employed professional) or PYME (small or medium-sized enterprise) needs to formalise a personal loan from a shareholder, family member, or business associate. The Pagaré's abstract enforceability and access to the procedimiento cambiario provide significantly stronger protection than an informal loan agreement. Interest on the loan may be incorporated into the face value of the Pagaré or expressed separately as a clause within the instrument.

Under the Ley Cambiaria y del Cheque (Ley 19/1985), promissory notes and bills of exchange are governed in Spain. The Banco de España supervises banking under Ley 10/2014. The Comisión Nacional del Mercado de Valores (CNMV) regulates securities markets. The AEAT administers IVA (Ley 37/1992) and IRPF (Ley 35/2006). The Ley 3/2004 governs late payment in commercial transactions with statutory interest.

What to Include in Your Promissory Note Spain (Pagaré)

A valid Promissory Note Spain under the Ley 19/1985 Cambiaria y del Cheque, Articles 94–97, must contain the following mandatory elements. Missing any of these essential elements causes the instrument to lose its character as a Pagaré and consequently the right to use the procedimiento cambiario.

Mandatory Term 'Pagaré': The word 'PAGARÉ' must appear in the body of the document in the same language as the rest of the text, pursuant to Article 94.1 of the Ley 19/1985. This distinguishes the instrument from a letter of credit, a promissory note under other legal systems, or a mere acknowledgement of debt under Article 1233 of the Código Civil.

Unconditional Promise to Pay: An unconditional written promise (promesa incondicional de pago) — not subject to any condition or contingency — to pay a specific sum of money expressed in euros (€). Article 95 LCC requires that the sum be stated numerically and in words; where there is a discrepancy, the amount in words prevails.

Maturity Date (Fecha de Vencimiento): The date on which payment becomes due. Under Article 94.2 LCC (incorporating Articles 38–41 on letras de cambio), maturity may be expressed as: (1) a fixed date (día fijo); (2) a period from issuance (a un plazo desde la fecha); (3) on demand (a la vista); or (4) a period from sight (a un plazo desde la vista). A Pagaré without a stated maturity date is considered payable on demand (a la vista).

Place of Payment: The place where payment is to be made (lugar de pago), typically a bank account (IBAN), a specific branch, or the issuer's registered address. For bank-discounted Pagarés, the place of payment is usually the discounting bank's address.

Payee Identification: The full name of the person or entity to whom payment is to be made (nombre del tenedor / beneficiario). A Pagaré may also be made payable to the bearer (al portador), though bearer instruments carry higher misuse risk.

Date and Place of Issuance: The date on which the Pagaré is signed (fecha de emisión) and the place of issuance. Article 95 LCC requires the place — typically the city where the issuer is domiciled or operates.

Issuer's Signature: The handwritten signature (firma manuscrita) of the issuer (librador). The Pagaré must be signed by an individual or by a duly authorised representative of a legal entity (apoderado with power of attorney — poder de representación). The signature cannot be replaced by a stamp or a digital signature for cambiario enforcement purposes.

Issuer's Identification: Although not strictly required by Ley 19/1985 for formal validity, commercial practice requires the issuer's full name, DNI/NIF, and address to support enforcement. Banks and creditors will generally not accept Pagarés without clear issuer identification.

Endorsement (Endoso): A Pagaré may be endorsed (endosado) by the original payee to a third party (endosatario) by writing the endorsement on the reverse of the instrument and signing it, pursuant to Articles 14–23 of the LCC (applied to Pagarés via Article 96). The endorsee acquires autonomous rights in the instrument independent of defences the issuer may have against the endorser.

Interest Clause: A Pagaré may include an interest clause (cláusula de intereses) if it is payable on demand (a la vista) — for fixed-maturity Pagarés, interest is typically incorporated into the face value. The applicable default interest rate in Spain is the legal interest rate (interés legal del dinero) set annually by the Presupuestos Generales del Estado, or the rate agreed by the parties.

Forms-legal.com provides this Promissory Note Spain (Pagaré) template for standard commercial and private use. The template should be reviewed by a qualified abogado or gestión administrativa when used for bank discounting, endorsement, or enforcement through the Juzgado de Primera Instancia via the procedimiento cambiario.

Under the Ley Cambiaria y del Cheque (Ley 19/1985), promissory notes and bills of exchange are governed in Spain. The Banco de España supervises banking under Ley 10/2014. The Comisión Nacional del Mercado de Valores (CNMV) regulates securities markets. The AEAT administers IVA (Ley 37/1992) and IRPF (Ley 35/2006). The Ley 3/2004 governs late payment in commercial transactions with statutory interest.

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Forms Legal. (2026). Promissory Note Spain (Pagaré) (Spain) [Legal document template]. Forms Legal. https://forms-legal.com/espana/financial/loans/promissory-note-spain

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@misc{formslegal-promissory-note-spain,
  author       = {{Forms Legal}},
  title        = {Promissory Note Spain (Pagaré) (Spain)},
  year         = {2026},
  howpublished = {\url{https://forms-legal.com/espana/financial/loans/promissory-note-spain}},
  note         = {Free legal document template}
}

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