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Administrative Review Appeal Spain (Recurso de Reposición)

Administrative Review Appeal Spain (Recurso de Reposición)

RECURSO DE REPOSICIÓN POTESTATIVO

Optional Administrative Review Appeal — LPAC Articles 123–124

Ley 39/2015, de 1 de octubre, del Procedimiento Administrativo Común de las Administraciones Públicas

TO: [Issuing Body Name]

[Issuing Body Address]

[Appellant Name] (DNI/NIF: [Appellant NIF]), with address at [Appellant Address], electronic notification address [Appellant Email], acting through [Legal Representative], hereby files this RECURSO DE REPOSICIÓN POTESTATIVO pursuant to Articles 123 and 124 of Ley 39/2015, del Procedimiento Administrativo Común de las Administraciones Públicas (LPAC), on an optional basis and without prejudice to subsequent judicial review before the Tribunal Contencioso-Administrativo, against the following administrative act:

I. CHALLENGED ACT

Act: [Act Description]

Reference: [Act Reference]

Date notified: [Notification Date]

The challenged act puts fin a la vía administrativa and is subject to the optional recurso de reposición per Article 123 LPAC. A copy of the act is attached as Exhibit 1.

II. GROUNDS FOR THE APPEAL (MOTIVOS)

[Grounds Summary]

III. RELIEF REQUESTED (SOLICITUD)

[Relief Sought]

IV. SUSPENSION REQUEST

Suspension of enforcement requested: [Suspension Requested]

Grounds: [Suspension Grounds]

In [Filing City], on [Filing Date].

[Appellant Name]

[Legal Representative]

Signature: _________________________

Appellant / Legal Representative

________________

Signature

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What Is a Administrative Review Appeal Spain (Recurso de Reposición)?

An Administrative Review Appeal Spain (Recurso de Reposición Potestativo) is a formal administrative appeal governed by Articles 123 and 124 of Ley 39/2015, de 1 de octubre, del Procedimiento Administrativo Común de las Administraciones Públicas (LPAC), through which a citizen or legal entity asks the same administrative body that issued a final administrative act (acto que pone fin a la vía administrativa) to reconsider and revoke or modify that act before the appellant proceeds to judicial review before the Tribunal Contencioso-Administrativo. The recurso de reposición is potestativo — optional, not mandatory — meaning the appellant may choose either to file a reposición before the same body or to go directly to judicial review without the intermediate administrative step.

Article 123.1 of LPAC defines the acts subject to the recurso de reposición as those that put fin a la vía administrativa — final acts from which no higher administrative appeal is possible within the administrative hierarchy. This category includes: acts of ministers (ministros) and secretaries of state (secretarios de estado) in the General State Administration; acts of the highest governing bodies of autonomous communities (presidents and councils of regional government); acts of mayors (alcaldes) and full councils (plenos) of municipalities; and acts of organisations that by their nature or specific regulation put fin a la vía administrativa. Identifying whether an act is final (pone fin a la vía administrativa) is essential — if the act is non-final, the recurso de alzada applies instead.

The practical utility of the recurso de reposición is debated among Spanish administrative law practitioners. Arguments in favour: it gives the administration an opportunity to correct obvious errors quickly and cheaply without court involvement; it interrupts the prescription period; and in some cases (particularly in local administration where the same alcalde or pleno that issued the act has political reasons to reconsider) it may produce results. Arguments against: the same body that issued the act rarely changes its position; the 1-month resolution period (with silencio negativo) extends the time before the appellant can go to court; and the 2-month judicial review deadline runs from the date of the reposición rejection (or deemed rejection), not from the date of the original act — so filing a reposición extends the total time before judicial review.

In local administration (entidades locales), the recurso de reposición has a special mandatory nature in certain contexts. Under Article 108 of the Ley Reguladora de las Bases del Régimen Local (LRBRL), some acts of local entities must be challenged through mandatory reposición before judicial review — this varies by local regulation and the type of act. Traffic penalty proceedings under Real Decreto Legislativo 6/2015 (Ley de Tráfico) establish a mandatory period during which the sanctioned driver may file a alegaciones (objections) or a recurso, which functions analogously to a reposición.

The recurso de reposición in tax matters is governed separately by Article 222 of the Ley General Tributaria (LGT) — this is a functionally identical optional pre-appeal mechanism for tax acts issued by the AEAT before proceeding to the economic-administrative review (reclamación económico-administrativa) or directly to judicial review. The LGT recurso de reposición follows the same 1-month filing deadline and 1-month resolution period as the LPAC version. As with the LPAC reposición, the taxpayer may choose between filing the reposición first or going directly to the reclamación económico-administrativa — but cannot do both simultaneously against the same act under LGT Article 222.2.

The Tribunal Supremo (Administrative Chamber) has addressed the recurso de reposición in multiple rulings, confirming that its optional nature means the appellant is not prejudiced for bypassing it — the 2-month judicial review deadline runs from the original act's notification if no reposición is filed, and from the reposición rejection notification if one is filed. The Supreme Court has also confirmed that the doctrine of actos propios (estoppel) does not bar an appellant from raising new grounds in the subsequent judicial review that were not raised in the reposición, though raising all available grounds at each stage is recommended practice.

When Do You Need a Administrative Review Appeal Spain (Recurso de Reposición)?

A Recurso de Reposición Spain is needed when a citizen or company has received a final administrative act from a Spanish public body and wishes to give the same body an opportunity to correct the act before initiating judicial proceedings — particularly where the grounds for challenge are straightforward (obvious factual error, miscalculation, incorrect notification) that the administration might readily accept.

The reposición is useful when the appellant needs more time to prepare a judicial appeal — filing a reposición extends the period before the 2-month judicial review deadline begins to run (since that deadline runs from the reposición rejection, not the original act), giving extra time to gather evidence, obtain expert opinions, and instruct an abogado administrativista.

The appeal is needed for local administration matters where the specific local regulation or the nature of the act makes reposición practically appropriate — many municipalities' own appeal procedures expect an initial reposición before escalation.

A recurso de reposición is necessary in tax matters governed by the LGT when the taxpayer wishes to use the simple, low-cost administrative review route before committing to the more formal and time-consuming reclamación económico-administrativa before the TEAR.

The reposición is needed when a penalty (sanción administrativa) with an early payment discount (reducción por pronto pago) has been issued — some administrative penalty regimes allow a reduced fine for early payment, and the reposición interrupts this calculation. The appellant should verify whether filing a reposición affects the early payment reduction before deciding.

The appeal is also appropriate when the only grounds for challenge are formal or procedural — an incorrect notification, a failure to provide an adequate hearing (audiencia) — where the administration may readily concede the point and re-issue the act following proper procedure, saving the appellant the cost and delay of judicial proceedings.

The reposicion is also needed when a penalty has a pronto pago discount period running — filing a reposicion within the voluntary payment period interrupts the discount window, but may be worth it if the grounds for challenge are strong. Taxpayers under the Ley General Tributaria Article 222 reposicion regime must choose between the reposicion and the reclamacion economico-administrativa before the TEAR under Article 226 — both routes are available but cannot be pursued simultaneously against the same act under Article 222.2 LGT. The decision requires weighing the speed of the reposicion (1-month resolution under Article 124 LPAC or Article 225 LGT) against the broader review powers of the TEAR under Article 237 LGT.

The recurso de reposicion is required in local administration contexts where the Ley Reguladora de las Bases del Regime Local (LRBRL) Article 108 makes it mandatory before judicial review of certain municipal acts — particularly for acts of the Pleno or Alcalde of an Ayuntamiento that directly exhaust the administrative route. In these mandatory reposicion scenarios, the subsequent judicial review before the Juzgado de lo Contencioso-Administrativo under Law 29/1998 (LJCA) Article 8 cannot be initiated without having first filed and exhausted the reposicion.

What to Include in Your Administrative Review Appeal Spain (Recurso de Reposición)

A valid Recurso de Reposición Spain under LPAC Articles 123 and 124 must contain the following essential elements to be admitted and processed by the competent body.

Identification of the Appellant: Full name, DNI/NIE/NIF, postal and electronic address of the natural person or legal entity filing the appeal. For legal entities, the company name, NIF, and the name and authority of the legal representative must be stated. LPAC Article 66.1 requires these identification elements in all administrative documents. Mandatory electronic filers under LPAC Article 14 must submit through the Sede Electrónica.

Identification of the Challenged Act: The complete reference number of the challenged act, the issuing body, the date of the act, and the date of notification to the appellant. A copy of the challenged act should be attached. The characterisation of the act as final (pone fin a la vía administrativa) must be clear — if it is not final, the recurso de alzada applies instead and the reposición would be inadmissible.

Statement of Grounds: A clear statement of why the act is unlawful — factual errors, legal errors in the application of the relevant norm, procedural defects (failure to provide audiencia under LPAC Article 82, lack of mandatory report, incorrect notification), or violation of fundamental rights. Citing specific LPAC articles, sector-specific legislation, and relevant case law strengthens the grounds.

Specific Relief Requested: A clear statement of what outcome the appellant requests — annulment of the act, modification of the penalty amount, recognition of a right, or other specific remedy. The body resolving the reposición may confirm, annul, or modify the challenged act, but cannot resolve beyond what is requested (congruencia).

Declaration of Optional Nature: Under LPAC Article 123.2, the appellant should declare that this reposición is filed on an optional basis and does not prejudice any subsequent judicial review. The appellant should also state the intended next step if the reposición is rejected — judicial review before the Tribunal Contencioso-Administrativo — to make clear the stakes and motivate the body to reconsider.

Suspension Request: Where the challenged act has immediate enforceability — a penalty with a payment deadline, a licence revocation — the appellant should request suspension under LPAC Article 117 simultaneously with the reposición. As with the recurso de alzada, suspension is not automatic but may be granted if the harm from immediate enforcement would be difficult to repair and the appeal has apparent merit.

Key Article References: Article 123 LPAC — recurso de reposicion potestativo. Article 124 LPAC — 1-month filing deadline and 1-month resolution period. Article 117 LPAC — suspension during appeals. Article 119 LPAC — prohibition of reformatio in peius. Article 108 of Law 7/1985 (LRBRL) — mandatory reposicion in local administration. Article 222 of Law 58/2003 (LGT) — tax reposicion. Article 225 LGT — resolution period. Article 226 LGT — reclamacion economico-administrativa as alternative. Article 46 of Law 29/1998 (LJCA) — 2-month judicial review deadline from reposicion rejection. The Tribunal Supremo Sala Contencioso-Administrativo has clarified in judgments STS 914/2021 and STS 677/2022 that the optional nature of the reposicion does not restrict grounds available in subsequent judicial proceedings.

Forms-legal.com provides this Recurso de Reposición Spain template as a practical tool for citizens and businesses engaging with Spanish public administrations. Given the strict 1-month filing deadline and the complex assessment of whether to use reposición or go directly to judicial review, consulting a qualified abogado administrativista is recommended for anything beyond straightforward factual error corrections.

Key Spanish statutory references: LPAC Articles 123–124 — recurso de reposición procedure. LPAC Article 117 — suspension during administrative appeals. LGT Article 222 — tax reposición. LJCA Article 46 — judicial review deadline from reposición rejection. LPAC Article 121 — recurso de alzada for non-final acts.

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@misc{formslegal-administrative-review-appeal-spain,
  author       = {{Forms Legal}},
  title        = {Administrative Review Appeal Spain (Recurso de Reposición) (Spain)},
  year         = {2026},
  howpublished = {\url{https://forms-legal.com/espana/government/court-forms/administrative-review-appeal-spain}},
  note         = {Free legal document template}
}

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