Commercial Leases in Aragon: The Ultimate Guide

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Discover how the Spanish Urban Leases Act applies to commercial real estate in Aragon, covering deposits with DGA, freedom of pacts, and obligations.

4 min read
Verified Mar 2026
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Legal Disclaimer

This content is for general informational and educational purposes only. It does not constitute legal advice and should not be relied upon as such. Laws change frequently — always verify current regulations and consult a licensed attorney in your jurisdiction for advice specific to your situation. Landager is a property management platform, not a law firm.

Renting commercial real estate in Aragon (retail shops in Zaragoza, logistics warehouses in Huesca, or offices in Teruel) falls under the legal category of "arrendamiento para uso distinto del de vivienda" (lease for use other than housing) within the Spanish Urban Leases Act (LAU). Unlike residential renting, which heavily protects the tenant, commercial leasing is governed primarily by the principle of freedom of contract (libertad de pactos).

Disclaimer: This guide provides general legal information for educational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Always consult a licensed Spanish attorney for advice specific to your situation. Information last verified: March 2026.

Freedom of Contract: The Golden Rule

Article 4.3 of the LAU establishes a clear hierarchy for resolving conflicts or interpreting a commercial contract:

  1. The will of the parties (what is explicitly written in the contract).
  2. Failing that, Title III of the LAU.
  3. As a last resort, the Spanish Civil Code.

This means that almost any condition, timeline, liability, or penalty can be freely negotiated. For this reason, meticulous drafting of an Aragonese commercial contract is paramount; the law will usually not step in to save a party from a poorly negotiated deal.

Primary Differences from Residential Leasing

ConceptResidential LeaseCommercial Lease (Non-Housing)
Mandatory Deposit1 Month's rent2 Months' rent
Additional GuaranteesMax 2 monthsUnlimited (Freely negotiated)
Regional Custody (DGA)Obligatory (1 Month)Obligatory (2 Months via WFIA)
Minimum Duration5 or 7 years mandatoryFreely negotiated (No forced extensions)
Rent Increase LimitGovernment capped (State Index)Freely negotiated (Usually unrestricted CPI)
Taxes (VAT/IRPF)VAT exempt (generally)Subject to 21% VAT and 19% IRPF Withholding

Deposits, DGA Compliance, and Tax Regime in Aragon

Commercial renting across Aragon legally requires (LAU Art. 36) a cash security deposit equivalent to TWO months' rent.

Crucially, the Government of Aragon strictly demands that this two-month deposit be held by the regional treasury. Within two months of signing the lease, the landlord must process this deposit through the new WFIA (Web Fianzas Aragón) digital platform, implemented in late 2025. This mandatory administrative step avoids severe financial penalties.

For tax purposes, the landlord must apply 21% VAT (IVA) on top of the base rent in their invoice. Furthermore, if the commercial tenant is a company or registered freelancer (autónomo), they must apply a withholding tax on account of personal income tax (IRPF, currently 19%), which the tenant will pay directly to the Spanish Tax Agency on behalf of the landlord.

For more detail, see our Commercial Security Deposits guide.

Subletting, Assignment, and Business Transfers (Traspasos)

One of the unique features of Title III of the LAU (Art. 32) is that if a business or professional activity is exercised on the rented premises, the tenant may sublet the property or assign the contract without needing the landlord's consent—unless the contract expressly prohibits it (which is highly recommended).

If not prohibited, the landlord has the legal right to increase the renting base by 10% (for partial sublets) or 20% (for total assignment or transfer/traspaso) to compensate for the change in business ownership.

Eviction and Default (Desahucios)

Non-payment of commercial rents triggers the same judicial eviction process (desahucio) as residential property, although a commercial default includes the unpaid base rent plus the associated VAT. Since landlords must declare VAT quarterly to the Spanish government (Form 303), an unpaid invoice is doubly damaging, as the landlord may be forced to pay the tax authorities VAT they never actually collected from the defaulting B2B tenant.

For more detail, see our Commercial Eviction Process guide.

Manage Your Aragon Commercial Portfolio

Leasing offices or retail spaces requires generating compliant invoices (accounting for VAT and IRPF withholdings) and meeting the DGA's strict 2-month WFIA deposit deadlines. Utilize Landager's comprehensive financial and contractual tools tailored for private owners and retail investors in Aragon to keep your accounting precise and your leases ironclad.

Back to Aragon Commercial Overview.

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