Recursos y acciones legales tras una detención aeroportuaria: cómo impugnar una inadmisión en España

Legal remedies and actions after an airport detention: how to challenge a refusal of entry in Spain

You have been returned from the airport. Or you have been notified of an entry ban. You may think there is nothing you can do, that the decision is final and that you have no choice but to accept it.

Even after a refusal of entry at the border, even after you have been returned to your country, there are legal avenues to challenge that decision, have it annulled, remove entry bans from your record, and protect your immigration future.

This article explains what legal remedies are available to you after an airport detention or refusal of entry, when and how to file them, and why the involvement of a specialist lawyer makes the difference between a successful challenge and an appeal that will be dismissed.

At IN DIEM Abogados, we have been handling these situations for years, defending people refused entry at Spanish and European airports. Our experience shows that a refusal of entry is not the end of the road: it is the start of a well-designed legal strategy. We have managed to annul refusals of entry, lift entry bans, and clear immigration records even when the affected person had already been returned to their country of origin.

Why is it possible to appeal even after being returned?

Many people believe that once the authorities have returned you to your country, the case is definitively closed. This belief is false and can cost you dearly in the future.

A refusal of entry at the border is an administrative act, i.e., a decision taken by an administrative authority (the National Police, under the direction of the Ministry of the Interior). And all administrative acts in Spain can be challenged if you consider them unlawful, unfair, or adopted in breach of your rights.

This is guaranteed by the Spanish Constitution, Law 39/2015 on the Common Administrative Procedure, the Law on the Contentious-Administrative Jurisdiction, and the Schengen Borders Code

At IN DIEM, we analyse each refusal of entry as an administrative act subject to thorough legal scrutiny. We do not limit ourselves to filing generic appeals: we identify procedural defects, reasoning errors, and violations of fundamental rights which, when properly argued, make the difference between a rejected appeal and a successful challenge.

  • Annulment of the refusal of entry: A declaration that the refusal of entry was unlawful and its removal from your record, erasing the negative entry that makes future visas more difficult.
  • Removal of the entry ban: If you were given an entry ban to the Schengen Area (usually between 1 and 5 years), you may be able to have it annulled.
  • Recognition of irregularities: Even if the refusal of entry is not annulled on the merits, procedural irregularities may be recognised, which is useful for future cases.
  • Financial compensation: In exceptional cases, if there have been serious violations of fundamental rights during your detention, compensation may be obtained.

The three avenues of challenge: when to use each one

The Spanish legal system offers different avenues to challenge an airport refusal of entry. It is not a matter of choosing one at random, but of knowing which applies at each stage and how to combine them strategically.

📌 Important note: If you have not yet read the previous articles in this series, we recommend consulting our article on immediate action after being held and on procedures in the inadmissibles room, to understand the full context.

General overview of remedies

1. Administrative appeal (administrative route): The first appeal to the administration itself.

2. Contentious-administrative appeal (judicial route): Filed before the courts that review the legality of administrative decisions.

3. Habeas corpus: An urgent judicial action only when there is unlawful deprivation of liberty.

Administrative appeal: the first opportunity

The administrative appeal is the first step in the administrative route to challenge a refusal of entry. It is filed with the hierarchical superior of the authority that made the decision.

Deadline and filing

Deadline: One month from the date you were notified of the refusal-of-entry decision. This deadline is non-extendable: if you miss it, you lose this avenue.

Where is it filed? Usually with the Government Sub-delegation of the province where the airport is located (for example, the Government Sub-delegation in Madrid for Barajas). Your lawyer knows exactly which body it must be filed with depending on your specific case.

What is argued?

The administrative appeal is not a simple complaint letter. It is a technical legal submission in which your lawyer argues:

Formal defects: Errors in the procedure:

  • Failure to provide proper notification
  • Absence of the right-to-be-heard stage
  • Insufficient reasoning
  • Failure to provide an interpreter when necessary

Substantive defects: The decision is substantively incorrect:

  • The facts do not justify the refusal of entry
  • There is documentation proving the requirements were met
  • Incorrect interpretation of the regulations
  • Relevant personal circumstances ignored

Supporting documentation: Bank certificates, employment contracts, verified bookings, invitation letters, medical reports, or any document proving you met the requirements.

Effects and practical reality

It does not automatically suspend the enforcement of the return, which is why it is crucial to file it quickly and expressly request interim suspension.

The administration must decide within three months. If it does not, the appeal is deemed dismissed by “administrative silence”, opening the contentious-administrative route.

Most appeals filed without legal representation are dismissed because:

  • Lack of adequate legal grounds (citing legal provisions, case law)
  • Insufficient or poorly presented documentation
  • Lack of knowledge of the administration’s actual criteria
  • Formal errors that lead to the appeal being declared inadmissible

Contentious-administrative appeal: judicial review

If the administrative appeal is dismissed, the next step is the contentious-administrative appeal before the contentious-administrative courts (Judiciary).

Deadline and jurisdiction

Deadline: Two months from notification of the final administrative decision. This is also non-extendable.

Where is it filed? Usually before the Contentious-Administrative Court of the place where the airport is located. Correctly determining territorial jurisdiction is crucial to avoid inadmissibility.

What is challenged?

The judge reviews whether the administrative decision is lawful. Grounds for challenge include:

  • Procedural defects: Irregularities that make it voidable
  • Formal defects: Defects in the decision that invalidate it
  • Substantive defects: The decision is contrary to substantive law

You may request that the judge suspend the effects of the refusal of entry while the appeal is decided:

  • Suspend an entry ban
  • Prevent a return from being enforced
  • Suspend any harmful effect

For them to be granted, the judge must find that your arguments are serious and that you will suffer harm that is difficult to remedy if enforcement is not suspended.

Obtaining interim measures requires solid legal argument supported by documentation and case law. A specialist lawyer knows how to maximise the chances of them being granted.

Procedure and duration

The procedure includes: filing and admission, request for the administrative file, claim and defence, evidence (if necessary), conclusions, and judgment. It may last between 12 and 24 months.

That is why interim measures are so important: even if you ultimately win, if the ban was in force for two years, you have lost that time.

Possible outcomes

Upheld (you win): The refusal of entry is annulled, removed from your record, and the entry ban is set aside.

Dismissed (you lose): The judge confirms that the decision is lawful. You may appeal.

Partially upheld: It is annulled due to formal defects, requiring the administration to roll back the procedure, but without guaranteeing a different outcome.

The contentious-administrative appeal requires:

  • Mandatory representation by a court agent
  • Technical knowledge of administrative and immigration law
  • Experience drafting contentious-administrative claims
  • Ability to analyse the administrative file (it may run to hundreds of pages)
  • Knowledge of case law of the Supreme Court and the Court of Justice of the European Union

A non-specialist lawyer will face enormous difficulties in handling this process with any guarantee of success.

Habeas corpus: when your liberty is unlawfully at stake

Habeas corpus is an urgent judicial procedure that can be activated when a person is unlawfully deprived of liberty.

When does it apply?

Habeas corpus does not challenge the refusal of entry; rather, it reviews whether your deprivation of liberty is lawful:

  • Detention at the airport without legal grounds
  • Excessive time in the inadmissibles room (more than 72 hours without a decision or judicial oversight)
  • Detention in a CIE without judicial authorisation
  • Violation of safeguards during detention
  • Extension of detention beyond the authorised period

Urgent processing

It is filed with the duty Investigating Court. The judge must act immediately (usually within 24 hours):

  • Requests urgent information from the authorities
  • Orders that the detainee be brought before the court
  • Holds an urgent hearing where the detainee, with their lawyer, explains their situation
  • Decides whether the deprivation of liberty is lawful

If it is unlawful, orders immediate release. If it is lawful, it is confirmed.

Habeas corpus as a strategic tool

Although it does not resolve the merits of your immigration situation, it is powerful when used correctly:

  • Provides immediate judicial oversight
  • Documents irregularities useful for subsequent appeals
  • Puts pressure on the administration to act properly
  • Can buy valuable time

Important: It only reviews the legality of the deprivation of liberty, not the refusal of entry. It must be well grounded to avoid creating false expectations.

Strategic coordination between the different avenues

What distinguishes a specialist lawyer is the ability to strategically coordinate the different avenues to maximise the chances of success.

Simultaneous and planned use

Practical example: You have been refused entry and transferred to a CIE. Your lawyer can:

  1. File habeas corpus if you have been detained for days without judicial oversight
  2. At the same time, file an administrative appeal with documentation proving you met the requirements
  3. If the administrative appeal is dismissed, prepare a contentious-administrative appeal with interim measures
  4. Document violations of rights for a possible claim for state liability

Each avenue has its timing, objective, and strategy. It is not about “firing in all directions”, but about designing a coherent plan.

Complex cases: criminal and administrative routes in parallel

If there are criminal implications (false documentation, judicial alerts, resisting authority), you need coordination between criminal defence and administrative defence so that strategies do not conflict.

Deadlines: your worst enemy if you do not act

In administrative law, deadlines are unforgiving. If you miss the established deadline, you definitively lose the right to appeal.

Critical deadlines

  • Administrative appeal: 1 month from notification
  • Contentious-administrative appeal: 2 months from the final decision
  • Habeas corpus: No deadline, but it must be filed when the unlawful deprivation of liberty occurs
  • Interim measures: Must be requested when filing the appeal

What happens if you miss a deadline?

The decision becomes final:

  • You lose the opportunity for the administration to reconsider
  • You lose the possibility of judicial review
  • The refusal of entry and ban are consolidated in your record
  • They will affect you for years in future attempts to travel or apply for visas

A specialist lawyer monitors all these aspects to ensure you do not miss any deadline.

Consequences of not appealing or appealing incorrectly

1. Consolidation of the negative record

If you do not appeal, the refusal of entry becomes final and consolidated in your record:

  • In future visa applications, it creates a very strong negative presumption
  • In future entry attempts, the authorities will be much stricter
  • In residence procedures, it will work against you

2. Entry ban in force

If you were given an entry ban (1–5 years) and you do not appeal it:

  • You cannot apply for a Schengen visa
  • You cannot travel to any of the 27 countries in the Schengen Area
  • If you try to enter, you will be refused again

Even after the period expires, the record continues to harm you.

3. Knock-on effects in other countries

The Schengen Information System (SIS) is shared by all Schengen countries and consulted by associated countries. A ban in Spain affects all of Europe.

4. Poorly drafted appeals: worse than not appealing

  • Unfounded appeals consolidate unfavourable decisions
  • False documentation may trigger criminal proceedings
  • Out-of-time appeals are declared inadmissible without examining the merits
  • Contradictions destroy your credibility

Why does specialisation make the difference?

Intersection of legal disciplines

A specialist lawyer masters:

  • Administrative law
  • Immigration law (Organic Law 4/2000, implementing regulations, police instructions)
  • European law (Schengen Borders Code, directives, CJEU case law)
  • Contentious-administrative procedural law
  • International and constitutional law

It is virtually impossible for a non-specialist lawyer to master all these areas with the necessary depth.

Irreplaceable practical experience

  • Knowledge of specific case law on airport refusals of entry
  • Court criteria depending on each court
  • Experience obtaining interim measures
  • Network of professional contacts (lawyers in other countries, experts, institutions)

Statistics show that appeals filed by specialist lawyers have a significantly higher success rate because they:

  • Identify procedural defects others do not see
  • Know what documentation can change the outcome
  • Know applicable case-law precedents
  • Avoid formal errors that lead to inadmissibility

At IN DIEM Abogados, we know the real criteria applied by the Government Sub-delegations and the most frequent mistakes made by the administration in airport refusals of entry. This practical experience allows us to file administrative appeals that are technically robust, well documented, and strategically focused, significantly increasing the chances of success compared to generic or poorly drafted appeals.

When is it realistic to appeal?

Cases with a high likelihood of success

  • Serious procedural defects (lack of notification, hearing, interpreter)
  • Demonstrable error in the assessment of the facts
  • Documentation that changes the assessment
  • Disproportionality of the measure

Cases with limited prospects

  • Confirmed false documentation
  • History of prior refusals of entry or expulsions
  • Well-founded security alerts
  • Formally correct and well-reasoned procedure

At IN DIEM, we will tell you from the outset the real prospects of your case so that you can make an informed decision.

Infografía: Recursos tras Inadmisión Aeroportuaria

RECURSOS LEGALES
TRAS INADMISIÓN
EN AEROPUERTO

Guía rápida de actuación legal

1

RECURSO DE ALZADA

  • Primera vía administrativa
  • Plazo: 1 MES desde notificación
  • Ante: Subdelegación del Gobierno
Posibilidad de aportar nueva documentación
2

RECURSO JUDICIAL

  • Vía contencioso-administrativa
  • Plazo: 2 MESES desde resolución firme
  • Ante: Juzgado Contencioso-Administrativo
Posibilidad de medidas cautelares
(suspender prohibición de entrada)
3

HABEAS CORPUS

  • Solo si hay detención ilegal
  • Procedimiento URGENTE (24-48h)
  • Ante: Juzgado de Instrucción
Revisa legalidad de privación de libertad

⚠ PLAZOS CRÍTICOS

Los plazos son IMPRORROGABLES

Si los dejas pasar, pierdes el derecho a recurrir

NO RECURRIR = ANTECEDENTE

PERMANENTE EN TU HISTORIAL

¿QUÉ PUEDES CONSEGUIR?

✓ Anular inadmisión • ✓ Eliminar prohibición de entrada
✓ Limpiar tu historial • ✓ Proteger futuros viajes

Conclusion: your rights do not end at the airport

Being refused entry does not mean everything is over. You have rights, and those rights include the right to appeal.

Administrative and judicial remedies, when used correctly with proper advice, can:

  • Annul unlawful or unfair refusals of entry
  • Remove entry bans from your record
  • Prevent a mistake from following you for years
  • Protect your fundamental rights
  • Open the door to future travel and opportunities in Europe

For them to work, you need three essential things:

1. Act quickly: Deadlines are unforgiving

2. Solid documentation: An appeal without documentation has no chance

3. Specialist advice: These procedures are technically complex

If you have been refused entry, if you have been given an entry ban, if you believe your rights were violated, do not write the case off.

Consult a specialist lawyer. Have them explain the real options in your case. Have them design a strategy tailored to your circumstances. Have them defend you with the professional rigour these cases require.

Your future can change. But only if you act.

How can we help you at IN DIEM Abogados?

In situations of retention, inadmissibility, or detention of foreign nationals at Spanish airports, time is a decisive factor. Rapid and specialized legal action can make the difference between reversing the denial of entry or being returned to the country of origin with lasting administrative consequences.

At IN DIEM Abogados, we provide urgent legal assistance at airports to foreign nationals and their families, acting from the very first moment of the border procedure.

We can help you with:

  • Immediate legal assistance at the airport, both in retentions and in inadmissibility or administrative detention procedures.
  • Direct dialogue with the National Police at border controls and inadmitted persons’ rooms.
  • Review of the legality of the procedure, checking that all your rights are respected (legal assistance, interpreter, communication, motivation of the resolution).
  • Submission of urgent allegations and provision of documentation to try to reverse the denial of entry before the return.
  • Filing of appeals and urgent actions, including habeas corpus when there are irregularities in the deprivation of liberty.
  • Advice and coordination with family members and consulates, facilitating the rapid collection of documents and communication with the authorities.
  • Legal defense after return, analyzing the administrative consequences of the inadmissibility and the possibilities for appeal or lifting of entry bans.

We have specific experience in immigration procedures at the border, which allows us to act with speed, legal judgment, and practical knowledge of how airport controls work in Spain.

If you or a family member are held at an airport or facing a denial of entry, it is fundamental to contact a specialized lawyer immediately.
Early action can prevent serious consequences and protect your right to enter Spain legally.

Consult IN DIEM Abogados. We will analyse your case rigorously, tell you the real prospects and, if there is legal viability, design the appropriate strategy to defend your rights.

Frequently Asked Questions

What exactly does a refusal of entry at the border mean?

A refusal of entry at the border is an administrative decision by which the Spanish authorities deny entry to a foreign national into Spanish territory. It usually occurs at airports and may be based on reasons such as lack of documentation, doubts about the purpose of the trip, or alleged non-compliance with entry requirements. It is not a criminal sanction, but it does create an administrative record.

Can I appeal even if I have already been returned to my country?

Yes. Return does not close the case. The refusal of entry can be challenged even after you have been returned, provided you act within the legal deadlines. At IN DIEM Abogados, we routinely handle appeals from abroad with favourable results.

What are the deadlines to appeal an airport refusal of entry?

Deadlines are strict:
• Administrative appeal: 1 month from notification of the refusal of entry.
• Contentious-administrative appeal: 2 months from the final administrative decision.
• Habeas corpus: no fixed deadline, but only while the unlawful deprivation of liberty continues.

If you miss the deadline, you definitively lose the right to appeal.

What happens if I do not appeal the refusal of entry?

The decision becomes final and the record is consolidated in your immigration history. This may:
• Make it difficult or impossible to obtain future visas
• Lead to new refusals of entry on subsequent attempts
• Affect residence applications
• Keep an entry ban in force in the Schengen Area

What is the administrative appeal and what is it for?

It is the first administrative remedy that allows you to ask the administration itself to review its decision. It is not a mere formality: it must be legally grounded and accompanied by relevant documentation. A well-prepared administrative appeal can annul the refusal of entry without having to go to court.

Does the administrative appeal automatically suspend the return or the entry ban?

No. Filing the appeal does not automatically suspend the effects of the refusal of entry. That is why it is essential to expressly request interim suspension and argue it properly, which requires technical experience.

When is it necessary to go to court?

When the administrative appeal is dismissed or when the administration remains silent. In that case, a contentious-administrative appeal may be filed, in which a judge reviews the legality of the refusal of entry and may annul it in whole or in part.

What are interim measures and why are they so important?

Interim measures allow the effects of the refusal of entry or the entry ban to be suspended while the judicial proceedings are pending. They are essential because a process can take months or years, and without them the harm may be irreparable even if you ultimately win the case.

What is habeas corpus and when does it apply at an airport?

Habeas corpus is an urgent judicial procedure used only when there is unlawful deprivation of liberty, for example:
• Detentions without a legal basis
• Prolonged stays in inadmissibles rooms
• Detention without judicial authorisation

It does not serve to annul the refusal of entry, but it does protect your liberty and document irregularities.

Do I need a lawyer to appeal a refusal of entry?

Legally, some appeals can be filed without a lawyer, but in practice it is strongly discouraged. Most dismissed appeals are dismissed due to technical errors, lack of legal grounds, or poor strategy. In judicial proceedings, moreover, a lawyer and court agent are mandatory.

Why is it important that the lawyer specialises in airport refusals of entry?

Because these are complex procedures where the following intersect:
• Administrative law
• Immigration law
• European regulations
• Specialist case law

At IN DIEM Abogados, we have specific experience in border refusals of entry, which allows us to detect irregularities that other professionals overlook.

Is it possible to remove an entry ban to the Schengen Area?

Yes. If the entry ban is unlawful, disproportionate, or imposed without respecting the procedure, it may be annulled in whole or in part through an administrative or judicial appeal.

What documentation can improve the chances of success?

It depends on the case, but it usually includes:
• Evidence of financial means
• Employment or study contracts
• Genuine, verifiable bookings
• Invitation letters
• Medical reports
• Evidence of ties or connections

The key is not only to provide documents, but to know which ones are legally relevant.

Can IN DIEM Abogados handle my case if I am outside Spain?

Yes. We manage administrative and judicial appeals from abroad, maintaining continuous contact with the client and acting before all competent authorities in Spain.

How do I know whether my case has real prospects of success?

A specialist lawyer must review your file and tell you the truth, even if the options are limited. At IN DIEM Abogados, we assess each case rigorously and only recommend appealing when there is genuine legal viability.

What should I do if I have just been refused entry?

Act immediately. Keep all documentation, seek specialist advice, and do not miss deadlines. Early action can make the difference between regaining your right to enter Europe or carrying a negative record for years.

Expert Immigration Lawyers: European Union, Latin America, Spain, and International Service.

IN DIEM Abogados has a team with experience in previous roles such as Judge, State Attorney, Public Prosecutor, or University Lecturer, which will provide you with peace of mind and confidence, as you will have the best team—competitive and highly prepared—to achieve your objectives and meet your needs.

Residence Permits and Visas: We advise individuals and companies on obtaining residence permits, whether for work, studies, family reunification, or non-lucrative residence. We ensure that all procedures are carried out in accordance with current regulations and efficiently.

Work Permits and Self-Employment Authorisations: We guide foreign nationals through the process of obtaining employed or self-employed work permits, both for EU citizens and non-EU citizens, providing the necessary support to ensure the legality of their work activity in Spain.

Spanish Nationality: We provide legal advice throughout the process of obtaining Spanish nationality, whether by residence, marriage, or other means, ensuring comprehensive support at every step.

Family Reunification: We manage the family reunification process, both for immediate family members of resident foreign nationals and for those who wish to reunite with their family in Spain, ensuring compliance with legal requirements.

Immigration and Expulsion: We defend the rights of foreign nationals against administrative decisions that may affect their situation in Spain, including appeals against permit refusals and expulsion proceedings.

Advice to Companies: We advise companies that need to manage the hiring of foreign staff or wish to establish subsidiaries in Spain, ensuring compliance with labour and immigration regulations.

We are at your disposal for anything you need. You can reach us via IN DIEM Lawyers Phone (+34) 916 353 892. For urgent cases, you can contact us on IN DIEM 24-Hour Emergency Lawyers Phone: (+34) 610 667 452.

We offer our clients the option of being assisted via video call or videoconference, as well as by telephone, according to our clients’ preference, so that the assistance is as personal as possible, with absolute immediacy, without the need to travel. This service is complemented by communication via email, which facilitates the analysis and delivery of documentation.

Likewise, we offer urgent and 24-hour services for our companies, handling national and international contracting operations.

For more information on the Online Legal Advisory Service HERE, the 24-hour and Urgent Service, HERE, and some recognitions, we leave you this link.

Anything else about IN DIEM Lawyers? Here’s a short presentation video…

Would you like to have an in-person meeting with us? You can find us in Madrid, Las Palmas de Gran Canaria, Tenerife, Málaga, Seville, Huelva, Tomares, Coria del Rio, Dos Hermanas, Mairena del Alcor, Estepona, Marbella, Mairena del Aljarafe… it will be a pleasure to assist you…!!

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