DAC7: Qué hace Hacienda con los datos recibidos y cómo los utiliza en inspecciones. ¿Qué revisan y cómo defenderse?

DAC7: What the Tax Agency Does with Received Data and How It Uses It in Inspections. What Do They Review and How to Defend Yourself?

The data that digital platforms communicate to the Tax Agency under DAC7 regulations are not simply filed away. Quite the opposite: they are integrated into automatic analysis systems, cross-referenced with pre-existing tax information, and feed into the procedures for selecting taxpayers for inspections and verifications.

This article explains what the Tax Agency does exactly with this information and how it translates into real actions against taxpayers operating through digital platforms.

1. What does the Tax Agency do with DAC7 data once it receives it?

When the Tax Agency receives the information reported by digital platforms under the DAC7 Directive, this data does not remain static. It is immediately incorporated into the tax administration’s IT systems, where it serves two main functions:

DAC7 data is integrated into advanced analysis tools that allow the Tax Agency to detect patterns, anomalies, and tax risk profiles. These systems process information massively and automatically classify taxpayers according to different risk criteria.

The information reported under DAC7 adds to the ecosystem of data that the Tax Agency already possesses: personal income tax (IRPF) declarations, corporate income tax, VAT, informative models, bank data, and census records. This accumulation of sources generates a complete tax portrait of each taxpayer, difficult to conceal or fragment.

2. Automatic cross-checks performed by the Tax Agency with DAC7 data

Once the data is incorporated, the Tax Agency performs automatic cross-checks to detect inconsistencies between what the taxpayer declared and what was reported by the platforms. These cross-checks are performed with:

The Tax Agency contrasts the income reported by platforms with the income declared by individuals in their annual declaration. If a platform reports €30,000 in gross income and the taxpayer has only declared €15,000, the discrepancy is recorded.

In the case of companies operating through platforms, reported business figures are cross-referenced with Corporate Income Tax declarations. Any significant difference triggers risk alerts.

Transaction data is cross-referenced with quarterly VAT declarations. The Tax Agency can detect VAT-liable operations that have not been declared or situations where the taxpayer should have registered in the business census but did not.

Information on economic activity reported by platforms allows the Tax Agency to identify individuals who are carrying out economic activities without being registered in the census of businesses and professionals. This non-compliance has both administrative and sanctioning consequences.

DAC7 data is cross-referenced with information from informative models that companies and professionals must submit. Model 347 (operations with third parties), Model 349 (intra-community operations), and other records allow the Tax Agency to verify the overall consistency of the declared activity.

It is essential to understand that the Tax Agency may have data about your activity without that automatically implying an inspection. Data is stored, cross-referenced, and analyzed, but the decision to initiate an inspection depends on multiple factors: volume of discrepancies, risk profile, available resources, and internal selection criteria.

However, the existence of this data means that the Tax Agency has the technical and legal capacity to act at any time.

3. Profiles with higher inspection risk due to DAC7

Although any taxpayer operating through digital platforms may be subject to verification, some profiles present a higher tax risk:

Professionals who provide services through platforms (designers, programmers, consultants, content creators) and who are not correctly declaring their income. It is common to detect cases where only a portion of income is declared or where self-employment registration has not been completed.

Individuals who sell products through Amazon, eBay, Wallapop, or other e-commerce platforms and who are not complying with their tax obligations. The problem is exacerbated when the volume of sales exceeds the thresholds that require registration in the Economic Activities Tax (IAE) or the VAT regime.

Owners who rent tourist accommodation through Airbnb, Booking, or similar platforms without declaring this income or doing so incompletely. This profile has traditionally been a focus for the Tax Agency, and DAC7 reinforces its inspection capacity.

Companies that invoice part of their activity through platforms and are not correctly reflecting this income in their annual accounts or tax declarations. This also includes cases of companies operating without being registered in the corresponding censuses.

Situations where there is confusion between personal activity and corporate activity. For example, a professional who invoices part of their services as an individual and another part through a company, without clear consistency between both structures. These cases are especially vulnerable to cross-inspections.

4. Typical discrepancies detected with DAC7

The Tax Agency’s automatic cross-checking systems are designed to identify patterns of inconsistency. The most frequent discrepancies are:

The platform reports income that does not appear in any of the taxpayer’s tax declarations. This is the most serious assumption and generates the highest risk of regularization with interest and penalties.

The platform reports gross income (before commissions and expenses), while the taxpayer declares a significantly lower net figure without adequate justification. The Tax Agency may consider that there is a lack of transparency in the declaration of expenses.

Abrupt changes in declared activity from one year to another without reasonable justification. For example, declaring €10,000 in 2022, €40,000 in 2023, and returning to €12,000 in 2024, when the platform reports stable activity around €35,000-€40,000 annually.

The taxpayer declares income from one platform but not from others where they also operate. Automatic cross-checks allow the Tax Agency to identify these omissions.

Cases where the platform reports one figure and the taxpayer declares a different one, without a reasonable explanation (e.g., differences in accrual, non-deductible commissions, or errors in temporal imputation).

Situations where a taxpayer channels income through a company without a real business structure, with the aim of reducing the tax burden. The Tax Agency may consider this a simulation and reclassify such income as personal income.

5. Most frequent types of actions by the Tax Agency

When the Tax Agency detects discrepancies thanks to DAC7 data, it can initiate different types of actions, each with a different scope and consequences:

This is the mildest action. The Tax Agency requests the taxpayer to provide documentation or explanations regarding certain operations or detected discrepancies. It does not necessarily imply a regularization but is a sign that there are doubts about the tax situation.

Usual response period: 10 working days, extendable upon justified request.

A more agile procedure than a formal inspection, focused on specific aspects of the declaration. The Tax Agency can verify one or more specific concepts (e.g., income from digital platforms in a given year) without reviewing the taxpayer’s entire tax situation.

Maximum duration: 18 months, according to the General Tax Law.

A procedure for exhaustive verification of the taxpayer’s tax situation, which may cover several tax years and multiple taxes. Formal inspections have a broader scope and can lead to complex regularizations with late payment interest and penalties.

Maximum duration: 18 months, with possible extensions in cases of special complexity.

The Tax Agency can review the last four non-prescribed tax years (in some cases, it may review more years if it detects signs of fraud). Regularizations may include the settlement of the tax debt, late payment interest, and, where applicable, penalties.

6. Common errors detected by the Tax Agency thanks to DAC7

Beyond quantitative discrepancies, there are fiscal approach errors that the Tax Agency easily identifies thanks to DAC7 information:

Declaring economic activity without being registered in the corresponding census, or being registered under a heading that does not reflect the actual activity. This also includes cases where expenses unrelated to the declared activity are claimed.

Structuring activity in an improvised manner, without professional advice, which generates inconsistencies between the economic reality and the declared tax situation. For example, establishing a company to channel income without a real business activity behind it.

Not correctly understanding the tax obligations applicable to activity carried out through platforms. This includes not knowing whether to declare under IRPF or Corporate Tax, being unaware of VAT obligations, or not correctly applying withholdings.

Submitting declarations without having previously analyzed the information that platforms have reported to the Tax Agency. This generates discrepancies that could have been avoided with an adequate review.

DAC7: Cómo usa Hacienda tus datos de plataformas digitales

DAC7: Cómo usa Hacienda tus datos de plataformas digitales

Guía práctica sobre inspecciones y cruces automáticos

1

¿Qué hace Hacienda con los datos DAC7?

Integración automática en sistemas de análisis de riesgo fiscal
Big Data tributario: cruza con IRPF, Sociedades, IVA y modelos informativos
Detección de patrones y perfiles de riesgo de forma masiva
2

Cruces automáticos más frecuentes

IRPF: ingresos reportados vs. rendimientos declarados
IVA: operaciones sujetas no declaradas
Censos: actividad económica sin alta fiscal
Modelos 347/349: coherencia con operaciones declaradas
3

Perfiles con mayor riesgo de inspección

🎨 Freelancers digitales

Sin alta o con ingresos parcialmente declarados

🛍️ Vendedores online

Marketplaces sin cumplir obligaciones fiscales

🏠 Arrendadores turísticos

Airbnb/Booking con declaraciones incompletas

🏢 Estructuras mixtas

Confusión persona física/sociedad

4

Discrepancias que detecta Hacienda

Ingresos no declarados o declarados parcialmente
Diferencias entre ingresos brutos y netos sin justificar
Incoherencias entre ejercicios fiscales
Uso incorrecto de sociedades (simulación)
5

Actuaciones más frecuentes

Requerimientos de información (10 días para responder)
Comprobaciones limitadas (hasta 18 meses)
Inspecciones formales (varios ejercicios y tributos)
Regularizaciones retroactivas (últimos 4 años)

⚠️ Importante: Anticiparse es clave

La regularización voluntaria antes de una inspección evita sanciones y reduce intereses de demora. Si detectas discrepancias, actúa antes de que Hacienda inicie una actuación.

7. When does it make sense to consult a specialized tax lawyer?

The complexity of DAC7 regulations and the Tax Agency’s ability to cross-reference information from multiple sources make specialized legal advice advisable at several points:

Preventive advice allows for reviewing the tax situation, detecting possible discrepancies, and, if necessary, voluntarily regularizing before the Tax Agency initiates an action. Voluntary regularization helps avoid penalties and reduce late payment interest.

If you have received an information request or a notification of the start of a verification, it is time to analyze the situation with a professional. An inadequate response can worsen the situation or close off subsequent defense avenues.

Tax inspections are complex procedures where every action has legal consequences. Having a specialized lawyer allows you to defend your interests, negotiate with the Inspection, and ensure that your rights as a taxpayer are respected.

If you have detected errors or omissions in your declarations, voluntary regularization is the best option to minimize the economic impact. A tax lawyer can help you correctly calculate the debt, submit the necessary supplementary declarations, and avoid the imposition of penalties.

The information reported under DAC7 is already being used by the Tax Agency to detect inconsistencies and select taxpayers for verifications and inspections. The risk is not theoretical or future: it is real and present.

The key is to anticipate: review your tax situation, ensure that your declarations correctly reflect the economic activity you carry out through digital platforms, and, if discrepancies are detected, voluntarily regularize before the Tax Agency initiates an action.

If you have doubts about your tax situation, have received a request from the Tax Agency, or simply want to ensure that your digital activity is correctly declared, specialized legal advice on DAC7 and tax defense can make the difference between a controlled regularization and an inspection with significant penalties.

This article is part of our specialized series on the DAC7 Directive, in which we analyze all relevant aspects of this regulation and its practical implications for taxpayers and businesses.

Contact our firm to analyze your situation and design the best defense or regularization strategy.

How does IN DIEM help you with DAC7?

Prevention is always more efficient—and less costly—than cure

The new regulatory framework derived from DAC7 has brought about a radical change in tax control of the digital economy. The information that the AEAT now receives is massive, automated, and cross-border, leaving very little room for improvisation or lack of knowledge.

In this context, IN DIEM supports companies, digital platforms, and professionals in adopting a proactive legal strategy, designed to minimize risks, ensure regulatory compliance, and protect the taxpayer’s position before administrative actions are initiated.

At IN DIEM Abogados, we advise companies, digital platforms, and professionals affected by DAC7, acting from the outset to identify tax risks, ensure regulatory compliance, and protect your position against the Tax Agency.

We can help you with:

  • Immediate analysis of your situation regarding DAC7, determining if you are subject to reporting obligations and what your real level of exposure to the AEAT is.
  • Review of DAC7 reports made since 2023, detecting errors, omissions, or inconsistencies that may lead to verification or penalty procedures.
  • Evaluation of tax obligations from previous years, quantifying risks and assessing voluntary regularizations before inspection actions.
  • Implementation and review of DAC7 tax compliance systems, especially for digital platforms, including due diligence protocols, identity verification, and annual reporting procedures.
  • Legal defense in tax verification and inspection procedures initiated based on DAC7 information, with the design of specific defensive strategies and protection of your rights as a taxpayer.
  • Tax planning compatible with DAC7, reviewing business structures, invoicing models, and income flows to operate with legal certainty and tax efficiency.

We have specific experience in digital taxation, online platforms, and complex tax procedures, which allows us to act with legal judgment, practical knowledge of the AEAT’s operations, and a strategic vision oriented towards prevention.

If your company, platform, or professional activity may be affected by DAC7, it is essential to analyze the situation as soon as possible.
Early action allows for reducing risks, avoiding unnecessary penalties, and facing the new environment of tax transparency with legal certainty.

That’s where IN DIEM makes the difference.

If your company or digital platform may be affected by DAC7, specialized legal advice is key to complying with regulations and avoiding unnecessary tax risks. At IN DIEM Abogados, we analyze your case and help you act with confidence.

Frequently Asked Questions

What does the Tax Agency do with DAC7 data once it receives it?

The Tax Agency integrates DAC7 data into its automatic risk analysis systems. This information is cross-referenced with IRPF declarations, Corporate Income Tax, VAT, and other informative models, allowing for the detection of inconsistencies, omissions, and tax risk profiles that may lead to verifications or inspections.

Does the Tax Agency cross-reference DAC7 data with my IRPF and Corporate Income Tax declarations?

Yes. The income reported by digital platforms is automatically contrasted with what is declared in IRPF or Corporate Income Tax. If there are significant differences between what the platform reported and what the taxpayer declared, internal risk alerts are generated.

What happens if the platform declares more income than I have declared?

The discrepancy is recorded in the Tax Agency’s systems. This does not automatically imply an inspection, but it does increase the taxpayer’s risk profile and may lead to information requests, limited verifications, or formal inspections.

Does having DAC7 data mean that the Tax Agency is already inspecting me?

Not necessarily. The Tax Agency may have the information without initiating immediate action. Data is stored and analyzed, and the decision to inspect depends on factors such as the volume of discrepancies, the risk profile, and internal selection criteria.

Which profiles have a higher risk of inspection due to DAC7?

Freelancers and digital professionals, marketplace sellers, lessors of tourist properties, companies operating through digital platforms, and mixed individual-company structures with tax inconsistencies present a higher risk.

What are the most common discrepancies detected with DAC7?

The most common are undeclared income, unjustified differences between gross and net income, inconsistencies between tax years, incomplete platform declarations, and discrepancies between what the platform reported and what the taxpayer declared.

What types of actions can the Tax Agency initiate with DAC7 data?

The Tax Agency can initiate information requests, limited verifications, or formal inspections. Additionally, it can regularize non-prescribed years, demanding the tax debt, late payment interest, and, where applicable, penalties.

Can the Tax Agency review previous years thanks to DAC7?

Yes. The Tax Agency can review the last four non-prescribed tax years and, in certain cases with signs of fraud, extend the temporal scope of the review.

What tax errors does the Tax Agency detect most easily thanks to DAC7?

Notable errors include lack of census registration, inconsistencies between real and declared activity, poor tax planning, incorrect use of companies, lack of knowledge of obligations in the digital economy, and improvisation in submitting declarations.

When is it advisable to consult a tax lawyer specializing in DAC7?

It is advisable before receiving a request to review and voluntarily regularize, after a notification from the Tax Agency, during a tax inspection, or when errors are detected that should be corrected before penalties are imposed.

Is it better to voluntarily regularize before the Tax Agency acts?

Yes. Voluntary regularization helps reduce late payment interest and avoid penalties. Anticipation is the most effective strategy to minimize risks when there are discrepancies between what is declared and DAC7 data.

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.

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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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