DAC7 en España: qué es, a quién afecta y cómo impacta a plataformas y empresas digitales

DAC7 in Spain and tax obligations for digital platforms

DAC7 in Spain: what it is, who it affects, and how it impacts digital platforms and companies

Why does DAC7 change the rules of the game for digital platforms?

The digital economy has radically transformed how companies operate. Marketplaces, holiday rental platforms, transport apps, online intermediaries, and cross-border e-commerce generate billions of euros in transactions every year.

However, this digital expansion has also posed significant challenges for European tax authorities, which have traditionally struggled to identify and properly tax the income generated through these platforms.

The Council Directive (EU) 2021/514, known as DAC7 (Directive on administrative cooperation in the field of taxation, seventh amendment), represents a structural shift in tax oversight of the digital ecosystem. Since January 2023, digital platforms have had new reporting obligations that allow the Tax Agency to automatically access detailed data on sellers, landlords, and service providers operating through them.

For companies, platforms, and professionals, this means that the tax opacity that characterised certain digital business models is definitively over. Understanding the scope of DAC7, assessing whether your activity is affected, and adopting the necessary legal measures is not optional: it is a matter of regulatory compliance, risk mitigation, and business sustainability.

What is DAC7 and what is its purpose?

The DAC7 Directive is part of a broader European strategy aimed at improving tax transparency and combating evasion in the digital economy. Adopted by the Council of the European Union on 22 March 2021, this regulation establishes a mandatory framework for the automatic exchange of information between Member States’ tax authorities on income earned by sellers through digital platforms.

DAC7’s stated objective is threefold:

  1. Increase tax transparency in activities carried out through digital platforms, where it has traditionally been difficult for tax authorities to identify taxpayers and quantify their income.
  2. Facilitate tax compliance, both for sellers (who will know their data is being reported) and for platforms (which take on an active role as reporting entities).
  3. Ensure tax fairness, ensuring that those who generate income through digital channels are taxed under conditions equivalent to those operating through traditional structures.

In Spain, the transposition of Directive (EU) 2021/514 (DAC7) has been completed through Royal Decree 117/2024, of 30 January, which sets out the due diligence and reporting rules and procedures for digital platform operators and amends the General Regulation on tax management and inspection actions and procedures. Previously, Royal Decree-Law 7/2021, of 27 April, had already introduced relevant amendments to Law 58/2003, the General Tax Law, regarding information exchange and administrative cooperation, and Order HFP/1307/2022, of 21 December, regulated certain technical aspects of informative returns filed with the State Tax Administration Agency (AEAT). However, it is Royal Decree 117/2024 that specifically details the reporting obligations arising from DAC7 and provides for its effective implementation within the Spanish tax system.

Since 1 January 2023, digital platforms operating in Spain are required to collect, verify, and report annually information on the sellers using their services, provided certain thresholds and conditions are met.

Who DAC7 really affects: platforms, sellers, and sectors under scrutiny

Digital platforms required to report

DAC7 precisely defines what is considered a “platform operator” subject to reporting obligations. A digital presence is not enough: the platform must act as an intermediary facilitating transactions between sellers and customers, and receive consideration arising from those transactions.

Among others, the following are required to report:

  • General marketplaces (Amazon, eBay, Etsy, Wallapop in its professional capacity).
  • Property rental platforms (Airbnb, Booking.com, Vrbo, Homeaway).
  • Passenger transport platforms (Uber, Cabify, Bolt).
  • Freelance services platforms (Upwork, Fiverr, Freelancer).
  • Platforms selling digital services or physical products that act as intermediaries between sellers and buyers.
  • Vehicle rental platforms between individuals or companies.

The determining criterion is that the platform facilitates the transaction and receives a commission, fee, or economic consideration for that intermediation.

🚫 Platforms that only offer advertising services or external links without actively participating in the transaction are not required to report.

In addition, the criterion of tax residence or significant presence in Spain determines whether the platform must report to the AEAT, whether due to a permanent establishment, tax residence, or a relevant volume of transactions with sellers resident in Spain.

➔ Affected sellers and service providers

DAC7 does not affect all users of digital platforms, but rather those whose economic activities exceed certain thresholds.

✔️ Sellers subject to reporting:

  • Individuals or legal entities with more than 30 transactions per year or who exceed €2,000 in consideration.
  • Landlords renting property for temporary residential or commercial use.
  • Providers of personal services (transport, freelance work, professional services).
  • Sellers of physical or digital goods who operate on a regular basis.

❌ Excluded from reporting:

  • Occasional sellers who do not meet the established thresholds.
  • Public entities and non-profit organisations in certain circumstances.
  • Pure B2B transactions where the platform does not actively intermediate.

➔ Sectors under particular scrutiny

The experience of other European countries and guidance from the European Commission indicate that certain sectors are receiving priority attention:

  1. Tourist and holiday rentals: owners who rent properties through platforms.
  2. The collaborative economy and gig economy (VTC, couriers, freelancers).
  3. Cross-border e-commerce: sellers operating from Spain to other European countries or vice versa.
  4. Sales of digital products and online services (training, consultancy, graphic design, programming, and other professional services offered through platforms).

What information is reported to the Tax Agency: the level of detail is significant

DAC7 requires the reporting of individualised and comprehensive information on each seller subject to reporting.

Platforms must collect and transmit annually to the AEAT the information.

  • Full name or company name.
  • Full tax address.
  • Tax Identification Number (NIF) or foreign equivalent (VAT, tax ID).
  • Date of birth (for individuals).
  • Bank account number where payments are received (IBAN).
  • Total consideration obtained in the calendar year (gross income).
  • Total number of transactions carried out.
  • Commissions, fees, or withholdings applied by the platform.
  • Type of activity: sale of goods, provision of services, property rental, passenger transport, etc.
  • Property address (in the case of rentals).
  • Number of days rented (in the case of holiday rentals).

When the seller resides in a Member State different from that of the platform, the information is automatically exchanged between the corresponding tax authorities. This means that a Spanish seller operating on a German platform will have their data reported to the AEAT, and vice versa.

The report must be submitted before 31 January of the year following the reported tax period. In other words, the data for financial year 2024 must be reported to the AEAT before 31 January 2025.

The OECD has developed technical standards (Model Rules for Reporting by Platform Operators) that serve as an international reference, and which the European Union has adapted through DAC7 to ensure interoperability between tax systems.

What changes with DAC7 compared to the previous situation?

Before DAC7 entered into force, tax oversight of income generated through digital platforms was fragmented, reactive, and largely dependent on the investigative capacity of each national tax authority.

⚖️ El Cambio de Paradigma con DAC7

Impacto real en el control fiscal digital

📊

Antes

  • OpacidadSin acceso sistemático a datos
  • Control reactivoInspecciones aisladas
  • DesigualdadVentaja frente al comercio tradicional
  • Fronteras fiscalesEscasa visibilidad internacional
🎯

Después

  • Intercambio automáticoDatos enviados a la AEAT
  • Control preventivoCruces masivos de información
  • Plataformas responsablesDebida diligencia y sanciones
  • Visibilidad totalVendedores identificados

This structural change means that the “low tax visibility” strategy that some operators maintained is no longer viable.

General risks arising from non-compliance: full visibility before the Tax Agency

➔ Risks for digital platforms

  • Specific penalty regime.
  • Reputational and operational liability.
  • Possible operational restrictions (or blocks) in serious cases.

These aspects, including the specific amounts and penalty procedures, will be analysed in detail in the second article in this series.

➔ Risks for sellers and service providers

Sellers whose data is reported to the AEAT and who have not correctly declared their income face:

  1. Verification and inspection procedures.
  2. Regularisation of non-time-barred tax years.
  3. Tax penalties.
  4. Impact on other taxes (VAT, withholdings, instalment payments).
  5. Possible criminal liability in serious cases.

DAC7 does not create new tax obligations, but decisively increases the Administration’s monitoring capacity.

Infografía DAC7 España
IN DIEM
🔍

DAC7 EN 60 SEGUNDOS

¿Tu plataforma debe informar a Hacienda?

📋

¿QUÉ ES DAC7?

Directiva europea que obliga a plataformas digitales a comunicar datos fiscales de vendedores a Hacienda desde 2023

🏢

¿QUIÉN ESTÁ OBLIGADO?

  • Marketplaces (Amazon, eBay, Etsy…)
  • Plataformas de alquiler (Airbnb, Booking…)
  • Apps de transporte (Uber, Cabify…)
  • Plataformas freelance (Upwork, Fiverr…)
  • Venta de productos/servicios digitales
💾

¿QUÉ DATOS SE COMUNICAN?

  • Identidad completa del vendedor
  • NIF y dirección fiscal
  • Ingresos totales del año
  • Número de transacciones
  • Cuenta bancaria (IBAN)
  • Tipo de actividad desarrollada

UMBRALES CLAVE

VENDEDOR REPORTADO SI:
+30 transacciones/añoO+2.000€ ingresados/año
📆

PLAZO DE COMUNICACIÓN

Antes del 31 de ENERO

(datos del año anterior)

Ejemplo: Datos 2024 → comunicar antes 31/01/2025

⚠️

RIESGO PRINCIPAL

Hacienda cruza automáticamente estos datos con tus declaraciones

Incumplimiento = Inspección + Sanciones

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.

IN DIEM: legal certainty in an environment of total transparency

The technical complexity of DAC7, its interaction with European and national regulations, and the significant economic and legal consequences of non-compliance mean that specialised legal advice is not an expense, but a strategic investment in legal certainty, business continuity, and business sustainability.

In a scenario where the Tax Agency already has the data, the real competitive advantage is to anticipate.

That’s where IN DIEM makes the difference.

In the next articles in this series, we will delve into critical aspects such as the specific penalty regime, tax inspection procedures arising from DAC7, defence and regularisation strategies, and regulatory developments towards DAC8 (crypto-assets). In the meantime, the recommendation for companies and professionals is clear: assess their current position, identify potential risks, and act with legal certainty.

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 is DAC7 and since when has it applied in Spain?

DAC7 is the European directive that requires digital platforms to report tax information on the sellers operating through them. In Spain, it has applied since 1 January 2023, with the first reports filed with the AEAT in January 2024.

Does DAC7 create new taxes for sellers or platforms?

No. DAC7 does not create new taxes, but it significantly increases the Tax Agency’s monitoring capacity by enabling automatic, cross-border access to income data obtained on digital platforms.

Which platforms are required to report under DAC7?

Platforms that actively intermediate in transactions and receive economic consideration are required to report, such as marketplaces, holiday rental platforms, transport, freelance services, or e-commerce platforms. Platforms that only offer advertising or links are not required to report.

Does DAC7 affect individuals who sell occasionally?

In general, no. DAC7 excludes occasional sellers who do not exceed 30 transactions per year or €2,000 in income, although each case should be analysed individually.

What information is reported to the Tax Agency under DAC7?

Seller identification data, gross income, number of transactions, platform commissions, banking details, and, in the case of rentals, detailed property information and the number of days rented are reported.

What happens if my income has already been reported to the AEAT and I have not declared it?

The AEAT may initiate verification or inspection procedures, regularise non-time-barred tax years, and impose penalties. In many cases, anticipating this through voluntary regularisation can significantly reduce the economic consequences.

Does DAC7 affect foreign platforms operating with Spanish sellers?

Yes. DAC7 provides for the automatic exchange of information between Member States, so a foreign platform that intermediates with sellers resident in Spain may generate reports that reach the AEAT directly.

Is it mandatory to have specialised legal advice on DAC7?

It is not mandatory, but given the technical complexity, the volume of information, and the penalty risks, specialised legal advice is key to ensuring compliance, anticipating risks, and properly defending the taxpayer’s interests.

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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