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Eviction for Non-Payment: Complete Guide for Landlords and Tenants
Procedures12 minEquipo Lexiel

Eviction for Non-Payment: Complete Guide for Landlords and Tenants

Complete guide to eviction for non-payment of rent: claim, enervation, opposition, eviction and rights of landlords and tenants.

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Eviction for Non-Payment: Complete Guide for Landlords and Tenants

Eviction for non-payment of rent is one of the most frequent proceedings in Spanish civil courts. Regulated primarily by articles 249.1.6, 250.1.1, 440, and 22.4 of the LEC, together with the Urban Leases Act (Ley de Arrendamientos Urbanos, LAU), it affects both landlords and tenants.

Eviction for non-payment is processed as a verbal trial regardless of amount (Art. 250.1.1 LEC). Lawyer and procurador representation is mandatory in all cases (Art. 31.2.2 LEC). The procedure allows joinder of the eviction action with the claim for unpaid rent (Art. 437.4.3 LEC).

Landlord's Perspective (Claimant)

#### Pre-Claim Requirements

  1. Verify the lease exists: written or verbal.
  2. Evidence the non-payment: bank statements.
  3. Prior demand: send a certified letter demanding payment. This prevents enervation if sent at least one month before filing (Art. 22.4 LEC).
  4. Quantify the debt: unpaid months, recoverable expenses, VAT for commercial leases.

#### The Eviction Claim (Art. 440 LEC)

The claim must include: party identification, contract details, schedule of arrears, joinder of actions (eviction + rent recovery), future rent condemnation (Art. 220.2 LEC), and eviction date request.

Art. 440.3 LEC: admission includes order to the tenant to vacate, pay, or object within 10 business days, setting the hearing date and eviction date.

#### Enervation: Risk for the Landlord

Enervation (Art. 22.4 LEC) allows the tenant to halt proceedings by paying all owed rent before the hearing. It may only be exercised once and is not available if the landlord demanded payment at least one month before filing.

Key tip: ALWAYS send a certified payment demand at least one month before filing to prevent enervation.

Tenant's Perspective (Defendant)

#### Options After the Court Order

Option 1: Enervate -- pay all rent due plus costs (if no prior demand was sent and enervation not previously exercised).

Option 2: Object within 10 business days (Art. 440.3 LEC). Grounds: no non-payment, lack of standing, set-off (Arts. 21 and 26 LAU), defects, res judicata, limitation (5 years, Art. 1964 CC).

Option 3: Do nothing -- judgment in accordance with the claim and eviction on the scheduled date.

#### Vulnerable Tenant Protections

  • Eviction suspension: Royal Decree-Law 11/2020 and extensions for vulnerable tenants.
  • Social services: the court notifies social services, which must report within 10 days (Art. 441.5 LEC).

Procedure Timeline

ActionDeadlineLegal Basis
Prior demand (recommended)At least 1 month before claimArt. 22.4 LEC
Enervation / Opposition / Vacate10 business daysArt. 440.3 LEC
Oral hearing (if opposed)Date set by courtArt. 440.3 LEC
Judgment10 days from hearingArt. 447 LEC
EvictionDate set at admissionArt. 440.3 LEC
Appeal20 daysArt. 458 LEC

How Lexiel Automates Eviction Proceedings

  • Prior demand letter with Art. 22.4 LEC requirements to prevent enervation.
  • Eviction claim with joinder of actions, personalized with contract and debt data.
  • Rent calculation including CPI adjustments, VAT, and recoverable expenses.
  • Opposition brief when representing the tenant.
  • Deadline management for the 10-day period, hearing date, and eviction date.
  • Opposing View to anticipate the other side's strategy.

Conclusion

Eviction for non-payment requires technical knowledge from both landlords and tenants. For landlords, prior preparation is key. For tenants, rapid response within legal deadlines. Legal advice is essential in both cases.


Need to Handle an Eviction?

Lexiel generates the eviction claim with rent accumulation, prior demand letter to prevent enervation, and automatic deadline management. It also prepares the opposition if you represent the tenant.

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