Contributory Unemployment Benefit in Spain (Prestación Contributiva): Requirements, Amount and How to Claim
The contributory unemployment benefit — commonly called "el paro" — is Spain's main income-replacement payment for workers who lose their job involuntarily and have paid into the Social Security system long enough. This guide covers everything an immigrant needs to know: who qualifies, how much you receive, how to apply, what documents are needed, and what to do if your claim is denied.
What prestación contributiva is
The prestación contributiva por desempleo is Spain's main unemployment benefit. It is managed by SEPE (Servicio Público de Empleo Estatal) and funded through the contributions that both you and your employer pay into the unemployment fund every month while you are employed.
Check your unemployment benefit
Tell us your situation — when your contract ended, how long you contributed, and what happened — and we will help you understand your options, calculate your benefit, and take the right next step with SEPE.
Check my unemployment benefit →Unlike means-tested subsidies, this benefit is based purely on your contribution record. It replaces a percentage of your previous salary for a limited period, giving you financial support while you look for new employment. It is the first-tier benefit in Spain's unemployment protection system — if you exhaust it without finding work, you may then qualify for a lower-level subsidy (subsidio por desempleo) or other aids.
Who can claim
To receive the contributory unemployment benefit you must meet all of the following conditions:
- Involuntary job loss — dismissal (despido objetivo or disciplinario), end of temporary contract, collective layoff (ERE/ERTE), voluntary termination under art. 50 ET (serious employer breach), or mutual agreement during an ERE.
- Minimum 360 days of unemployment contributions in the last 6 years (only days not previously used for another benefit count).
- Registered as a jobseeker (demandante de empleo) at your regional employment office before or on the day you apply.
- Affiliated and registered (alta) with Social Security, or in a situation deemed equivalent (e.g., the day after dismissal).
- Not reached ordinary retirement age entitling you to a contributory pension.
- Signed the activity commitment (compromiso de actividad) — you agree to actively seek work and accept suitable offers.
Check if paro contributivo fits your case
Tell NAVI your last job, contributions, dismissal date and SEPE status. It will check the route and ask for the missing facts.
How long it lasts
The duration of the benefit depends on how many days you contributed to unemployment in the last 6 years. The relationship is set by law in fixed brackets:
| Days contributed (last 6 years) | Benefit duration |
|---|---|
| 360 – 539 | 4 months (120 days) |
| 540 – 719 | 6 months (180 days) |
| 720 – 899 | 8 months (240 days) |
| 900 – 1,079 | 10 months (300 days) |
| 1,080 – 1,259 | 12 months (360 days) |
| 1,260 – 1,439 | 14 months (420 days) |
| 1,440 – 1,619 | 16 months (480 days) |
| 1,620 – 1,799 | 18 months (540 days) |
| 1,800 – 1,979 | 20 months (600 days) |
| 1,980 – 2,159 | 22 months (660 days) |
| 2,160 or more | 24 months (720 days) — maximum |
Only contribution days within the last 6 years that have not been used for a previous benefit claim count toward a new claim.
How much you get
The monthly amount is calculated as a percentage of your base reguladora (regulatory base), which is the average of your contribution bases over the last 180 days before unemployment.
Percentage applied
- First 180 days: 70% of the base reguladora.
- From day 181 onward: 60% of the base reguladora.
Minimum and maximum caps (2026)
With two or more dependent children the maximum cap is EUR 1,575/month. Caps are tied to the IPREM (Indicador Público de Renta de Efectos Múltiples), which for 2026 is EUR 600/month.
How to apply
- DNI, NIE or valid passport.
- Certificado de empresa (issued by employer to SEPE; keep a copy).
- Informe de vida laboral (work-life report from Social Security).
- Bank account number (IBAN) in your name.
- Family book (libro de familia) or equivalent if claiming children-related caps.
- Dismissal letter or contract termination document.
- Benefit application form (available at sede.sepe.gob.es).
Common reasons for denial
SEPE can deny your claim or reduce your benefit in several situations. Being aware of these helps you avoid mistakes:
- Missed the 15-day deadline — late applications lose one day of benefit per working day of delay. Applying more than 15 days late does not eliminate your right entirely, but drastically reduces the duration.
- Voluntary resignation — SEPE checks the reason for termination on the certificado de empresa. If coded as voluntary ("baja voluntaria"), the claim will be denied.
- Insufficient contribution days — fewer than 360 unemployment-contribution days in the last 6 years means you cannot access the contributory benefit (though you may qualify for a subsidio).
- Incomplete paperwork — missing certificado de empresa is the most common cause of delay. SEPE may give you 10 days to submit it; if not provided, the file is archived.
- Not registered as demandante de empleo — you must be registered before the application is processed.
- Still employed part-time elsewhere — if you have another active contract, the situation is treated as partial unemployment (compatibility rules apply, not a full claim).
Obligations while receiving paro
Receiving the benefit is not passive — SEPE requires you to comply with several obligations throughout the entire payment period:
- Renew your demanda de empleo (sellar el paro) — typically every 3 months, on the exact date indicated on your card. You can renew online, by phone or in person. Missing the renewal date suspends your benefit.
- Accept suitable job offers — SEPE or your regional employment service may send you offers. Refusing a "suitable" offer without justification can result in sanctions (reduction or extinction of the benefit).
- Attend training courses — if called to a training programme or employment workshop, attendance is mandatory.
- Report changes in income or family situation — starting part-time work, receiving other income, or changes in dependants must be reported within 3 working days.
- Do not travel outside Spain for more than 15 calendar days per year without prior authorisation from SEPE (see FAQ below for details).
- Appear when summoned — if SEPE or the employment office calls you for a review meeting or interview, non-attendance without justification leads to sanctions.
Compatibility with work
In some situations you can keep part of your benefit while working or starting a business:
Part-time employment
If you find a part-time job, you may choose to either (a) suspend your benefit (and resume it when the contract ends) or (b) keep the benefit reduced proportionally (descuento proporcional). Under option (b), the benefit is reduced by the proportion of your working hours relative to a full-time schedule. For example, if you work 50% of full time, you receive 50% of your benefit. The days you would have received are not consumed faster — the total duration stretches.
Capitalisation of the benefit (pago único)
If you want to start as autónomo (self-employed) or join a cooperative, you can request capitalización del paro — receiving the full remaining amount of your benefit in a lump sum to invest in the business. Requirements include: having at least 3 months of benefit remaining, not having used capitalisation in the last 4 years, and starting the activity within 1 month of the resolution. The lump sum must be used exclusively for the approved business purpose.
What to do if denied
If SEPE denies your application, you receive a written resolution (resolución denegatoria) explaining the reason. You then have two avenues:
Frequently asked questions
Can I get paro if I quit voluntarily?
As a general rule, no. The contributory benefit requires involuntary job loss. However, there are narrow exceptions: if you resigned due to a serious employer breach (unpaid wages, harassment, substantial unilateral contract changes) and obtained a judicial resolution under art. 50 of the Estatuto de los Trabajadores, SEPE will treat it as involuntary. Victims of gender-based violence may also qualify after voluntary resignation.
What happens if I miss the 15-day deadline?
You do not lose your right entirely, but the benefit starts on the day you actually apply rather than the day after your employment ended. This means you lose one day of benefit for every working day of delay. If you apply several months late, you could lose a significant portion of your entitlement. There is no absolute cut-off — you can still apply up to the end of the benefit period — but every day costs you money.
Can I work part-time and keep my paro?
Yes. You can combine a part-time contract with your unemployment benefit. The benefit is reduced proportionally to your working hours (e.g., a 20-hour/week contract out of a 40-hour full-time week means you keep 50% of the benefit). Alternatively, you can choose to fully suspend the benefit and resume it once the part-time contract ends, preserving all remaining days for later.
Do foreign contributions count?
Contributions from EU/EEA countries and countries with bilateral Social Security agreements with Spain (e.g., certain Latin American countries, Morocco, Ukraine) can be "totalised" — meaning they count toward the 360-day minimum. However, your last contribution must have been in Spain. You need a U1 form (for EU countries) or equivalent certificate from the foreign country's Social Security authority. SEPE processes the totalisation when you apply.
What is capitalización del paro?
Capitalización (also called "pago único") lets you receive your entire remaining benefit as a lump sum to invest in self-employment or a cooperative. You must request it before starting the activity. The money can cover the initial investment and/or your monthly autónomo Social Security fees. If you use it for fees only, you receive the amount monthly rather than in one payment. You cannot have used capitalisation in the previous 4 years.
Can I travel abroad while receiving paro?
You may leave Spain for up to 15 calendar days per year (total, not consecutive) without losing your benefit — but you must notify SEPE beforehand. Trips longer than 15 days without authorisation cause automatic suspension. For EU jobseekers, there is a special procedure to export your benefit to another EU country for up to 3 months (extendable to 6) using form U2. Outside these frameworks, being abroad means not being available for work, which violates your obligations.
Related guides
- Benefit denied in Spain — how to appeal
- Ingreso Mínimo Vital (IMV) — how to apply
- RAI (Renta Activa de Inserción) — requirements and guide
- How to get a certificado digital in Spain
- Empadronamiento — how to register your address
Based on: Real Decreto Legislativo 8/2015 (LGSS), art. 262–282; Ley 36/2011 (LRJS); SEPE public documentation. Amounts reflect 2026 IPREM. For information purposes only. Updated June 2026.
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