A Spanish restaurant deal has more hidden surprises than a comparable deal in the UK, Netherlands, or US. The legal frameworks are different. The hospitality industry conventions are different. And the things sellers leave out of conversations are different. This is the structured pre-purchase audit we run on every acquisition we evaluate.
The list below is in the order we work through it on a typical 2-4 week diagnostic. Each item is something we've seen blow up a deal — usually post-signature, when fixing it is expensive.
1. The reported P&L vs the actual P&L
Ask for three full years of audited financial statements, plus the most recent 12 monthly P&Ls. Then ask for the underlying bank statements for at least the last 12 months. The gap between what a Spanish restaurant reports and what actually flows through the bank account is one of the most reliable sources of deal-breaking surprises. If the seller is reluctant to share bank statements, that itself is the answer to your question.
2. The labour line, in detail
Spanish hospitality has a long history of cash payments to staff that don't appear on payroll. A reported labour cost of 22% on a restaurant doing €600k in revenue is almost certainly understating reality. Real labour cost in well-run Spanish hospitality sits at 28-32% of revenue. If you're buying a business with a reported labour cost meaningfully below that range, you're inheriting either fictitious accounting or a labour situation that will collapse the moment you formalise it. Both have the same effect on your future P&L.
3. The lease — full tenor, full escalator, full termination
Spanish commercial leases (LAU contracts) typically run 10-15 years with annual IPC indexation. Pull the lease, calculate what the rent will be in years 3, 5, and 10 at IPC + 2% (the realistic inflation scenario). Verify the seller is current on rent. Check for any side letters, deferred payments, or guarantor obligations that don't appear in the headline rent. The lease termination clauses matter — Spanish landlords have significant rights when the tenant is replaced, and some leases prohibit transfer entirely.
4. Operating licences — every single one
Restaurants in Spain require multiple municipal licences: licencia de apertura (operating licence), licencia sanitaria (health), licencia de terraza (outdoor seating if applicable), licencia de música (if music is played), plus regional environmental and fire-safety compliance. Verify each one with the town hall — not with the seller. We've seen multiple deals where the seller said the licences were "all in order" and the town hall confirmed three of five had lapsed. Re-issuing lapsed licences can take 8-14 weeks and cost €8k-€15k in fees.
5. Supplier debts and prepayments
Ask the seller for a list of every supplier with an active account, the current outstanding balance, and a confirmation in writing that no debts exceed standard terms. Then cross-check by asking the seller for permission to call the top five suppliers directly. Suppliers will tell you in two minutes what the seller would never volunteer in two hours. Distillers, beverage suppliers, and meat wholesalers in Spain extend significant trade credit, and accumulated supplier debt is a common hidden liability.
6. Equipment age and condition
Walk through the kitchen and back-of-house with a chef who knows commercial equipment. Note the age and condition of: combi ovens, walk-in coolers, dishwasher, extraction system, ice machine, plancha, fryers. A well-equipped commercial kitchen costs €80k-€150k to fully replace. If half the equipment is at end-of-life, that capex hits you in year 2.
7. The reservations book and customer concentration
For mid-to-upscale restaurants, ask for 24 months of reservation data. Look at: average covers per service, no-show rate, repeat-customer percentage, and concentration of bookings in specific weekly patterns. A restaurant that's 70% dependent on weekend dinner is structurally fragile. A restaurant with a healthy spread across services and a strong repeat-customer base has earned operational stability.
8. The team — who's leaving when you arrive
Conduct structured interviews with the head chef, sous chef, restaurant manager, and at least two long-serving staff. Ask them directly: "If the business changes hands, will you stay?" Spanish labour law strongly protects existing employees (a sale that's structured as an asset purchase rather than share purchase has specific staff-transfer obligations under Article 44 of the Estatuto de los Trabajadores). The team you inherit is the team you're buying — if the head chef leaves in month two, you've bought an empty kitchen.
9. The fiscal layer — debts, retentions, and the agencia tributaria
Request a certificate of fiscal good standing (certificado de estar al corriente) from the Agencia Tributaria and from Social Security (Seguridad Social). These are obtainable in 48 hours and definitively show whether the seller has outstanding tax or social-security debts. Outstanding debts can attach to the business if you structure the deal as a share purchase rather than an asset purchase. Your Spanish lawyer will structure to avoid this — but you need the certificates to know what you're structuring against.
10. The brand and online reputation
Pull the Google Business profile, TripAdvisor profile, The Fork rating, and any food-delivery platform reviews (Glovo, Uber Eats, Just Eat). Read the last 100 reviews — not just the rating. Look for patterns: complaints about service, quality, pricing, hygiene. A restaurant with a 4.2 rating and a recent trend of "stale food" and "rude staff" complaints is in operational decline regardless of the trailing financials.
11. The lease's relationship to the landlord
Meet the landlord before signing. Most Spanish commercial landlords are individuals or small family-owned holdings rather than institutional REITs. The relationship between operator and landlord matters more than the contract suggests — small concessions on rent timing, building maintenance, terrace permits, and renovation approval often flow from a healthy relationship rather than the lease text. If the outgoing operator and the landlord are at war, you're inheriting that war.
12. The reason for sale
Ask directly, multiple times, in multiple settings. Cross-check the answer with anyone who knows the business — suppliers, neighbouring operators, the local hospitality association. The honest answer for a healthy sale is usually one of: retirement, family circumstances, new project elsewhere. If the answer is some version of "I just want to do something else," and you can't get a more specific story from the wider network, treat that as a soft signal of distress not yet visible in the financials.
The Spanish-specific traps that don't exist in your home market
A few items that surprise UK, Dutch, German, and US investors specifically:
Article 44 staff transfer: in an asset purchase that's deemed a continuation of business, all existing employees transfer with their accrued rights and seniority. You can't selectively retain staff. This is similar to TUPE in the UK but with different mechanics. Plan for it.
Inheritance of fiscal debts: if you buy the shares of an SL (share purchase) rather than the assets (asset purchase), you inherit every tax and social-security debt that wasn't disclosed. The good news: there's a clean way to structure around this. The bad news: only if you structure it before signing.
The horario commercial regulation: in many Spanish cities, the hours a restaurant can operate are regulated by the local government — and these rules vary city by city. A restaurant that's been operating until 02:00 might lose late-night permits when ownership transfers. Verify the current permitted hours with the town hall.
Music and noise compliance: outdoor music, late-night music, and live music each have separate licensing regimes. The neighbouring residents have rights to complain that can result in licence suspension. We've seen deals where a popular terraza was generating 30% of revenue — and the licence was suspended within four months of the new ownership because the neighbours had been quietly complaining for a year.
What this process should cost and how long it should take
A properly executed pre-purchase diagnostic on a single-site Spanish restaurant costs €3,500-€6,000 and takes 2-4 weeks calendar time. That's a rounding error against a €400k+ acquisition and the difference between a clean deal and a costly one. The diagnostic should produce a written report with: go/no-go recommendation, key risks identified, fair-value indication, and a 90-day post-acquisition action plan.
Skipping the diagnostic — relying on the seller's representations, your fiscal advisor's tax review, and your lawyer's contract review — leaves a significant operational gap. Lawyers and fiscalistas are excellent at the legal and tax layers. They're not trained to evaluate the operating reality of a hospitality business. That's a different discipline.
Looking at a Spanish restaurant acquisition? See our engagement structure (free initial diagnostic, deep due-diligence priced per scope) or book a 30-minute discovery call to discuss your specific deal.
Written by Kevin, Business Development & Operations partner at Gastro Partners. Multi-site openings specialist in Valencia (El Kiosko + hotel F&B). Specialises in the Spanish operational and regulatory layer.