The EU modifies sanctions against Russia over the war in Ukraine
The EU Council updates the restrictive measures imposed on Russia for destabilizing Ukraine. These sanctions affect economic sectors and individuals linked to the conflict.
The EU Council updates the restrictive measures imposed on Russia for destabilizing Ukraine. These sanctions affect economic sectors and individuals linked to the conflict.
The EU Council updates sanctions imposed on persons and entities that threaten Ukraine's sovereignty. Restrictions in force since 2014 are modified.
The EU establishes import quotas with reduced tariffs for Mercosur products. Affects European importers of food, manufactures and other South American goods.
The EU expands its list of sanctioned parties for Russian destabilizing activities, freezing assets and prohibiting transactions with those affected.
The European Commission officially recognizes that the crisis in the Middle East since 28 February 2026 constitutes an exceptional event with significant impact on European markets.
The EU provisionally applies the commercial agreement with Mercosur (Argentina, Brazil, Paraguay and Uruguay), opening new trade opportunities between both blocs.
A constitutional challenge has been filed against the part of RDL 15/2025 that modifies the invoicing software requirements for businesses. The Constitutional Court will decide whether that provision is valid.
The EU unifies corporate insolvency rules across all member states. It facilitates debt restructuring and bankruptcy proceedings for businesses and self-employed individuals.
An exceptional tax measure is approved in Spain. It may imply temporary changes in taxes or tax burdens for citizens and businesses.
The Government sets the maximum pensions and updates all public pensions for 2026. It affects retirees, pensioners and social benefit recipients.