Resource article
Baja maternal & paternal Spain 2026 — 16 weeks equal for both parents, 100% pay, non-transferable
Spain pioneered full equality of maternity/paternity leave in 2021. Both parents now get 16 weeks of paid leave each (32 total per couple), at 100% of base reguladora, capped at €4,720/month. Non-transferable — the second parent's 16 weeks are LOST if not taken. We explain qualifying rules, 6-week mandatory simultaneous start, and the optional excedencia.
What you will learn
- The 2021 reform: 16 weeks equal for both parents
- How the prestación is calculated
- Qualifying contribution requirements
- Excedencia: extending unpaid but job-protected
The 2021 reform: 16 weeks equal for both parents
Until 2017, Spanish maternity leave was 16 weeks for the mother and 2-5 weeks for the father. The 2019-2021 reform progressively equalised the entitlements: by 2021, both parents receive 16 weeks of paid leave each, fully non-transferable. This is one of the most generous and gender-balanced leave systems in the EU.
Both parents must take the FIRST 6 WEEKS immediately after birth, full-time, simultaneously. This is a hard rule — failing to take the first 6 weeks loses them entirely.
The remaining 10 weeks per parent are flexible: full-time blocks (in weekly increments) or part-time, taken anytime within the first 12 months of the child's life. Many couples coordinate so that one parent always provides care during the entire 12-month window.
How the prestación is calculated
The 'prestación por nacimiento y cuidado del menor' equals 100% of the BASE REGULADORA, which is your contribution base for the calendar month before the leave starts. For employees, the contribution base typically equals your monthly gross salary plus 1/12 of any extra payments (pagas extra), capped at the Spanish Seguridad Social maximum.
Cap in 2026: €4,720/month gross (the topMaximum base de cotización). Earners above receive the same as someone at €4,720/month. Floor: there is no formal floor for the contributory leave (separate subsidio non-contributivo applies for very low earners).
Self-employed (autónomos) calculate on their declared base de cotización, which they choose between the minimum (€960) and maximum (€4,720) — many choose the minimum to save on monthly contributions, then receive a low maternity benefit. Plan for at least 6-12 months at a higher base before pregnancy.
Qualifying contribution requirements
To receive the FULL contributory permiso, you need accumulated contributions: under age 21, no minimum required; age 21-26, 90 days in the last 7 years OR 180 days in lifetime; age 26+, 180 days in the last 7 years OR 360 days in lifetime.
If you don't meet the contributory threshold, you may still qualify for the SUBSIDIO NON-CONTRIBUTIVO: 42 days of paid leave at 100% of IPREM (~€600/month in 2026). Better than nothing but much less than the contributory benefit.
Periods of maternity/paternity leave themselves COUNT as contributions for future entitlements (pension, unemployment etc.) — the Seg-Social keeps you in the system at the level just before the leave.
Excedencia: extending unpaid but job-protected
After the 16 paid weeks, you can request EXCEDENCIA POR CUIDADO DE HIJOS: up to 3 years of unpaid leave per child, with full job protection during the first year (employer must hold your job) and reserve the same job category afterwards.
During the first year of excedencia, your contributions to Seguridad Social are CREDITED automatically (computed at the level of your last salary). After year 1, you must self-fund (convenio especial) to keep contribution years adding up.
Some CCN top up the excedencia with a monthly stipend (e.g. teaching, hospitality) — check yours. In any case, plan for the financial impact of unpaid leave: many parents combine the 16-week paid permiso with up to 6 months of partial reducción de jornada (50-87.5% reduction with proportional salary cut) before going to full excedencia.
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