Areas of expertise
Specializations
- Commercial disputes
- Payment orders
- Insolvency claims
Education
- Master in Legal Practice (Garrigues programme), Universidad de Navarra
- Law Degree, Universidad de Navarra
Languages
Biography
Daniel Castillo Vera joined BMC in 2022 after his time at Garrigues, where he completed the master in legal practice and his first years of professional work in the commercial litigation group. That experience at one of Spain’s largest law firms gave him the procedural rigour and analytical capability he now applies to daily client work at BMC.
His practice focuses on debt recovery and commercial litigation: payment order proceedings (proceso monitorio), enforcement actions, contractual breach claims before mercantile courts, and the management of creditor positions in insolvency proceedings. He has a clear understanding of the real timelines of Spanish mercantile jurisdiction and knows when it makes sense to litigate and when it is more efficient to negotiate a payment arrangement or a write-down. That ability to assess the cost-benefit equation of any given proceeding is one of the highest-value services for a business client.
He is analytical and thorough in procedural preparation — qualities developed in a demanding environment and maintained regardless of case size. At BMC he handles both high-value individual claims and smaller-balance debt portfolios, adapting procedural strategy to the economic context of each matter.
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Services led
Practice areas where Daniel serves as lead advisor or active contributor
Civil and commercial mediation services under Organic Law 1/2025. Since April 2025, Spanish courts reject claims without prior proof of a MASC attempt (mediation, conciliation, or assisted negotiation). We design the protocol, facilitate the process, and issue the court-ready certificate.
View service Debt RecoveryProfessional debt recovery combining amicable negotiation with effective legal action to restore your cash flow.
View service Corporate Debt RestructuringBook I TRLC restructuring plans allow haircuts and maturity extensions to be negotiated with creditors, effects extended to dissenters through judicial homologation (cram-down), and the company restructured without entering formal insolvency proceedings. For companies with imminent insolvency and a viable underlying business, it is the most powerful alternative to formal bankruptcy in Spain.
View service Digital Evidence & E-DiscoveryDigital evidence preservation with chain of custody, forensic IT coordination, e-discovery in arbitration and litigation, and acquisition of admissible electronic evidence for Spanish and international proceedings.
View service Director and Officer LiabilityPersonal liability audit for directors and officers, compliance programme for the governing body, D&O insurance advisory, and defence in liability claims. Prevention and comprehensive protection against civil, insolvency, and criminal liability of company directors.
View service Express Insolvency and No-Asset InsolvencyWhen a company has insufficient assets to cover the costs of formal insolvency proceedings, Spanish law provides for immediate closure through express insolvency (Art. 37bis TRLC). For individuals (self-employed and directors who have given personal guarantees) there is also the BEPI pathway — discharge of unsatisfied debts. If you need to close a company with debts legally and definitively, this is the route.
View service Insolvency Advisory and RestructuringExpert guidance through Spanish insolvency proceedings and pre-insolvency restructuring plans under the reformed Ley Concursal. With over 9,000 bankruptcies in Spain in 2024, early intervention is the difference between preserving value and losing everything — including directors' personal assets.
View service Insolvency Agreement (Convenio Concursal)Insolvency agreement (TRLC arts. 317-341): the payment arrangement with creditors within insolvency proceedings. Advisory services on negotiation, advance proposal, and agreement compliance for companies in insolvency.
View service Insolvency Qualification (Culpable or Fortuitous)Insolvency qualification (TRLC Arts. 442–456): defence of directors facing the qualification section. The difference between culpable and fortuitous insolvency can mean unlimited personal liability.
View service Insolvency Rescission of Prejudicial ActsDefence of third parties in insolvency rescission proceedings (TRLC Arts. 226–239): the insolvency administrator may challenge acts performed in the two years before the insolvency declaration. Preventive advice for companies approaching insolvency.
View service Judicial Approval of the Restructuring PlanJudicial approval of the restructuring plan (Art. 639 TRLC): extends the effects of the plan to dissenting creditors through the cram-down mechanism. Specialised advisory on procedure and defence.
View service Litigation & ArbitrationRepresentation and strategy in civil and commercial litigation and national and international arbitration for businesses.
View service Pre-Insolvency Filing (Art. 583 TRLC)The pre-insolvency court notification under Art. 583 of the Spanish Insolvency Act activates a 3-month judicial shield against enforcement actions, allowing negotiation with creditors without declaring formal insolvency. It is the most powerful early-intervention tool in Spanish insolvency law — and most directors are unaware it exists until it is too late.
View service Public Debt Negotiation: AEAT and Social SecurityDeferral under Art. 65 LGT, instalment arrangements with the TGSS and AEAT singular agreements are specific mechanisms for negotiating public debt when a business faces liquidity difficulties. Knowing when to use each one — and when instead to incorporate public debt into insolvency proceedings — can be the difference between saving the business and destroying it.
View service Restructuring Plan (Insolvency Act)Pre-insolvency restructuring plan under TRLC Arts. 616–732: restructure your company's debt before insolvency proceedings, with judicial protection and binding effect on dissenting creditors.
View service Second Chance Law for IndividualsLegally discharge your debts and start fresh. Spain's Second Chance Law allows any natural person — self-employed, salaried employees, retirees, guarantors — to write off unpaid debts, including partially those owed to the Tax Agency and Social Security. The February 2026 Supreme Court rulings significantly expand public debt discharge.
View service Special Procedure for Micro-EnterprisesThe special procedure for micro-enterprises (Law 16/2022) allows companies with fewer than 10 employees to resolve their insolvency entirely online, without a court-appointed insolvency administrator, in 3–6 months and at a fraction of the cost of ordinary insolvency proceedings. Three routes available: business continuation, creditor arrangement, or orderly liquidation.
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