Gestor problems All guides

Your gestor didn't file your declaration: who's liable and what to do now

Last reviewed: 3 July 2026 · 3 official sources (BOE / AEAT) · Informational — not asesoría fiscal

The hard truth first: in front of AEAT, the missing declaration is your problem, not your gestor’s. You are the obligado tributario — the debt, the surcharges and the procedure land on you (art. 35 LGT), regardless of what you paid the gestoría to do. Feeling betrayed is legitimate; acting on the betrayal comes second. Damage control comes first.

Step 1 — Establish the facts (30 minutes)

Don’t argue with the gestoría about what happened. Open the Sede consultation and check, model by model and quarter by quarter, what was actually filed in your name — full walkthrough here: how to check what your gestoría actually filed. Screenshot everything. This is simultaneously your to-do list and your evidence file.

Step 2 — Regularize before AEAT asks

If there are unfiled periods and no requerimiento has arrived yet, file them voluntarily now. That keeps each one in the art. 27 LGT regime — a surcharge of 1% + 1% per full month (15% + interest past 12 months) and, more importantly, no penalties. Once a requerimiento lands, that door closes and sanctions are on the table. The maths and worked examples: what being late actually costs.

If the missing filings already produced debts in enforcement, deal with those in parallel: check what you owe and, if a scary letter already arrived, providencia de apremio explained.

You shouldn’t need to audit your own gestoría by hand. Gestorro is being built to verify filings, deadlines and notifications continuously on your own data — the black box, opened.

Step 3 — Now deal with the gestoría

With your filings safe and the screenshots saved:

Penalties, if AEAT ever proposes any, are not automatic: they require responsibility for the infringement, and the LGT recognises defences — including having acted with due diligence (art. 179 LGT). Document everything; diligence is easier to show with a paper trail.

FAQ

Is my gestor liable to AEAT for not filing?

No — you are. The taxpayer remains the obligado tributario: tax due, surcharges and AEAT procedures are normally addressed to you, even if the gestoría was paid to file (art. 35 LGT). Penalties are not automatic and admit defences (art. 179 LGT), but the debt itself is yours.

Can I recover the damage from the gestoría?

Possibly — as a separate civil/professional-liability claim. You’ll normally need proof of the engagement, what they were instructed to do, the breach, the damage and the causation. It does not pause or cancel anything at AEAT.

What if the gestor says they filed, but I can’t find it?

Trust the Sede, not the reassurance. Search by your NIF, model and year in "Consulta de declaraciones presentadas"; ask the gestoría for the justificante with its CSV and verify it. A filing that isn’t in the Sede didn’t happen.

Should I fire the gestoría immediately?

Regularize first, fight later. Until the missing periods are filed, every day matters (the art. 27 clock and the requerimiento risk). Switch once your filings are safe and your documents are back in your hands.

Don’t discover missed filings after AEAT does

Checking up on your gestoría shouldn’t be a manual quarterly ritual. Gestorro does exactly this check on your own data — continuously.

Double opt-in: we’ll send you a confirmation email first. No spam — the launch and major updates only. Privacy policy

Official sources