European Court Slams Spain Over ‘Precarious’ Public Sector Contracts
By Daniel Richardson, Editor-in-Chief
The Court of Justice of the European Union (TJUE) issued a stinging rebuke to Spain this Tuesday, April 14, 2026, ruling that the country’s efforts to resolve the abuse of long-term interim workers in public administration are fundamentally insufficient. In a decision that sends shockwaves through the Spanish administrative system, the Luxembourg-based court determined that current measures do not adequately punish the “abusive apply” of temporary contracts nor eliminate the resulting precarity for workers.
For years, the Spanish public sector has leaned heavily on interinos—interim workers who often chain together temporary contracts for a decade or more without ever achieving permanent status. The TJUE has now made it clear: Spain’s attempt to fix this by converting these workers into “indefinite non-fixed” employees is not a solution; it is a continuation of the problem.
The ‘Indefinite Non-Fixed’ Loophole
The heart of the dispute lies in how Spain attempted to appease EU standards. Rather than granting full permanent status (fijos) to those subjected to temporary contract abuse, Spain implemented a middle-ground: the indefinite non-fixed contract. The TJUE ruled that this transformation “does not constitute an adequate measure to duly sanction the abuses.”

According to the court, maintaining this specific labor relationship essentially preserves the “situation of precarity” for the worker. The ruling suggests that by avoiding full permanent appointments, the administration continues to maintain a temporary labor relationship in all but name.
The court’s scrutiny didn’t stop at contract types. The TJUE also dismissed several other Spanish safeguards as ineffective sanctions, including:
- The payment of financial compensation to workers when their labor relationship ends.
- The existing liability regime for Public Administrations.
- The practice of opening selective processes to fill vacancies that grant points or consideration for a worker’s previous experience.
In the eyes of the European judges, these measures fail to “duly sanction this abusive use” or erase the consequences of violating European Union law.
The Numbers: A System in Crisis
To understand why the TJUE has stepped in, one only needs to look at the data. Spain’s public sector temporality rate currently sits above 32%. This is a staggering figure when compared to the 8% threshold demanded by the European Union.
This gap represents hundreds of thousands of workers caught in a cycle of instability. The ruling, stemming from the high-profile “Caso Obadal,” addresses a systemic anomaly in the Spanish administrative system that has persisted for years, turning temporary employment into a permanent fixture of the state’s workforce.
What Happens Now?
This ruling was the answer to specific questions posed by the Spanish Supreme Court, which sought clarity on whether Spain is legally obligated to convert interim workers into full permanent staff to remedy the abuse of temporary contracts.
While the TJUE has provided the legal framework and the condemnation of current practices, the final implementation rests with the Spanish Supreme Court. The high court must now determine exactly how to apply this ruling to the thousands of affected workers. While a previous opinion from the TJUE’s Advocate General suggested that automatic conversion might not be mandatory for member states, this latest ruling emphasizes that the current “indefinite non-fixed” path is a failure.
For the thousands of interinos awaiting a resolution, the decision is a massive victory in the fight against labor precarity. For the Spanish government, it is a mandate for a historic reform of the public employment system.
The next critical checkpoint will be the Spanish Supreme Court’s official pronouncement on how it will translate the TJUE’s findings into national law.
Do you feel the Spanish government will move toward full permanent contracts, or will they attempt another legal workaround? Let us realize in the comments.
For more detailed legal analysis on this ruling, you can refer to the official reports from RTVE and Fijeza Ya.