Support teams in Spain just got the clearest signal yet that the old way of doing things won’t cut it anymore.
That signal comes in the form of one of the most ambitious customer service regulations in Europe – a law designed to strengthen consumer protections and set clear expectations for fair, transparent, and personalized customer service. Among its measures: new protections against spam calls, stronger transparency requirements, safeguards around personalized interactions, and measurable standards for speed, accessibility, and complaint handling within customer support.
It’s a significant shift, especially for large enterprises and essential-service providers. But while the first reaction may be concern about fines and audits, the larger opportunity is clear: this law forces the kind of modernization many organizations have needed for years.
Spain is often an early mover in consumer-protection regulation, and this shift could signal what future standards across the EU might look like, making it an important moment for all EMEA support leaders to pay attention to. If you haven’t already started exploring AI, take this as a sign that it’s time to rethink your ways of working and look into how automation can improve your overall customer experience.
Below, we break down what the law requires, what it means in practice, and how AI Agents like Fin can help teams meet regulatory expectations while delivering faster, more personal support at scale.
A closer look at Spain’s new customer service law
The law applies in full to providers of regulated services, including water, energy, passenger transport, postal services, pay-audiovisual media, and electronic communications, and also to any company (or group) that meets certain size and turnover thresholds, even if their core business falls outside those sectors.
Large companies (those with more than 250 employees and over €50 million in turnover) also hold additional obligations, particularly around multilingual support in Spain’s co-official language regions.
While the law is still moving through its final approval stages, the direction is clear: a broad set of obligations will apply to reinforce consumer rights, ensuring they can:
- Reach support quickly.
- Speak to a human when needed.
- Get clear information during outages or service disruptions.
- Have complaints handled promptly and on time.
To guarantee these rights, here are some of the expectations the law sets:
1. 95% of support calls must be answered within three minutes
This raises the bar significantly for responsiveness, especially during spikes, outages, billing cycles, or seasonal surges. Most support systems are not built for this level of agility.
2. Customers must be able to speak to a human on request
Automation is allowed, but it cannot be the only option. At any point during a call, a customer must be able to transfer to a human if they ask for one. Companies cannot trap customers in automated loops.
3. Support lines must be free of charge
Premium-rate numbers are prohibited. Customer service cannot generate revenue for the business, nor may it be used to upsell products.
4. Essential services must offer 24/7 support for continuity issues
Electricity, water, gas, telecoms, and transport providers must always be reachable at all hours when customers need to report service interruptions.
5. Complaints must be resolved within 15 days – or within five days for undue charges
This halves the previous general complaint window of 30 days and adds a much faster path for billing-error complaints. Companies must maintain records, assign tracking numbers, and ensure timely follow-up.
6. No spam calls or unwanted commercial pressure
Companies must identify business calls with a designated prefix, and customer -service calls with a different one. Telecom operators will be required to block calls that do not use these codes.
Additionally, contracts obtained via unsolicited calls will be legally null and void, protecting consumers from being pressured into commitments they never intended to make.
7. Companies must maintain a unified complaint-tracking system
All complaints, claims, and incidents must be recorded in a centralized system to ensure traceability.
8. Companies must pass annual external audits
These audits assess whether customer service processes are meeting the required standards.
9. Better linguistic and accessibility rights
Large companies operating in regions with co-official languages must be able to provide support in those languages. They must also ensure their customer service is accessible for vulnerable consumers, such as those with disabilities or older adults.
10. Fairer contract renewals
Companies must provide customers with 15 days’ notice prior to automatic renewal of online subscriptions and make cancellation simple.
Most support systems weren’t built for this level of speed or operational rigor. But the steps required to comply are the same ones that make service better for customers – and for your team delivering it.
How AI Agents can help teams comply and modernize their support offering
With the regulatory expectations clear, the question becomes: what does a modern, compliant support operation look like?
This is where AI plays a meaningful role. Not as a replacement for humans, but as a reliable front line that can handle a wide range of queries, including the most complex ones that require real depth, while keeping queues under control.
Adopting an AI Agent like Fin helps teams build a support model that meets regulatory expectations and improves customer experience across all your channels. Here’s how.
Handling calls within three minutes
Many organizations will struggle to meet the three-minute standard during normal times, let alone during spikes or busy seasons, without unsustainably scaling their teams. Fin can help by reducing the number of calls that reach your phone lines and Fin Voice will ensure the ones that do are handled quickly.
Reducing avoidable call volume before it reaches the queue
Many of the queries teams receive are predictable: outage updates, billing questions, account changes, and other repeatable issues. Fin can resolve these instantly across several channels, including live chat, SMS, email, and WhatsApp, using the content and processes your team already maintains.
You can also use your own proactive tools to notify customers about known triggers (such as interruptions or billing cycles) before they feel the need to call.
Answering the phone immediately
For customers who do call, Fin Voice can pick up straight away. It provides natural, conversational responses based on your existing knowledge and helps your team stay responsive during busy periods.
Making it easy to reach a human easier during spikes
When queues build up, Fin can capture the reason for the call, gather details, and prioritize the most urgent issues. If you offer callback options, Fin can help schedule them quickly so customers avoid long wait times, which is key for staying compliant during peak periods.
Ensuring customers can speak to a human when they ask
The law requires customers to reach a real person whenever they request one. Fin supports this by keeping the path to a human clear and dependable:
- Every interaction includes an option to speak to a person, and that option is accessible until the issue is resolved.
- When chosen, Fin hands over full context so human teams don’t start from scratch.
- If you show team availability or wait times, Fin can surface that information for customers.
- Escalations can be prioritized to ensure faster pickup.
- Alerts can notify on-call staff when urgent issues arise.
On the phone, Fin Voice follows the same principle. Callers can request a transfer at any moment, and Fin routes the call to the right team with context intact.
Delivering 24/7 support for continuity issues
Essential-service providers must be reachable at any hour when customers need to report service interruptions. Fin can help you meet this requirement without building a full overnight staffing model.
Always-on answers and triage
Fin provides first-line support at any hour of the day or night. Fin Voice brings this capability to the phone, giving callers immediate help even when your human team is offline. Fin can also direct customers to the latest updates you’ve published, such as outage information or status pages.
Routing urgent issues to the right people
When an issue requires human judgment, Fin gathers the necessary details and routes it to the appropriate on-call team using your existing after-hours processes. Teams can set up notifications so urgent issues are seen quickly.
Proactively surface what matters most
With AI Insights, Fin can also monitor for emerging patterns in customer conversations through Trending Topics. This means that if there’s a sudden spike in reports about a specific outage or a recurring question about a new process, Fin can flag these trends in real time. Your team is alerted to what’s top-of-mind for customers, so you can prioritize updates, publish targeted FAQs, or escalate critical issues, ensuring your support stays relevant and responsive, even overnight.
Meeting complaint-resolution and outage-communication requirements
Complaints and outages often create the biggest spikes in volume, and the new law increases pressure to respond quickly, keep customers informed, and maintain complete records.
A more structured complaint intake
Fin can recognize when a customer is lodging a complaint, gather required information, and initiate a record in your existing system with a clear ID assigned from the outset.
Clear ownership and deadline alignment
Your team can then use your case-management tools to apply the 15-day resolution timeline (or five says for undue charges). Fin’s structured intake helps ensure that ownership and next steps are visible, rather than buried in unstructured notes.
Faster, more consistent outage communications
During service interruptions, Fin can share the latest published information, provide estimated fix times when available, and direct customers to live updates.
On the phone, Fin Voice can triage incident-related calls quickly so callers aren’t waiting for a human agent just to receive basic information.
Supporting accessibility and multiple regional languages
While multilingual support is only mandatory for large companies operating in co-official language regions, it remains essential for meeting consumer expectations.
Fin helps by:
- Supporting multilingual, natural language interactions across voice and other channels.
- Operating within channels that support accessibility features, like channels compatible with screen readers or commonly used messaging apps.
- Offering “request a call” paths and collecting the necessary information up front so teams can follow up quickly for customers who prefer phone support.
Keeping support conversations free from sales pressure
The law prohibits customer service interactions from generating additional revenue or being used to offer new products. With Guidance, you can set Fin up to stay firmly within these boundaries by shaping how it responds, which topics it should avoid, and what it should prioritize when a customer is seeking help or lodging a complaint.
Strengthening reporting, auditability, and record-keeping
The law raises expectations around documentation and audit readiness. Fin helps by making customer interactions more structured and consistent:
- When a conversation involves a complaint, Fin can ensure the required information is captured and a clear ID assigned.
- That ID can follow the interaction so it remains easy to trace.
- Consistent intake gives you better visibility into key metrics regulators care about, like response times, time to first human contact, escalation volume, and whether complaints are resolved within required timelines.
- Transcripts, summaries, and metadata can be retained until cases are resolved, supporting audit requirements.
- Many organizations maintain internal compliance playbooks outlining processes and owners. Fin’s structured intake helps keep these practices reliable.
- Leverage Insights to identify trending topics, optimize processes and measure service quality.
Modernizing for better customer experiences
Spain’s new customer service law raises the bar on speed, access, and accountability. As a support leader, it’s natural to worry about how your team will cope.
The reality is that meeting these expectations through people alone would put unsustainable pressure on already stretched support teams. The risk of burnout and operational chaos is real, which is why an AI Agent like Fin can bring welcome relief.
By handling everything from high-volume, repetitive questions to many of the deeper, more involved issues customers raise, Fin keeps queues manageable and prevents the strain from falling entirely on your human team, helping everyone stay above water as expectations rise.
For companies operating across the EU, adapting early to Spain’s stricter expectations can build resilience for whatever comes next – whether that ends up being driven by regulation or customer demand.
