Goya Award for Best Supporting Actress
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| Goya Award for Best Supporting Actress | |
|---|---|
The 2026 recipient: Nagore Aranburu | |
| Native name | Premio Goya a la mejor interpretación femenina de reparto |
| Awarded for | Best performance by an actress in a supporting role in a Spanish film of the year |
| Country | Spain |
| Presented by | Academy of Cinematographic Arts and Sciences of Spain (AACCE) |
| First award | 1st Goya Awards (1986) |
| Most recent winner | Nagore Aranburu Sundays (2025) |
| Website | Official website |
The Goya Award for Best Supporting Actress (Spanish: Premio Goya a la mejor interpretación femenina de reparto) is one of the Goya Awards presented annually by the Academy of Cinematographic Arts and Sciences of Spain (AACCE) since the awards debuted in 1986. It is given in honor of an actress who has delivered an outstanding supporting performance in a Spanish film.
Since its inception, the award has been given to 31 actresses. At the 1st Goya Awards ceremony held in 1987, Verónica Forqué was the first winner of this award for her role in Year of Enlightment.
Verónica Forqué, Rosa Maria Sardà, María Barranco and Candela Peña have received the most awards in this category with two awards each. Chus Lampreave and Terele Pávez have been nominated on six occasions with each winning one award, being the most nominated actresses in the category. María Barranco and Candela Peña follow with five nominations each.
Actresses that won or were nominated for this category have appeared in film festivals such as the Málaga Film Festival, where Elvira Mínguez (Tapas) and Susi Sánchez (Lullaby) won Best Actress while Nathalie Poza (Rosa's Wedding) won the Best Supporting Actress. At the Cannes Film Festival, Carmen Maura, Lola Dueñas and Blanca Portillo won the Best Actress award alongside the female cast of Volver (2006).
As of the 2026 ceremony, Nagore Aranburu is the most recent winner in this category for her role as Madre Priora Isabel in Sundays.
Winners and nominees
In the following table, the years are listed as per Academy convention, and generally correspond to the year of film release; the ceremonies are always held the following year.
| ‡ | Indicates the winner |
|---|
1980s


| Year | Actress | Role(s) | English title | Original title |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1986 (1st) [1][2][3][4] |
Verónica Forqué ‡ | Irene | Year of Enlightment | El año de las luces |
| María Luisa Ponte | Alejandra | The Bastard Brother of God | El hermano bastardo de Dios | |
| Chus Lampreave | Doña Tránsito | Year of Enlightment | El año de las luces | |
| 1987 (2nd) |
Verónica Forqué ‡ | Monique | Moors and Christians | Moros y cristianos |
| Marisa Paredes | Olga | Turnip Top | Cara de acelga | |
| Terele Pávez | Teresa | Laura | Laura, del cielo llega la noche | |
| 1988 (3rd) |
María Barranco ‡ | Candela | Women on the Verge of a Nervous Breakdown | Mujeres al borde de un ataque de nervios |
| Laura Cepeda | Policía | Baton Rouge | ||
| Chus Lampreave | Emilia | Wait for Me in Heaven | Espérame en el cielo | |
| Terele Pávez | Madre | Winter Diary | Diario de invierno | |
| Julieta Serrano | Lucía | Women on the Verge of a Nervous Breakdown | Mujeres al borde de un ataque de nervios | |
| 1989 (4th) |
María Asquerino ‡ | Marcela | The Sea and the Weather | El mar y el tiempo |
| María Barranco | Nena Colman | The Things of Love | Las cosas del querer | |
| Chus Lampreave | Doña Antonia | Going South Shopping | Bajarse al moro | |
| Amparo Rivelles | Isabel de Farnesio | Esquilache | ||
| Concha Velasco | Pastora Patermo | |||
1990s




2000s





2010s



2020s


