14 official data sources, the BOE every day, and an AI that connects it all. Ask in plain language. Get answers in seconds.
Spain generates millions of official records every year — unemployment by municipality, average household income, mortgages by province, municipal budgets since 2010, active companies by sector, IRPF declarations. They're out there, on government websites, in impossible formats, updated months late with no easy way to query them.
datasector.io normalizes them, unifies them and makes them queryable in plain language.
You write: 'What is the municipality with the highest unemployment in Andalusia in 2025?'
The AI interprets the question, runs the query against official data and returns the answer in seconds — with an Excel-exportable table.
No SQL. No government websites. No downloading spreadsheets.
SEPE (unemployment & contracts) · INE (census, income, tourism, companies) · AEAT (IRPF by municipality) · Municipal budgets 2010-2025 · Municipal settlements · Bank of Spain · CPI · EPA · Mortgages 1994-2026 · Companies Registry · and more.
Historical data from 2002 in some sources. Automatic updates when official bodies publish new data.
First 10 queries free, no card required.
Each source alone is already useful. Combined, they answer questions that were previously impossible without a data analyst.
The system cross-references the tables, runs the calculations and explains the result. You just ask.
Every morning, before the working day begins, datasector.io automatically processes everything published in the Official State Gazette. Our AI evaluates each disposition, classifies it by relevance and citizen impact, and prepares a plain-language summary.
At 9:00, the result arrives in your inbox: the BOE news that affects you most, explained without legal jargon.
Not all BOE dispositions carry the same weight. Between 100 and 300 documents are published every day — routine appointments, administrative agreements, laws with real impact. Our AI reads them all and decides which ones deserve attention.
Some dispositions introduce significant changes in the articles without the title reflecting it. These can be modifications to rights, new obligations, changes to benefits or conditions that affect many citizens but go unnoticed among dozens of publications.
When our AI detects this type of document, it flags it. Not because they're irregular — they're official, valid publications — but because we believe they're worth reading more carefully.
The complete BOE archive from January 2025 is indexed and available for natural language search. No search operators, no need to know which section the regulation is in.
Write your question as you'd ask a colleague — the system finds the most relevant documents and responds with the sources and links to the official PDFs.
When you save a BOE document, our AI studies it in depth and sends you a personal briefing: what it establishes, who it affects, what changes, key dates and what the headline doesn't say. It's not an automatic summary — it's an analysis designed so you know exactly what to do with that information.
The daily summary so you miss nothing. The weekly one to read only what matters. Both free, no plan required. Daily · Mon-Sat · 9:30 AM — 5-8 news items from that morning's BOE, already processed by AI. 2-minute read with your coffee. Weekly · Fridays · 12:00 PM — Top 10 of the week, ordered by impact.
Subscribe from /boe.
Start with the BOE — no account, no card needed. When you need to cross-reference data, you have 10 free queries to try.