The BOE is published every day of the year except Sundays, according to its usual calendar.
The absence of an ordinary edition does not prevent an extraordinary bulletin from being published when there is a rule or decision whose entry into force cannot wait until the next business day.
Until an extraordinary issue appears, Saturday's bulletin remains the most recent edition.
What the last BOE published
Saturday the 11th's issue includes appointments and dismissals in the Administration, public employment calls, collective agreements, and new provisions.
Among its contents is a selection process for permanent staff of the General State Administration in professional groups M3, M2, and M1, both by open access and by internal promotion.
Salary updates for various companies and sectors, changes in certain tobacco prices, and administrative agreements are also published.
When the next BOE comes out
The next ordinary edition is scheduled for Monday, July 13.
The publication time may vary in the early morning, although the content is usually available on the BOE's electronic headquarters at the beginning of the day.
The calendar allows you to consult issues by date and access both the complete summary and each provision in HTML or PDF format.
What is and how to check if there is an extraordinary BOE
The organism's cover always shows the last published bulletin.
If urgent legislation were approved on Sunday, the extraordinary edition would appear differentiated and with its own number. It should not be considered to exist until it appears on the official portal.
Users can also use the BOE's alert system to receive notifications about regulations, job openings, appointments, or specific matters.
What effects does a rule published in the BOE have
Official publication allows knowledge of the full text, the date of entry into force, and the provisions that are modified or repealed.
Not all rules start to apply on the same day. Some come into force after their publication, others the next day, and others set a later date in their articles.
Therefore, the headline or summary does not replace reading the full provision when you need to know a deadline, a requirement, or a specific right.