diff --git a/spring-boot-dependencies/pom.xml b/spring-boot-dependencies/pom.xml
index 0d1abd3ffe0..9c9e9d52ba3 100644
--- a/spring-boot-dependencies/pom.xml
+++ b/spring-boot-dependencies/pom.xml
@@ -949,6 +949,11 @@
+
+ org.spockframework
+ spock-spring
+ ${spock.version}
+
org.springframework
spring-framework-bom
diff --git a/spring-boot-docs/src/main/asciidoc/spring-boot-features.adoc b/spring-boot-docs/src/main/asciidoc/spring-boot-features.adoc
index c3b6e7aa453..c6c69bddb78 100644
--- a/spring-boot-docs/src/main/asciidoc/spring-boot-features.adoc
+++ b/spring-boot-docs/src/main/asciidoc/spring-boot-features.adoc
@@ -2005,8 +2005,11 @@ the actual port that was allocated for the duration of the tests.
[[boot-features-testing-spring-boot-applications-with-spock]]
==== Using Spock to test Spring Boot applications
-If you wish to use Spock to test a Spring Boot application then you cannot use the
-`@SpringApplicationConfiguration` annotation that was
+If you wish to use Spock to test a Spring Boot application you should add a dependency
+on Spock's `spock-spring` module to your application's build. `spock-spring` integrates
+Spring's test framework into Spock.
+
+Please note that you cannot use the `@SpringApplicationConfiguration` annotation that was
<> as Spock
https://code.google.com/p/spock/issues/detail?id=349[does not find the
`@ContextConfiguration` meta-annotation]. To work around this limitation, you should use