Spain Doesn’t Need Fewer Tourists—It Needs More Homes
The real crisis isn’t who’s visiting. It’s who can no longer afford to stay.
Spain welcomed 94 million tourists last year and raked in €126 billion. Our beaches are packed, our restaurants full, and our cities alive with energy. Tourism isn’t the problem—it’s doing its job.
But while we celebrate record-breaking tourism, something far more urgent is being ignored: we’re not building enough homes—especially homes people can afford to own.
This isn’t a tourism crisis. It’s a housing failure.
In the early 2000s, Spain built over 500,000 homes annually. Today? Just 100,000, according to INE. BBVA warns we’ll be short 1.5 million homes by 2030. Meanwhile, Idealista reports rents are up 15% in major cities.
This isn’t a statistic—it’s a young teacher living in their childhood bedroom at 34. A nurse commuting two hours to work. A family of four priced out of their own town by investors who will never set foot in it.
Tourists didn’t cause this. Decades of underbuilding and red tape did.
Immigration Fuels Housing Demand—And the Government Fails to Act
Spain’s population grew by roughly 458,000 in 2024, mostly due to immigration. This surge created an estimated 200,000–250,000 new households annually, piling enormous pressure on an already broken housing system.
In cities like Barcelona, the foreign-born population grew over 15 times faster than native Spaniards between 2022 and 2023—yet the government’s response has been weak, reactive, and ineffective.
Instead of planning for this demographic reality, officials remain stuck in bureaucratic inertia and short-term gestures. No serious strategy exists to expand affordable housing for newcomers or ensure their arrival doesn’t push locals further out of the market.
Government inaction and lack of foresight mean rising demand crashes headfirst into a housing system strangled by years of neglect and red tape. Families—both new and old—are left scrambling for a place to live in a country that seems unwilling to plan for its own future.
Tourism’s Role in Housing Pressure—A Convenient Scapegoat
In 2024, Spain welcomed a record 94 million international tourists who spent approximately €126 billion, underpinning a crucial sector of the economy. But the surge in short-term rentals, especially through platforms like Airbnb, has fueled rising housing costs and reduced availability for residents.
The government’s crackdown on illegal rentals—removing nearly 66,000 properties and planning to eliminate 10,000 authorized tourist apartments in Barcelona by 2028—is more performative than practical. These actions barely scratch the surface and ignore the core issues: stagnant housing supply, prohibitive taxes on locals, and the crushing red tape that blocks new construction.
Tourism gets blamed, but it’s really the system itself that’s failing the people.
Public Housing Helps—but It’s Not the Solution
We need affordable housing. We need tenant protections. But if we stop at rentals, we fail.
The real answer is ownership.
Not as speculation. Not as an asset class. But as a right.
Owning your home means:
Pride—in what you’ve built and where you live.
Security—knowing you’re not one rent hike away from being uprooted.
Belonging—feeling part of a neighborhood, not just passing through.
Motivation—because when people own, they invest—in their homes, their streets, their future.
Ownership isn’t a luxury. It’s the foundation of stability in a country where wages are low, costs are high, and the social contract feels broken.
Four Fixes to Reclaim Housing—and Hope
1. Rezone. Build. Let People Own.
Spain doesn’t lack land—it’s drowning in unused space. What we lack is permission to build where people actually want to live.
Yes, protect natural parks, mountains, and coastal ecosystems—untouched land should stay that way. But much of what’s zoned “rustic” isn’t pristine wilderness—it’s abandoned farmland.
Take Valencia’s orange plantations, for example. The local citrus industry has been gutted by cheap imports and unfair international standards. Thousands of hectares lie unused, with farmers pushed out by forces beyond their control.
We can’t keep these lands frozen under the guise of sustainability. Either we support local farmers properly and revive the land—or we unlock it for planned, affordable housing.
This includes:
Reclassifying non-productive rustic land for housing development.
Prioritizing infrastructure and public services alongside new housing.
Encouraging co-housing, self-build plots, and cooperatives to foster community ownership.
This isn’t about destroying the countryside—it’s about making use of land already taken from nature but now left to rot.
Let locals live where they work. Let families own instead of rent forever. Let this land serve the people again.
2. Revive the 30,000 Dying Villages
Half of Spain’s villages are vanishing—not for lack of charm, but for lack of purpose. With no jobs, no broadband, and no future, people leave. What remains? Brochures and ruins.
We must:
Return small-scale industry to rural areas with targeted tax incentives and grants.
Fund training centers for trades, tech, and sustainable agriculture.
Deploy real broadband and digital infrastructure, not just empty promises.
Offer land and affordable housing to remote workers and entrepreneurs.
One remote worker can lead to a café. A café brings life. Life brings community. The cycle starts with one family, one business, one reason to stay.
Tourism can be part of the mix—but it can’t be the backbone. Villages need residents, not visitors.
3. Unleash Entrepreneurs
Spain is choking innovation before it begins. Entrepreneurs pay income tax, social security, and overhead before earning a single euro. It’s a death sentence for anyone trying to start something new.
To build a vibrant, self-sufficient economy, we must:
Eliminate startup taxes for the first 12–24 months.
Cut social security minimums until profit is made.
Create fast-track visas and housing access for international founders.
Allow live-work hybrid spaces in rural areas for creators, tech workers, and freelancers.
Entrepreneurs don’t want handouts—they want a fair runway. Give them that, and they’ll create jobs, community, and growth.
4. Fix Public Spending—No More Excuses
Spain spends nearly half its GDP through government. Yet families struggle with permits, hospitals clog up, and public offices still run on paper.
We need to:
Digitalize every government service.
Publish every euro of spending online.
Scrap overlapping agencies and outdated departments.
This isn’t austerity—it’s accountability. Families budget to the last cent—so should the government.
Use savings to build homes, power local projects, and make public services worth the taxes we pay.
Government Measures: Too Little, Too Late—and Misguided
The government’s so-called “solutions” amount to little more than political theatre. Proposing a 100% tax on property purchases by non-EU residents who aren’t legal residents is a token gesture that dodges the real issues.
Removing 66,000 illegal tourist rentals and planning to eliminate 10,000 authorized tourist apartments in Barcelona by 2028 might sound like progress—but it’s mostly symbolic. It fails to address the root causes: decades of stagnant housing supply, suffocating red tape, and a tax system that punishes local buyers and entrepreneurs.
Meanwhile, tens of thousands of frustrated citizens protest high rents and housing shortages. The government hears them but doesn’t act, choosing instead to scapegoat tourists and immigrants while letting bureaucracy and political inertia deepen the crisis.
Until leaders stop passing blame and start fixing foundations, families will keep losing homes and futures.
This is not about survival.
It’s about living.
Spain isn’t a postcard.
It’s not a theme park.
It’s not a hotel for someone else’s dream.
It’s our country.
Our families.
Our future.
And we’re not asking for handouts. We’re demanding a system where people who work here, live here, and love it here can own a piece of it.
Let the tourists come.
But let the people stay.