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TOURISM

Valencia police pile pressure on tourist flats with more stiff fines

Valencian police are stepping up their crackdown on illegal tourist apartments in the city, with the number of fines and complaints by locals skyrocketing over the last year.

Valencia police pile pressure on tourist flats with more stiff fines
Valencia is clamping down on illegal holiday lets with stiff fines. Photo: Bearphotos/Freepik

Police in Valencia are clamping down on illegal tourist accommodation in the Mediterranean city.

This follows a request from the local council to put pressure on tourist flats operating without the proper licences, with the number of fines increasing exponentially in the last year.

As of early June a total of 301 fines had been handed in the coastal city, which means that so far this year fines have increased by 358 percent compared to the same period in 2023.

In 2022 just 73 fines were handed out, and in 2023 there were 84. The areas of the city with the most fines were Trànsits, the old town (known as Ciutat Vella in Valencian), Marítim and Russafa, the trendy nightlife district many locals feel is falling foul of gentrification.

The Federation of Neighbourhood Associations of Valencia (FAAVV) has demanded that local authorities hike up the fines for illegal tourism apartments in the city. The current bracket is €600 for minor offences and €4,000 for serious infractions, not enough to dissuade some landlords, they argue. 

READ ALSO: Valencia to crack down on tourist flats in historic old town

Valencia city council recently approved plans to crack down on the use of residential properties as tourist housing in the historic centre in Ciutat Vella, which includes the picturesque neighbourhoods of Velluters, Pilar, Mercat, Carmen, La Seu and La Xerea. Council estimates suggest that 10 percent of all properties there are now used for tourist rentals.

The council has also unanimously voted to suspend new licences for tourist accommodation for at least a year, as average rents in the city are now over €1,000 a month.

READ ALSO: Valencia to stop issuing licences to Airbnb-style lets as rents soar past €1,000

According to figures reported by Spanish daily El País, more than 3,500 tourist flats have opened in Valencia in the last year alone. However, as in almost all major cities across Spain, there are also many thousands of unlicensed tourist properties. 

This comes amid growing anti-tourism sentiment in Spain, with protests in Madrid, Barcelona, Málaga and the Balearic and Canary Islands in recent months. Locals argue the increase in platforms such as Airbnb inflates the local rental market and prices locals out of their own neighbourhoods.

In June, Barcelona mayor Jaume Collboni announced that the Catalan capital would attempt to ‘eliminate’ all tourist rental flats from the city by 2029 by not renewing licences for 10,000 properties in the city.

Local media in Valencia reports that the number of fines in Spain’s third city has soared due to an ‘inspection plan’ deployed by the council of mayor María José Catalá. Valencia’s urban planning councillor Juan Giner recently stated in a plenary session that police had sanctioned 166 illegal flats in just four months.

However, what is striking about this rapid increase in fines is not only their growing number but the geographical spread across almost all areas of Valencia, including those that are not traditionally tourist areas but increasingly targeted by property speculators.

The problem is becoming widespread enough in Spain that the national government is now toying with the idea of regulation.

Spain’s Minister of Housing and Urban Agenda, Isabel Rodríguez, announced recently that the government is studying a reform of the Horizontal Property Law in order to allow property owners to veto tourist apartments in their residential buildings.

In Spain, each building has what’s known as a community of neighbours, referred to as la comunidad in Spanish, and essentially the Spanish government is considering allowing them veto power over tourist apartments in their buildings.

READ ALSO: Spain considers banning tourist lets in residential buildings

Member comments

  1. But how is banning tourist accommodation going to relieve the housing problem? No person in their right mind would offer a property for long-term let, because before they know it, their “renters” will turn into squatters, and they will have to wait months and pay a fortune to get them out. How about changing the law so it doesn’t favour squatting, then maybe homeowners will be more willing to accept long-term lets over holiday rentals.

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VALENCIA

Why a row is brewing over Valencia’s refusal to hang the LGBTQ+ flag

A culture war battle is brewing in Valencia after the right-wing city council decided not to hang the LGBTQ+ flag on the balcony of the town hall building just a few hours before International Pride Day.

Why a row is brewing over Valencia's refusal to hang the LGBTQ+ flag

This has caused outrage among the city’s LGBTQ+ community and beyond, with national politicians wading into the debate and controversial comments from city council members and even the city’s mayor.

Valencia’s city council is a coalition of the centre-right Partido Popular and far-right Vox party.

In response to the decision, the opposition PSPV then hung a huge 60 metre long LGBTQ+ flag from its party headquarters in front of the town hall.

Faced with criticism from opposition parties, the city’s PP mayor, María José Catalá, stated that the council won’t hang the flag from the town hall because, if it did, it would also be obliged to put up “all the flags and social needs” that Valencia has.

“I respect the freedom of my opposition to put up whatever they consider in their offices, but if I put up the Pride flag I also have to put up the Alzheimer’s, ALS or cancer flags,” Catalá said.

The comment has caused widespread anger. Spain’s Minister for Equality, Ana Redondo, challenged Catalá on social media. “Loving is not an illness. The WHO eliminated homosexuality from its list of psychiatric illnesses in 1990,” the minister said.

The Socialist-led Spanish government is studying whether to take legal action against Valencia’s mayor, to which she has replied “I’m not a homophobe, give it a rest!”. Other members of her government have accused the opposition of politicising Pride celebrations. 

In response to the growing criticism, sources from the town hall have stressed to Spanish state broadcaster RTVE that no flags or banners were placed on the town hall balcony because, as announced last November, they have been replaced by two digital screens which are used to celebrate international days, such as International Pride Day, which projected LGBTQ+ material in the weekend leading up.

“The problem is that you’re not in power now, and you’re bothered by the PP being in government and that we’ve celebrated Pride in our city, that’s the problem,” PP politician Rocio Gil told the Valencian City Hall.

“We’ve carried out the same celebrations that you did (Socialists) and even more activities”.

In addition, 200 posters were put up on billboards around the city, seven buses were given special LGBTQ+ designs, and the outside of the town hall itself was illuminated with a projection of the LGTBQ+ flag.

It’s not the first time that a row break outs in Spain over the refusal of right-wing governed town halls to hang LGBTQ+ flags.

In fact, Guadalajara, Toledo, Talavera de la Reina and Ciudad Real have all followed Valencia City Hall’s example this year. 

Spain consistently ranks among the most gay-friendly countries in the world according to international studies but there is opposition in some sectors of society to progressive measures such as these.

READ ALSO: Is Spain really a tolerant country when it comes to LGBTIQ+ people?

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