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Spain Landlords Fear Unpaid Rent

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More landlords in Spain are tightening rental contracts over fears of unpaid rent. Credit : Rawpixel.com, Shutterstock

A growing number of landlords in Spain are rewriting their rental contracts after hearing too many stories about tenants stopping payments and staying in properties for months without leaving.

For some owners, the fear is no longer hypothetical. It is personal.

People talk about neighbours who spent more than a year without receiving rent. Others mention relatives trapped in expensive court procedures while still paying mortgages, taxes and community fees on flats they could not recover quickly.

And that growing anxiety is starting to change the way many people rent out homes in Spain.

Housing lawyer and economist María Piñeiro recently reignited the debate after posting a video on TikTok warning landlords about the financial reality of unpaid rent cases.

What caught people’s attention was not dramatic language or legal jargon.It was how blunt she sounded.

“If they stop paying, you could spend more than a year without receiving anything,” she warned.

That sentence alone triggered thousands of reactions online because it touched a nerve many landlords already feel quietly in the background.

Especially small property owners.

Not investment funds.

Not large companies.

Ordinary people renting one apartment and depending on that monthly income to help cover household expenses.

The clause many landlords in Spain are now insisting tenants sign

One of Piñeiro’s main recommendations is something many tenants are likely to see appearing more often inside rental agreements : An anti default clause.

According to the lawyer, the idea is simple. If tenants stop paying rent, their details can potentially be added to debtor databases, which may later affect their ability to rent elsewhere or apply for loans.

And apparently, that possibility alone makes some repeat defaulters nervous enough to walk away before signing.

Piñeiro even suggested landlords should pay close attention if a tenant refuses the clause from the start because, in her words, that can already be a bad sign.

That type of thinking reflects how cautious many landlords have become in recent years.

A few years ago, plenty of owners were mainly worried about finding someone reliable and keeping the property occupied.Now conversations often revolve around something else entirely.

What happens if the tenant suddenly stops paying.And more importantly, how long it takes to solve the situation afterwards.

Because that is the part many landlords say feels exhausting.

Not only the missed rent itself, but the feeling of being stuck in limbo while bills continue arriving every month.

More owners are paying for rent protection insurance even if they dislike the extra cost

Another thing changing rapidly in Spain’s rental market is the growing popularity of unpaid rent insurance.

Many owners used to see it as an annoying extra expense.

Now some landlords say they almost consider it essential.

Piñeiro recommends choosing policies that start covering missed payments immediately and include legal assistance and eviction procedures rather than only partial compensation.

And while landlords do not exactly enjoy paying for another insurance product, many now see it as less painful than facing months of uncertainty without income.That uncertainty is what seems to worry owners most.

Not everybody believes they will necessarily lose their property forever.

But many are terrified of entering a legal process that drags on endlessly while expenses continue piling up.

The debate has become even more emotional because Spain’s housing crisis is already tense enough without adding mistrust between landlords and tenants.

Some owners now admit they reject potential tenants much faster than before.

Others request stronger proof of income, permanent contracts or guarantors.

And some are abandoning traditional rentals altogether.

Room rentals, for example, are becoming increasingly attractive for certain landlords because they fall under different legal frameworks and often provide owners with slightly more flexibility.

Some landlords are now choosing fast exits instead of long legal battles

One of the most uncomfortable parts of Piñeiro’s advice was probably also the most realistic.

In some situations, she says, landlords may actually lose less money by negotiating directly with non paying tenants and recovering the keys quickly rather than fighting through long court proceedings hoping to recover every euro later.

That can mean accepting losses immediately in order to avoid even bigger losses later.

It sounds frustrating because, honestly, many owners feel it is unfair.But the reality is that lengthy legal disputes can become financially draining very quickly.

Piñeiro also warned landlords against offering money to tenants simply to leave the property voluntarily, something that occasionally happens in desperate situations.

According to her, once things reach that stage, legal problems often become even messier.The wider discussion around unpaid rent in Spain has become deeply polarised over recent years.

Tenant groups argue stronger protections are necessary because rising rents and housing insecurity are pushing vulnerable people into impossible situations.

Many landlords respond that ordinary owners are increasingly carrying huge financial risks with too little protection themselves.

And somewhere in the middle are thousands of people simply trying to rent homes without ending up in conflict.

What seems clear now is that Spain’s rental contracts are becoming longer, stricter and much more detailed than they used to be.

Trust alone is no longer enough for many landlords.

People want guarantees.Or at least the feeling that if things go wrong, they will not spend the next year trapped inside a legal nightmare waiting for somebody else to leave their property.

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British Pilgrim Dies After Fall On Camino De Santiago

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Puente la Reina village, Navarra on Camino route. Credit: Ayuntamiento PLR

A local resident discovered the lifeless body of a 64-year-old English pilgrim in the Robo River close to Puente la Reina-Gares on Friday morning, May 22. Police Foral officers, the police force of Navarra, rushed to the spot after receiving the alert at 9.30am.

Location and circumstances of the fall

Investigators suspect the man attempted to cross a ramshackle wooden bridge constructed from logs and pallets. This unofficial crossing is said to sit around two to three metres above the water level and serves local people accessing allotment plots. Reports indicate the structure does not form part of any official Camino de Santiago path. Registration details confirm the pilgrim was booked in as a registered guest at Hotel Albergue Jakue and nearby Albergue El Peregrino on Wednesday night. Concerns grew following failure to return for his booked accommodation among those around him.

Emergency services deployment

Firefighters from Navarra joined a duty doctor and an ambulance crew at the riverbank site. Medical staff could only confirm the death upon arrival near the riverbank on the way out of town towards Pamplona.

Police investigation underway

Officers from the regional force continue to examine details of what happened. Judicial authorities are now overseeing the case as standard procedure for such incidents. Everything points to an accidental slip that led to a plunge into the river. A possibility exists that the man struck his head during the fall from the height of the bridge. A local gardener who uses the bridge daily reported no unusual activity the previous day. Discovery occurred when the gardener returned to his plot the following morning and saw the body partially submerged.

Dangers on the pilgrimage

Another pilgrim lost his life on 17 April near Santiago de Compostela. That incident took place in the rúa do Beado area of O Milladoiro after the traveller suffered a sudden illness. Emergency teams from various services attended but could not revive him at the scene.

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Estepona Footbridge Accessibility Upgrade At Long Last

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Bridging a dangerous road. Credit: EWN

Residents in the Costa del Sol area can look forward to safer and easier crossings thanks to fresh approval for improvements to a vital pedestrian bridge.

Historic campaign that built the crossing

Stella Bosworth spotted serious dangers on the busy A-7 road back in 1984 while working for a British tourism company. Her strong call for action pushed forward plans for a safe footbridge near developing residential zones. Alan James, her then boss, and a leading British developer and chairman of The Experience Group, stepped in to fund and complete the structure within six months when public support stalled. This elevated walkway has protected countless people since then, linking communities on both sides of the busy motorway.

New ramps will transform access

Permission now allows full upgrades focused on accessibility. Oscar Puente, Spain’s transport minister, finally gave permission for the works to start, allowing Estepona jurisdiction over this, what would normally be the Ministry of Transport. Plans include concrete access ramps on each side with a maximum gradient of 12.5 per cent. Elderly users, individuals with reduced mobility, cyclists and parents pushing strollers will gain straightforward passage across the A-7. The local council will cover all construction costs after more than three years of preparations. Technical details came together with input from nearby property owners and residents.

Communities united by better connections

El Paraiso and Benamara stand to benefit directly from smoother links across the motorway. Daily journeys become simpler for hundreds of households in these outskirts of Estepona. Families can move freely between homes, shops and leisure spots without relying on steep stairs. This project builds on the bridge’s original life-saving purpose and reflects ongoing efforts to support growing populations in the region.

Contracting processes have started, with construction expected to follow in the near future. The original 1980s bridge, built with mixed concrete and steel beams on metal supports, will retain its core while gaining modern features for universal use.

Alan James and Stella Bosworth’s early determination continues to shape safer travel for new generations. Their story reminds many how individual resolve combined with community backing can deliver lasting infrastructure. Local users express relief at the progress toward inclusive crossings that strengthen neighbourhood ties.

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Seafood Fair With Dishes From Just €7

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Benalmadena’s delicious seafood fair is returning to Plaza Adolfo Suarez from Thursday, May 28 to Sunday, May 31, giving you the freshest seafood the Mediterranean and marina has to offer. Last year thousands of visitors passed through the Benalmadena fish event enjoying a huge variety of dishes straight from the sea. 

Portions will start from as little as €7, which for that that is normally on the pricier side of things, this is an affordable way to sample freshly prepared seafood without ramped up restaurant prices. Visitors can feast on favourites such as succulent cooked prawns, light seafood salad, clams, razor clams, traditional paella and popular fideua, all served amongst the beautiful scenery of the waterfront. 

Popular traditional dishes and stunning spring weather

Last year the seafood platters and rice dishes were the biggest hit for value for money, served in extra generous portions and prepared with delicious fresh local ingredients. The winning combination of good value, warm late‑spring weather and the marina backdrop brought families, residents, day-trippers all for a mooch and munch over the course of the day. 

Musical entertainment, sea views and great value €1 parking

Live musical entertainment with feed the ears while you feast on the food. Plenty of outdoor seating available and for those people driving they can use the Pueblo Sol parking during the fair for just €1, making it a stress free travel option for anyone wanting to be close to the action. 

Local and national brands both supporting the event

The fair is supported by a number of local businesses and many well‑known brands, with this year’s poster featuring collaborators including San Miguel, Coca‑Cola, Cumaca, and several local popular Benalmadena hospitality establishments. 

The return of the well-loved Benalmadena seafood fair is from Thursday, May 28 to Sunday, May 31. For more information visit the Benalmadena town hall website. 

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