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Pool Guests Causing Problems? Know Your Rights

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Communal pools are a common source of neighbour disputes during the summer. Credit : Dance60, Shutterstock

Summer has barely begun and, in many apartment complexes across Spain, the same argument is already making the rounds.

You head down to the communal pool hoping for a quiet afternoon, only to find it packed. The neighbour from two floors up has arrived with children, cousins, friends and perhaps a few people nobody in the building has ever seen before. Sunbeds disappear within minutes, the pool is suddenly full, and residents start asking the same question every summer :  Surely there must be a limit?

The answer isn’t quite as simple as yes or no.

Spain’s Horizontal Property Law (Ley de Propiedad Horizontal) doesn’t say how many guests someone can invite to the communal pool. But that doesn’t mean residents can treat shared facilities as if they were private property. Depending on the circumstances and your community’s own rules, there are ways to deal with neighbours who repeatedly turn the pool into their own private gathering.

The law doesn’t ban guests, but it does expect common sense

One of the biggest misconceptions is that communal pools are reserved exclusively for residents.

In reality, many communities allow owners to bring guests from time to time, and there’s nothing in the national law that sets a maximum number.

Where problems begin is when occasional visitors become a regular crowd.

Imagine arriving at the pool every Saturday to find one apartment has filled half the sunbeds with friends. Or finding that your children can’t even get into the water because one family has invited so many people that everyone else has been squeezed out.

That’s exactly the kind of situation Article 9 of the Horizontal Property Law is designed to prevent.

The article says owners must use shared areas properly and avoid stopping other residents from enjoying the same facilities. It isn’t really about counting guests. It’s about making sure everyone can use what they’ve all paid to maintain.

That’s an important difference, because many neighbourhood disputes aren’t caused by one extra visitor. They’re caused by repeated behaviour that makes the communal space feel less communal.

Before arguing with your neighbour, check your community rules

This is something many homeowners never think about until a disagreement starts.

While the national law doesn’t set guest limits, individual communities often do.

Many apartment complexes have internal regulations covering everything from pool opening hours to inflatable toys, barbecues and the number of visitors residents can bring.

If those rules exist, they apply to everyone.

So if your community has agreed that each property can only bring a certain number of guests and one neighbour ignores that every weekend, the residents’ association has something concrete to rely on.

The law allows communities to enforce their own internal rules, starting with a formal warning if necessary. If somebody repeatedly ignores those rules and continues causing problems, the matter can eventually be taken further under Article 7.2 of the Horizontal Property Law.

That doesn’t mean every disagreement ends up before a judge.

In reality, many disputes are resolved long before that stage, particularly once residents realise the community is prepared to enforce the rules that everyone agreed to follow.

No guest rules? You’re not necessarily out of options

Of course, not every community has a detailed rulebook.In many buildings, nobody has ever thought about setting limits because it simply hasn’t been an issue until now.

If that’s the case, you can’t suddenly invent a maximum number of guests.

But that doesn’t leave residents powerless.

If large groups are creating excessive noise, blocking access to shared areas or repeatedly preventing other neighbours from enjoying the pool, the community may still be able to act using the general protections already included in the law.

A practical solution is often much simpler.

Rather than allowing the same argument to happen every weekend, residents can ask for the issue to be added to the agenda of the next owners’ meeting.

With a simple majority, the community can approve internal rules covering guest access to the swimming pool. Once those rules are in place, everyone knows where they stand, making future disagreements much easier to resolve.

The biggest summer arguments are rarely about the swimming pool

Interestingly, it’s often not the water that causes the frustration.

It’s the feeling that one person is treating a shared facility as if it belongs only to them.

Nobody expects a communal pool to be empty in July or August. People understand that children will play, friends will visit and weekends will always be busier than weekdays.

What tends to upset neighbours is when the balance disappears.

If one apartment consistently brings so many visitors that other residents struggle to find a place to sit or even get into the pool, it’s no longer just a question of being sociable. It becomes a question of whether everyone is still able to enjoy the facilities they all contribute towards through their community fees.

That’s why Spain’s Horizontal Property Law focuses less on numbers and more on behaviour.

Bringing guests isn’t against the rules.Preventing everyone else from enjoying the communal areas can be.

As thousands of residential pools fill up over the coming weeks, that’s likely to remain one of the most common sources of neighbourly tension across Spain. And before the arguments start beside the sunbeds, it may be worth checking your community’s own rules. They often have the answer long before the law needs to get involved.

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Nerja Council Allocates €145,000 For Grants To Do Up Homes

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Streets of Nerja. Credit: AlexeMarcel – Shutterstock

Residents struggling with limited financial means in Nerja are going to get new opportunities to do up their properties through a special council plan. The local government recently approved funding that targets essential home improvements for qualifying households.

Programme details and funding levels

This 10th Municipal Housing Rehabilitation Programme has set aside a total budget of €145,000. Households can receive subsidies covering up to 80 per cent of eligible works costs, reaching a maximum of €12,000 per dwelling. Councillors have designed the scheme specifically to support those facing economic constraints while promoting better living conditions across older properties.

Strict eligibility requirements for applicants

Applicants must meet several key conditions to qualify for assistance. Household income cannot exceed three times the IPREM threshold. This is the Public Indicator of Income for Multiple Effects, meaning a guide to how well-off someone is. Currently, the IPREM is set at about €600 and can be checked at the iprem.com.es official website.

Properties also need to be over ten years old, serve as the main residence, and represent the sole ownership of the applicant. These rules make sure aid reaches those who need it most without allowing multiple claims per family.

Range of eligible home improvement works

Works focus on core aspects that increase safety and comfort inside homes. Structural stability improvements and damp removal feature prominently among supported activities. Accessibility modifications and energy efficiency upgrades also qualify for funding. Renewal of water, electricity, gas, and drainage systems receives coverage, in addition to better lighting, ventilation, window replacements, and interior surface treatments. These interventions are meant to raise overall habitability standards for participants.

Application process and next steps

Submission windows open for 15 natural days following official publication in the Boletín Oficial de la Provincia de Malaga and the national subsidies database. Interested parties should prepare documentation promptly once announcements appear.

This latest round of support continues Nerja’s commitment to affordable housing maintenance. Local families now have a practical pathway to address property needs without bearing full financial burdens. With clear criteria and substantial per-home grants available, the scheme offers real benefits for qualifying households seeking to improve their daily environments.

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This Cigarette Mistake Could Cost Drivers €500

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Throwing a cigarette butt from a car can lead to a €500 fine and six licence points in Spain. Credit : Chekalin Nikolai, Shutterstock

You have packed the car, the sat nav is set, and the motorway is finally behind the city traffic. You light a cigarette, enjoy a few minutes on the road, then flick the butt out of the window without giving it a second thought. It is a habit that still catches many drivers out, but in Spain it could leave you €500 poorer and six licence points down before your holiday has even begun.

With millions of people travelling by car during the summer holidays, Spain’s Guardia Civil has stepped up road safety campaigns and is reminding motorists that throwing a cigarette butt from a moving vehicle is far more than bad manners. Under Spanish traffic law, it is considered a very serious offence because of the danger it poses to both road users and the environment.

For anyone planning a road trip this summer, it is one rule worth remembering before you turn the key.

Why Spain treats one cigarette butt so seriously

Many drivers still see tossing a cigarette out of the window as a harmless reflex. During Spain’s long, hot summers, however, the consequences can be devastating.

Dry grass, roadside vegetation and woodland can ignite in seconds, particularly during heatwaves when the countryside is already under extreme fire risk. According to Spain’s Ministry for the Ecological Transition, discarded cigarette butts are responsible for around 3 per cent of forest fires, which is why authorities return to the issue every summer.

The Guardia Civil recently reinforced the message on social media with a simple warning. A cigarette thrown from a vehicle can cost €500 and six points on your driving licence, but far more importantly, it could start a wildfire with devastating consequences.

That warning comes at a time when thousands of holidaymakers are driving to Spain’s beaches, campsites and rural destinations, often through areas where vegetation is tinder dry.

The fine is higher than many drivers realise

Speeding is usually the offence motorists worry about most during summer journeys, but throwing objects from a vehicle can carry equally severe penalties.

Spanish traffic legislation specifically prohibits drivers from throwing onto the road, or its surroundings, any object capable of creating a fire or endangering road safety. Cigarette butts are mentioned because they present both risks.

The penalty is :

  • €500 fine
  • Loss of six licence points

The punishment is significantly tougher than it used to be. Before changes to the traffic law introduced in 2021, the same offence carried a €200 fine and four penalty points. The sanction was increased to reflect the serious consequences a single careless act can have during Spain’s increasingly hot and dry summers.

The rule applies regardless of whether a fire actually starts. Simply throwing the cigarette from the vehicle is enough to trigger the administrative penalty if detected by the authorities.

If a fire starts, the consequences become much more serious

For most drivers, the financial penalty alone would be enough to ruin a summer break. But if that discarded cigarette causes a forest fire, the situation changes completely.

At that point, the incident can move beyond traffic law and into Spain’s Criminal Code, where those responsible for causing a wildfire may face criminal prosecution. Depending on the circumstances and the damage caused, prison sentences of between three and six years may apply.

That is one reason why the Guardia Civil continues to focus on prevention rather than enforcement alone. Every summer, officers remind motorists that preventing fires often comes down to avoiding small mistakes that are entirely within a driver’s control.

A few seconds of care could save far more than money

Summer driving in Spain already brings its own challenges. Heavy traffic, soaring temperatures and long motorway journeys all demand extra concentration.

The Guardia Civil says motorists should also think carefully about everyday habits inside the car. If you smoke while driving, the safest option is to keep the cigarette inside the vehicle until it can be disposed of properly once you stop. It may seem inconvenient, but it is far less costly than risking a substantial fine or contributing to a potentially devastating wildfire.

For many drivers, throwing a cigarette butt out of the window has become an automatic gesture repeated countless times over the years. Spanish authorities want motorists to treat it differently.

Remember this : One careless flick of the hand could end your journey with a €500 fine, six points gone from your licence and consequences far beyond anything you expected.

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New Cancer Support Centre Opens In Almuñecar

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New AECC centre in Almuñecar. Credit: Sanmy Mon FB

The local branch of the Asociación Española Contra el Cáncer has established its new base at Avenida de Andalucía number 3. This development allows individuals with oncological conditions and their families to receive personalised care without long journeys to Granada.

Additional therapies enhance patient experience

Psychological attention formed part of previous services. Now both physiotherapy and social work assistance also join the programme for both patients and their relatives. Organisers at the centre plan multiple training courses, workshops and prevention talks, with details to follow in coming months.

Community effort brings the project to life

Concepcion Garcia, local AECC president, addressed the attendees during the inauguration. She described the months of dedicated work driven by commitment to those affected by cancer. Garcia expressed great pride in the unity shown by residents of Almuñecar and La Herradura.

Focus still on accessibility and equality

The new initiative makes sure people in smaller communities receive the same high standard of individual support available in larger cities such as Madrid or Granada. Volunteers play a central role in all this, with around 40 active members contributing time and energy.

Calls grow for continued research progress

Speakers at the event stressed the need for greater investment in cancer research to meet ambitious targets. Aims include raising survival rates substantially by 2030 through scientific advances and community action.

Local backing strengthens future activities

Businesses and residents have long provided valuable assistance throughout the process. This collaboration helps create a space that functions as more than just premises, serving instead as a centre of hope and practical aid.

Future activities will build on existing strengths while introducing new resources. Anyone seeking information about available support can contact the AECC directly at the new location. This development represents an important step in making quality cancer care more reachable for families across the area.

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