Home » Proposal to hike taxes and fines to curb tourist rentals in the Canary Islands
Fuerteventura, Canaries
A new proposal in the Spanish Congress aims to turn up the heat on holiday rentals in the Canary Islands, with increased taxation and penalties targeting unlicensed properties in what could soon be officially declared a high-pressure housing zone.
The left-wing coalition party called Sumar with ministers in the Spanish government has submitted a series of amendments to the ongoing reform of the Canary Islands’ Special Economic and Fiscal Regime, currently under debate in the Finance and Civil Service Commission. At the heart of these proposals is a goal to rein in what they call the “intensive exploitation” of housing for tourist use—a growing concern linked to the region’s wider rental affordability crisis.
Fighting tourist rentals with fiscal measures
One of Sumar’s central proposals is the introduction of a new specific tax rate within the Canary Islands Indirect General Tax (IGIC)—the regional equivalent of VAT—on services provided by holiday rental properties. This would apply not only to direct bookings but also to those made via digital platforms like Airbnb or Booking.com.
While the Spanish Congress lacks the direct power to modify regional taxes such as the IGIC, the party is urging national and regional authorities to collaborate within the established division of powers to implement fiscal policies discouraging short-term tourist lets. The aim is clear: make operating a holiday rental less attractive and help alleviate pressure on the long-term housing market.
According to Sumar, these steps are urgently needed to address what they describe as a “severe housing crisis” in key areas affected by mass tourism—including the Canary Islands.
Declaring tension and introducing penalties
The amendments go further by proposing the formal classification of parts of the archipelago as “residentially strained zones”—a label introduced in Spain’s new Housing Law. This would allow councils in the Canary Islands to limit rent increases and apply more stringent controls on the short-term rental market.
In addition to fiscal disincentives, Sumar recommends setting up an autonomous register for lease agreements and non-residential dwellings that would work in tandem with the regional tax agency and national land registry. The idea is to create greater transparency and traceability in the rental market.
Perhaps most striking is the proposed punishment for rule-breakers. Property owners listing their homes as tourist rentals without proper licensing could face financial penalties, particularly if operating in designated high-pressure zones. Revenues collected from these fines would, under Sumar’s plan, be funnelled directly into public housing initiatives.
More national support requested
To round off their proposal, Sumar is calling on Spain’s Ministry of Housing and Urban Agenda to allocate additional resources to the Canary Islands under the State Plan for Access to Housing and the Affordable Rental Fund. These funds would support the autonomous community as it grapples with soaring rental prices and housing scarcity, inflamed by the short-term rental boom.
What’s next?
The proposed measures are now headed to the next stage of the legislative process, where they will be debated within a commission working group. If approved by a majority, they will be integrated into the broader reform package of the Canary Islands’ Economic and Fiscal Regime.
In the meantime, landlords and investors in the Canary Islands’ holiday rental market may want to keep a close eye on parliamentary developments—you might soon need more than just a licence to stay ahead of the tax man.
The Canary Islands are ramping up efforts to limit the sale of residential properties to non-residents, and this time, they want all Spanish municipalities on board.
With legal room tightening regionally, the regional government of the Canary Islands aims to elevate the issue to national prominence—putting housing access for locals ahead of speculative interest from foreign buyers.
Targeting speculation through local rules
During a parliamentary session last week, Canarian president Fernando Clavijo announced that his government will present a proposal at the upcoming Conference of Presidents in Barcelona on 6 June. The central aim: to amend Spain’s Local Government Act, enabling municipalities to introduce ordinances that “complicate” rather than outright ban foreign purchases, using tools such as minimum residency requirements or proof of local employment.
“We’re not proposing a prohibition,” insisted Clavijo. “But we believe municipal governments should have the power to put local needs first and dampen the pressures foreign demand places on housing markets.”
The proposal is part of a wider strategy by the Canary Islands to safeguard access to housing, particularly in areas with high second-home ownership. It dovetails with the region’s push at the European level to treat outermost regions (RUPs) differently under Article 349 of the EU Treaty—allowing targeted protections for affordable housing supply and rental markets.
Backing local governments, confronting national hurdles
The Canarian leadership argues that the Spanish state, under its basic competency in local governance, could authorise municipalities to implement such restrictive tools. Legal studies commissioned by the regional government suggest that city councils may, for instance:
Link property purchases to a minimum period of local residence.
Require evidence of employment in the area.
Flag properties left vacant beyond six months.
Impose mandatory use or rental conditions on luxury purchases.
Proponents say this type of regulation could reduce speculative buying, ensure more homes are inhabited year-round, and help tame housing pressures in tourism-heavy areas.
PSOE wants big landlords to finance public housing
The Socialist Party (PSOE) welcomed parts of the Canarian initiative but offered its own diagnosis and solution. Speaking in Parliament, PSOE spokesperson Sebastián Franquis highlighted the alarming concentration of property ownership in the islands: “Four individuals own more than 620 homes, and 73 companies control over 19,300 units.”
Franquis announced a legislative proposal to raise the Property Transfer Tax (ITP) on high-volume owners, with proceeds earmarked exclusively for public housing initiatives. The Socialists also want to establish a national registry of large landlords to assist in state intervention and market monitoring.
Clavijo open to collaboration—but wants housing law reform
Surprisingly, President Clavijo encouraged Franquis to share the legislative draft ahead of the Barcelona summit. However, he also urged PSOE to press the central government to revise Spain’s national housing law, which Clavijo blamed for exacerbating market dysfunction: “It’s pushed homes out of the rental market and sent prices soaring.”
In the meantime, the Canary Islands will continue forging their legal path—with a growing roster of proposals aimed at reducing foreign ownership, prioritising long-term rentals, and increasing housing availability for locals.
Migration, debt and fiscal flexibility also on Clavijo’s agenda
While housing is set to dominate the debate in Barcelona, Clavijo also plans to revive discussions around a structural migration compact—proposed with Basque support—that failed to gain traction at December’s summit in Santander.
He’s also calling for:
Enforcement of the Supreme Court’s ruling on asylum-seeking minors, obligating the state to assume responsibility for more than 1,000 unaccompanied minors in the islands.
A general debt relief framework, noting that “forgiving debt for some shouldn’t be paid by all.”
Loosening Spain’s spending cap to allow the Canary Islands to deploy its own surpluses more freely.
Ensuring the Canary Islands’ REF (Fiscal and Economic Regime) is delinked from upcoming national financing reforms.
Conclusion: Housing debate goes national
Though the housing squeeze is most acute in tourist-heavy enclaves like the Canary Islands and Balearics, Clavijo’s bet is on national traction. If local governments across Spain are empowered to act against speculative foreign ownership, it could mark a significant—and controversial—shift in Spanish housing policy.