Tourists on the prom in Spain. Credit: pxhere.com
Ban, ban, ban, ban, ban! All there seems to be in the international press these days is news about how Spain is banning tourists. Why the lies? Why the misinformation? It’s almost as if a competitor were paying global press to slur the name of Spain.
There are NO bans against tourists in Spain. There never have been, and there never will be. One such publication on Friday, April 11, claimed in their vacuous and vague headline, ‘Spain’s ‘serious’ new tourist rules set to affect 90,000,000 holidaymakers’, with a list of the most ridiculous claims pertaining to Spain, when those rules are already in place in virtually every beach destination in Europe. Listed were such claims as ‘no reserving spots on sun decks and bathing platforms’, ‘no fishing with a rod within 150 metres of bathing zones’, or, for that matter, ‘no having sex on the beach’. I’m hard pressed to imagine where any of these are permitted at any European holiday destination.
In 2024, Spain happily received over 90 million tourists. Tourism is big business in Spain, but it’s far from its only business. Services, manufacturing (notably, cars), and agriculture account for far more GDP than tourism’s 13 per cent.
Who wants to ‘ban’ tourists in Spain?
Curiously, the wealthy island of Mallorca has become rich on the back of tourism, and their island has 40 per cent of its economy wrapped up in foreign visitors staying or living on their land. Of the few who were chanting anti-foreigner slogans at recent housing protests, I would ask what their jobs are. I bet most would be in, or somehow related to, the tourist industry. The majority of Mallorcans weren’t at those marches, though, as they are far too welcoming and friendly to foreigners, and know what side their bread is buttered on.
The litany of claims about how, specifically, Spain is curbing tourists doesn’t stop there: Extra charges for cruise ship passengers (it’s included in the price), tourist charges (Italy and Greece have been doing this for years), limiting new Airbnbs (so is just about every European city), banning smoking on some beaches (ditto), villages only allowing residents to drive into the centre (look up the acronym LEZ), and the eye-rolling list goes on.
This may sound like an impassioned rant, but Spain is listed as being one of the least racist, most welcoming and friendly nations in the world. This weekly barrage of slurs in the world’s press insinuating that tourists from any nation are being ‘banned’ is utter codswallop that directly affects the economy of people just trying to make ends meet. Come to Spain this year. You are more than welcome, just as you have always been. ¡Olé!