Crisis in Greece as tourists issued warning: ‘It’ll be Spain next’

Tourists taking a photo on Greek island

Greece is experiencing a crisis that looks to be spreading elsewhere (Image: Getty)

is being gripped by what has been described as a crisis which could to .

The issues relates to the number of exceeding hotel beds. This has sparked concern over local in terms of difficulties in accessing it and rising prices.

This is partly as a result of an exponential increase in tourist-use homes and a general boom in mass tourism.

reports that, in 2023, Spain had an offering of just over 340,000 tourist-use homes compared to 1.7million hotel rooms.

During the same year, hotels only increased their offering by 1.4%, but tourist-use homes (VUTs) grew by 10%.

: [TRAVEL]

Protestors Demonstrate Against High Rental Costs

There is concern in Spain over housing for locals (Image: Getty)

In Greece, meanwhile, short-term rental options (1million) have far exceeded the nearly 890,000 hotel rooms on offer.

Measures have been rolled out in Europe to curb the proliferation of tourist rental homes, including the elimination of the Golden Visa programme, through which foreign investors obtained residency; restricting licences for VUTs, or requiring short-term rentals to be registered.

In line with this, Greece has banned registering new tourist rental homes during 2024.

The measure currently applies only to certain neighbourhoods in Athens, the city that hosts most tourists out of the 32.7million annually (a record in 2023) and with the highest overcrowding.

: [REVEALED]

Scenic View of Granada, Andalusia

The amount of tourist-use homes is growing in Spain (Image: Getty)

Therefore, this year no more licences will be issued for flats located in areas such as Kolonaki, Koukaki, Pangrati, and Exarchia, among others.

In addition, the new regulation requires all homes to be declared and threatens hefty fines for all illegal ones.

It also offers the possibility of receiving tax benefits for all those owners who switch their short-term rentals to long-term and permanent ones.

This measure begins to be applied in Greece with the intention of “relieving rental pressure and increasing housing availability,” according to Greek Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis, which aims to address the housing crisis faced by Athens and other major Greek cities.

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