Spain’s Seville to cut water to illegal holiday homes in short-term lets crackdown
Sign up now: Get ST's newsletters delivered to your inbox
A woman in Madrid taking a photo of a message aimed at tourists and against Airbnb rentals, outside a closed-down shop.
PHOTO: REUTERS
Follow topic:
MADRID – Landlords illegally renting their apartments to tourists in the southern Spanish city of Seville could find their water cut off amid a crackdown by the local mayor’s office to curb the spread of short-term lets that is angering local residents.
The office of Seville’s mayor announced this week that it is reviewing all the city’s holiday apartments and will ask the local state-run water company Emasesa to cut off water supply to properties that do not comply with regulations, if their owners continue to let them out.
The review has so far identified 715 apartments that do not comply with regulations passed in 2022 which stipulate that holiday rentals must have an independent entrance if they are above the first floor, according to a source from the mayor’s office, who asked not to be named because the source is not authorised to speak to the media.
The source said the mayor’s office was already talking with the owners involved.
A surge in tourism over the past few years aided by the spread of holiday lets has led to widespread protests across Spain, with local residents complaining that they are being priced out of the rental market.
The local authorities in hot spots such as Seville are cracking down on illegal listings and are scrambling to find ways to limit the proliferation of short-term lets on platforms such as Airbnb or Booking.com.
The mayor’s office estimates that between 5,000 and 7,000 holiday lets in Seville are operating illegally, while another 8,000 to 9,000 comply with regulations, according to the source.
A Bill currently passing through Seville’s Parliament plans to ban any more licences for holiday lets in the old town and the colourful neighbourhood of Triana across the river.
Elsewhere in Spain, Barcelona has said it will ban all holiday apartments the Canary Islands

