user palmadave | over 5 years ago

Wow! Double whammy for the greedy, illegal renters. Well done Palma Council. Hotels for Tourists, flats for residents/locals and legal workers.

user cc | over 5 years ago

at home I maybe eat out once a week sometimes less depending on work on holiday pretty much every meal every day is the norm ,I'm sure this will be the same for many, only this year there will not be so many ! and the hoteliers wont mind one bit if the restaurants or bars or shops struggle, nor oworry about the unemployment this brings. personally I like to see new places opening and people trying to make a future for themselves with a new restaurant/ shop.service etcwhile were on it if they really did want to lmit the number of tourists why not reduce the numbe of guests staying in a hotel ?

user RBBM | over 5 years ago

To Ged: The article in El Pais (How can Spain ensure the survival of its world-beating tourism industry?) did't discuss shops, etc but the pressure of having too many tourists in relation to the population. Hotels don't compete directly with shops and entrepreneurs. If the latter should be protected then it would be more efficient to ban all the foreign companies on the island, not permit shopping centers with a lot of multinational store chains, etc.

user Ged | over 5 years ago

The vast majority of the 11.7 to 1 ratio will be in hotels RBMM. The very hotels that suck up the majority of the profits to be had from the tourists at the expense of the native shop owners and entrepreneurs that the government should be helping.

user TG | over 5 years ago

Residents and workers should be given priority to rent apartments close to their work location and at reasonable costs. Studies confirm that a city does not thrive on transient visitors, it’s the local populous that build a sustainable neighbourhood. Mallorca visitors are adequately catered for withougreedy apartment owners and letting companies cash in on raising rents. Congratulations Palma council for having the courage to put residents first.

user RBMM | over 5 years ago

I think that we are in a transition period and that more may come. Politicians had to do something, but they waited too long and now drastic measures are taken. To quote from El Pais "Overall there were 1.6 foreign tourists for every Spaniard in 2016, but that rate goes up to 2.4 tourists for every resident of Catalonia, 4.1 for every inhabitant of Barcelona, 6.3 for every resident of the Canary Islands and 11.7 for every native of the Balearic Islands."

user Richard | over 5 years ago

Whatever your views on all these confusing new laws, I think we should be united in one thing: this should go down in history as THE prime example of how to be a headless chicken Balearic politician. Shameful.

user Ged | over 5 years ago

So people who have been dependent to some extent on renting their apartment in order to help with its upkeep will no longer be able to do so. They will therefore have to offer their apartment on longer term rents. They will however put these apartments on the market at a rental rate near to the previous rental for tourists, because that's how their finances will have been arranged. With these going on the market a higher rate will be viewed by others will property on the market as an opportunity to raise their rental. In effect this could result in apartment rental in Palma going up not down.

user TC | over 5 years ago

Move with the times and embrace a up and coming industry that will give the all inclusive hotels a run for their money or come up with a lame excuse to protect the back pockets. The taxi drivers are the same. Everyone shouts about too many cars on the roads, hire car saturation, not enough public transport. In the mean time the taxi drivers break any plans that may harm their profit and have done for 30 odd years. Someone in office needs to get a grip, seriously.

user Steve Riches | over 5 years ago

"Yeah we don't want those nasty tourists here spending their money in our major city. Just stay at home and send us a cheque instead!" I wonder what's coming next - maybe ban tourists from public transport, shops, hire cars, and no food or drink to be sold to them without a licence that costs €2,000 and takes two years to process? Mark my words - although I partly jest it won't be long before something else equally ridiculous hits the statute books. AND in the interests of equality I suggest that Palma's hotels should not from this point on be allowed to accept visiting tourists.