MUNDO Research Team · Vetted by Costa del Sol property professionals
Published June 2025 · Updated February 2026 · 7 min read
Tourist Licence (VFT) Requirements
If you want to rent out your Spanish property on a short-term basis (anything under 2 months in most regions, or under 31 days in some), you need a tourist rental licence. In Andalusia, this is called a VFT (Vivienda con Fines Turísticos). Other regions have their own names and systems: VT (Vivienda Turística) in Valencia, or HUT (Habitatge d'Ús Turístic) in Catalonia.
Operating without a licence is illegal and carries significant fines — from €2,000 to €150,000 depending on the region and severity. Platforms like Airbnb and Booking.com are increasingly required to verify licence numbers before listing properties, and some regions actively monitor unlicensed listings.
General Requirements for a Tourist Licence
While requirements vary by autonomous community, the common criteria include:
- Habitation certificate (cédula de habitabilidad): Proof that the property meets minimum habitability standards — ventilation, natural light, running water, electricity, drainage
- Energy Performance Certificate (certificado de eficiencia energética): An EPC rating, valid for 10 years
- First Occupation Licence (licencia de primera ocupación): Proof the building was legally constructed
- Third-party liability insurance: Coverage for damage to guests or their property
- Complaints book (hojas de reclamaciones): Must be available to guests
- Guest registration: You must register all guests with the police (Policía Nacional) within 24 hours of arrival via the SES.Hospedajes platform
Andalusia's Specific Rules and Registration
Andalusia has been one of the more welcoming regions for tourist rentals, but regulations have tightened significantly since 2024. The key rules are:
Registration Process
- Submit a declaración responsable (responsible declaration) to the Junta de Andalucía's tourism registry (Registro de Turismo de Andalucía)
- This is done online through the Junta's website, and you receive a registration number within days
- The registration number must be displayed on all advertising and listings
- No inspection is required before registration — it is a self-declaration system, but the Junta can inspect at any time and impose penalties if the property does not meet requirements
Property Requirements in Andalusia
- Air conditioning: Required in areas where summer temperatures exceed certain thresholds (essentially all of Andalusia except high mountain areas)
- Heating: Required in areas where winter temperatures drop below certain thresholds
- Wi-Fi: Internet access must be provided
- Cleaning: Property must be cleaned before each guest arrives
- Information pack: Tourist information, emergency numbers, and house rules must be provided in at least Spanish and English
- Bed linen and towels: Must be provided and changed at least weekly for stays over a week
Community Restrictions
Since April 2025, any new tourist licence application in a residential building requires prior approval from the community of owners (comunidades de propietarios) by a 3/5 (60%) majority vote. Communities can also vote to restrict or prohibit tourist rentals entirely. If your community votes to ban short-term rentals, you cannot operate a VFT regardless of whether you have a licence. Licences obtained before 3 April 2025 are grandfathered against this new requirement.
Additionally, since July 2025, all tourist rental operators must register with the national VUD (Ventanilla Unica Digital) system, and platforms like Airbnb and Booking.com require a VUD ID to list. There is also a new annual reporting obligation for licensed operators.
Before purchasing a property with the intention of renting it on Airbnb, check the community statutes and recent meeting minutes to confirm there are no restrictions on tourist rentals.
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Long-Term vs Short-Term Rental Rules
Short-Term (Tourist) Rentals
- Defined as rentals under 2 months in Andalusia (under 31 days in other regions)
- Require a tourist licence
- Regulated by tourism law, not the LAU (Ley de Arrendamientos Urbanos, the Urban Leases Act)
- Higher income per night but more management-intensive
- Seasonal — many coastal properties have high occupancy in summer but are empty in winter
Long-Term Rentals
- Defined as rentals of 12 months or more (medium-term is 1-11 months)
- No tourist licence required
- Regulated by the LAU, which provides strong tenant protections
- Minimum contract duration: 5 years for individual landlords, 7 years for corporate landlords (since the 2023 reform)
- Annual rent increases capped at the IRAV index (a new index replacing CPI, capped at approximately 2-3% per year)
- Eviction for non-payment is slow — typically 6-12 months through the courts
- Lower income per month but more stable and less management
Medium-Term Rentals (Temporada)
Rentals of 1-11 months fall into a grey area. They don't require a tourist licence (in most regions), and they are regulated under the contrato de temporada (seasonal contract) provisions of the LAU. These offer more flexibility for landlords:
- No minimum duration beyond the agreed term
- No mandatory renewal
- Rent is freely agreed
- Popular with digital nomads and remote workers
Tax Obligations for UK Owners
Your tax obligations depend on whether you are a Spanish tax resident or a non-resident.
Non-Resident UK Owners
As a non-resident, you pay tax on your Spanish rental income through the Modelo 210. The rates and rules are:
- EU/EEA residents: 19% tax rate on net rental income (after deducting expenses). This rate applies to EU/EEA residents only. UK residents are classified as non-EU post-Brexit and pay the 24% rate below.
- Non-EU residents (UK and other non-EU countries): 24% tax rate on gross rental income (no deductions allowed). This is the current definitive position for UK non-resident owners since Brexit.
Deductible Expenses (for EU/EEA-rate taxpayers)
If you qualify for the 19% rate with expense deductions, you can deduct:
- IBI (council tax)
- Community fees (proportional to rental periods)
- Property insurance
- Mortgage interest (proportional to rental periods)
- Repairs and maintenance
- Management fees
- Cleaning costs
- Utility bills (if you pay them)
- Depreciation: 3% of the construction cost per year
- Professional fees (accountant, gestoría)
Filing Quarterly
Non-resident rental income is declared quarterly on the Modelo 210. For periods when the property is not rented, you must also file an annual imputed income declaration. Most UK owners use a gestoría to handle all filings for €200-€400 per year.
Platforms: Airbnb, Booking.com, Vrbo
The main platforms for short-term holiday rentals in Spain are:
Airbnb
- The dominant platform for holiday rentals in Spain
- Host fee: typically 3% of the booking total
- Guest fee: typically 14-16% (this reduces your effective rental rate, as guests see a higher total price)
- Requires your tourist licence number to list in Spain
- Reviews are crucial — properties with fewer than 10 reviews struggle to get bookings
Booking.com
- Originally a hotel platform, now a major player in holiday rentals
- Commission: 15-18% of the booking total (paid by the host, no separate guest fee)
- Higher commission but often higher occupancy rates due to Booking.com's massive traffic
- Guests tend to be older and less adventurous than Airbnb guests
Vrbo (formerly HomeAway)
- Strong in the family holiday market
- Commission: 8% host fee (or annual subscription model)
- Smaller market share in Spain than Airbnb or Booking.com
- Good for larger properties (3+ bedrooms) that suit families
Direct Booking
Some owners build their own website and market directly. This avoids platform commissions (saving 15-18%) but requires investment in a website, SEO, and guest management systems. A good property management company can handle this for you.
Property Management Options
If you live in the UK and rent your Spanish property, you will almost certainly need a property manager. Options include:
Full-Service Property Management
- Handles everything: listings, bookings, guest communication, check-in/out, cleaning, maintenance, key holding
- Cost: typically 20-30% of rental income
- Worth it for most remote owners — the time saving is enormous
Key Holding + Cleaning Only
- A local contact handles key handover and arranges cleaning between guests
- You manage listings and bookings yourself from the UK
- Cost: typically €50-€100 per changeover plus cleaning fees
Self-Management with Smart Locks
- Install a smart lock (like Nuki or Yale) for keyless entry
- Use remote monitoring cameras (exterior only, in common areas — cameras inside the property are illegal for rentals)
- Contract a local cleaner directly
- You manage everything remotely
- Lowest cost but highest time investment
Related Reading
Insurance Requirements
Standard home insurance does not cover short-term rental activity. You need:
- Landlord insurance: Covers the building and your contents against damage by tenants. Typical cost: €300-€600 per year.
- Third-party liability insurance: Required by law for tourist rentals in most regions. Covers injury to guests or damage to their property. Typical cost: €100-€200 per year (often included in landlord insurance policies).
- Loss of rent insurance: Covers you if the property becomes uninhabitable due to damage. Optional but recommended.
Platforms like Airbnb offer their own damage protection (AirCover), but this is not a substitute for proper landlord insurance. AirCover has coverage gaps and claim disputes are common.
Renting out your Spanish property can be highly profitable — gross yields of 5-10% are achievable in popular tourist areas. But doing it legally requires proper licensing, tax compliance, and insurance. The upfront effort pays for itself: a legal, well-managed rental generates more income, attracts better guests, and avoids the risk of devastating fines.
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Disclaimer
This guide is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal, tax, or financial advice. Property laws and tax regulations change frequently — always consult a qualified Spanish lawyer and tax advisor before making any property purchase decisions. Data sourced from Spanish Land Registry, Idealista, and MUNDO partner network. Last verified: March 2026.