CCAA
Comunidades Autónomas (CCAA) are Spain's 17 regional governments that hold primary constitutional competence on housing policy; they must contribute 40% co-financing (EUR 2,800m) for the Plan Estatal de Vivienda 2026-2030.
Last refreshed: 30 April 2026 · Appears in 1 active topic
Which CCAA will sign the 60/40 housing co-financing deal first, and which will stall?
Timeline for CCAA
Mentioned in: Spain's Congress sinks the rent-freeze extension
Nomads & CommunitiesMentioned in: Spain commits EUR 7bn to housing plan
Nomads & CommunitiesWhat are Spain's comunidades autónomas?
Why do the CCAA control Spain's housing policy?
Background
Comunidades autónomas (CCAA) are Spain's 17 regional governments, established by the 1978 Constitution as the primary tier of territorial self-government. Housing policy sits primarily under their competence, which is why the Plan Estatal de Vivienda 2026-2030 was approved as a 60/40 co-financing structure: the state contributes EUR 4,200 million and the CCAA are expected to contribute EUR 2,800 million, but none are legally compelled to sign on .
The political make-up of the CCAA is now the operational test of the Plan. Regions governed by PP (Partido Popular) — including Madrid, Andalusia and Galicia, which together represent a large share of Spain's rental market — must opt into the co-financing structure for the EUR 4,200m of state money to actually land. The plan was approved under Article 149.1.13 of the Constitution, precisely because housing is not a central-state competence. Whether CCAA leaders sign co-financing protocols, and on what timetable, is the next stage of the housing story.