The Canary Islands parliament passed the Ley de Municipios Turísticos de Canarias on 8 July 2026 by 63 votes to nil, with 3 Vox deputies abstaining, closing a regulatory gap open since 1993 1. The Canary Islands are a Spanish archipelago off northwest Africa and one of Europe's busiest tourist destinations. The law creates two legal categories that trigger automatically by fixed thresholds, so a town's obligations follow its visitor load rather than the will of whoever runs the council.
The high-volume tier, turístico de excelencia, bites when registered tourist beds pass 5 times the resident population, or reach 4,000 beds, or when five-star capacity exceeds 10 per cent of the population; on the greener, less-developed islands the trigger drops to 3 times the population or 2,000 beds 2. It counts beds, the plazas on the tourism register, not annual arrivals. The distinctive-asset tier, turístico de singularidad, turns on holding at least two singular tourist assets plus tourism exceeding 5 per cent of the local economy.
Cross either threshold and the town inherits binding duties: statutory planning instruments, sustainable-mobility measures, and public-service upgrades funded against the visitors it carries. Adeje, Arona and San Bartolomé de Tirajana, the last with just 54,116 residents yet drawing roughly 1.5 to 1.7 million visitors a year, clear the bed and ratio bars comfortably, with the regional tourism authority still to verify each classification.
Spain's national short-term-rental (STR) registry, the single system for licensing holiday lets, was voided by the Tribunal Supremo on federalism grounds after the court ruled Madrid had overstepped its constitutional authority , a ruling that landed as national STR inventory fell 12.4 per cent to 329,764 listings . The Canarian law routes around that fragility by legislating where competence has held, at the region and the municipality, producing a status that outlasts any one council.
