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Airbnb files motion against Madrid fine

2 min read
10:02UTC

Airbnb lodged a reconsideration motion at the High Court of Justice of Madrid; no hearing date was set as of 28 April.

SocietyDeveloping
Key takeaway

Airbnb's motion keeps the largest EU STR fine open through the 20 May registration deadline.

Airbnb has filed a reconsideration motion at the High Court of Justice of Madrid against the EUR 64 million fine that the same court declined to suspend on 23 March 2026 . No substantive hearing date had been set as of 28 April 2026 1.

Reconsideration is a procedural request that asks the court to revisit its prior order on the same record, and it is a familiar opening move in EU platform litigation. Every platform challenge to a national STR rule since 2019 has produced at least one favourable appeal-stage ruling somewhere in the chain; the question for Airbnb is which forum delivers it. The absence of a hearing date matters because the EU 2024/1028 registration deadline lands on 20 May, and the largest national enforcement precedent in the bloc will still be unresolved at the moment enforcement pressure peaks.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

In December 2025, Spain fined Airbnb EUR 64 million for having unlicensed listings and fake registration numbers. In March 2026, a Madrid court refused to pause the fine while Airbnb appealed. Airbnb has now filed a motion asking the same court to reconsider its decision to let the fine stand. The fine is the largest ever imposed on a short-let platform in the European Union. It matters particularly now because a new EU rule requiring all short-let platforms to share registration data with national governments takes effect on 20 May 2026, just three weeks away. The unresolved fine is sitting at the exact moment when that new EU framework kicks in.

What could happen next?
  • Precedent

    If the High Court of Justice of Madrid upholds the EUR 64m fine on the merits, it sets the first EU precedent for nine-figure STR platform liability under national consumer-protection law, with Germany, Netherlands and Austria the most likely jurisdictions to file comparable actions.

  • Risk

    If Airbnb escalates via an Article 11 pre-emption argument under EU Regulation 2024/1028 before 20 May 2026, the case moves from a Spanish administrative court to a potential ECJ reference, adding 18-36 months to resolution and creating regulatory uncertainty for all EU member-state STR enforcement actions already in train.

First Reported In

Update #2 · Spain's six-day housing arc, Georgia's cliff

Euronews· 29 Apr 2026
Read original
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