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29MAY

Spain moves to close the temporada gap

3 min read
08:55UTC

Government spokesperson Elma Saiz said on 29 June 2026 that Spain's coalition will bring a July housing decree regulating the seasonal contracts most long-stay nomads sign, while raising tourist-flat VAT from 10% to 21%.

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Key takeaway

Spain's July decree targets the seasonal-let loophole nomads use, and separately lifts tourist-flat VAT to 21%.

Government spokesperson Elma Saiz said on 29 June 2026 that Spain's coalition has agreed to bring a housing royal decree-law, an emergency instrument that bypasses the full parliamentary process, to approval in July 2026. 1 The text would redraw the rental contract that most long-stay nomads sign.

Temporada (seasonal) contracts, the 9-to-11-month lets remote workers use, currently fall outside the rent caps in the Ley de Vivienda (Spain's Housing Law) that apply in zonas tensionadas (designated stressed-rent zones). The decree would demand written contracts and a tighter legal test of what counts as genuinely temporary. It separately raises VAT (value-added tax) on tourist flats from 10% to 21% and offers IRPF (personal income tax) rebates to landlords who cut rents.

This repackages the rental prorroga (a forced contract extension) that Congress rejected on 28 April , now bundled with the VAT and seasonal-rental measures. As of 1 July 2026 the decree is unapproved and depends on a fragmented Congress that has already defeated the extension once.

INE (Spain's national statistics office) recorded 341,001 tourist-housing units in May 2026, a 3.4% rebound from the 329,764 post-ruling low , so supply is climbing even as the state moves to close routes. 2 Hosts are relisting after the Tribunal Supremo (Spain's Supreme Court) voided the national registration number , the baseline the decree is designed to reverse.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Spain capped how much rent can rise each year in its busiest cities under a 2023 law, but only for standard, long-term rental contracts where a tenant lives full time. A different kind of contract, called temporada (Spanish for seasonal), was left outside those caps because it was meant for people who need somewhere to live for a fixed period, not permanently, students or seasonal workers, for example. Many long-stay remote workers now rent through temporada contracts instead of standard ones, because a temporada lease is not capped and does not need to justify why the stay is temporary. Spain's coalition government wants a new decree in July 2026 to tighten the rules on those contracts and raise the sales tax on short-let tourist flats from 10% to 21%. As of 1 July it is still just a plan, not a law: Spain's parliament rejected a similar rent measure once already, in April.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

Spain's 2023 Ley de Vivienda built its rent caps around the tenant's declared need for a permanent home, using the existing Ley de Arrendamientos Urbanos exclusion for seasonal lets. That exclusion was written for a narrow case, students, seasonal workers, visiting professionals, who need housing for a fixed, non-permanent purpose.

It set no evidentiary test for what counts as genuinely temporary, so a landlord and tenant only need to sign a temporada contract, not prove a seasonal need, to sit outside the caps entirely.

The decree due in July does not close that definitional gap. It adds a forced extension and tax incentives on top of the existing exclusion, which is why Bank of Spain-style critics expect landlords to route around the new rules the same way they routed around the 2023 law's caps.

What could happen next?
  • Risk

    Congress has already rejected a similar rental decree once in 2026, on 28 April, so the July decree's temporada and VAT provisions face the same fragmented-majority arithmetic that sank the earlier attempt.

  • Consequence

    If passed, the decree gives Spain's regional tribunals a fresh test case for how narrowly temporada can be defined, since the 2023 law never set one, likely producing years of litigation rather than a single settled rule.

First Reported In

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elDiario.es / El Economista· 2 Jul 2026
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