Spain
proposes 100% tax on homes bought by non-EU residents
Pedro
Sánchez announces measure in response to anger over rising housing costs
Ashifa
Kassam in Madrid
Mon 13 Jan
2025 21.39 GMT
Spain has
announced plans to impose a tax of up to 100% on real estate bought by
non-residents from countries outside the EU, such as the UK, in an aim to
tackle the country’s housing crisis.
The measure
was one of a dozen unveiled Monday by the country’s prime minister, Pedro
Sánchez, as the government seeks to quell mounting anger over housing costs
that have soared far beyond the reach of many in Spain.
Sánchez
sought to underline the global nature of the challenge, citing housing prices
that had swelled 48% in the past decade across Europe, far outpacing household
incomes.
“The west
faces a decisive challenge: to not become a society divided into two classes,
the rich landlords and poor tenants,” he told an economic forum in Madrid.
The proposed
measures include expanding the supply of social housing, offering incentives to
those who renovate and rent out empty properties at affordable prices and
cracking down on seasonal rentals. In Spain just 2.5% of housing is set aside
for social housing, a figure that lags drastically behind countries such as
France and the Netherlands, said Sánchez.
But it was
the government’s plans to crackdown on foreign, non-EU buyers that grabbed
headlines around the world. Spain has long been a popular destination for
non-EU holiday home buyers, with residents of the UK, US and Morocco flocking
to buy properties in places such as Ibiza, Marbella and Barcelona.
Sánchez
described the tax of up to 100% as “unprecedented” in Spanish history. “Just to
give an idea, in 2023 alone non-European Union residents bought around 27,000
houses and flats in Spain. And they didn’t do it to live in them, they didn’t
do it for their families to have a place to live, they did it to speculate, to
make money from them, which we – in the context of shortage that we are in –
obviously cannot allow.”
He did not
offer more details on how the plan would work or when it would be finalised and
sent to parliament for approval. Given his government’s longstanding struggles
to pass legislation, one analyst suggested to the Financial Times that the
government’s aim was to deter foreign property investors by creating
“uncertainty and noise” with a proposal that has slim chances of becoming law.
The
government’s slate of measures also took aim at tourist flats, which have long
been blamed for shrinking the rental supply and leaving locals priced out of
the market.
Sánchez said
regulations on these rentals would be tightened while the taxes they pay would
be hiked. “It is not fair that those who own three, four, five apartments for
short-term rental pay less tax than hotels,” said Sánchez.
He argued
that the measures were necessary to tackle what he described as an “unbearable”
mismatch between rising housing prices and household incomes.
“We are
facing a serious problem, with enormous social and economic implications, which
requires a decisive response from society as a whole, with public institutions
at the forefront,” he added.
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