Audio By Carbonatix
The Spanish government has fined property rentals giant Airbnb €64m (£56m) for advertising unlicensed apartments.
It also said that some of the properties advertised in the popular tourist destination were banned from being rented.
The fine means that Airbnb has to withdraw the adverts promoting unlicensed properties. Although the Consumer Affairs Ministry said the fine cannot be appealed, Airbnb said it intends to challenge it in court.
Spain, one of the most visited countries in the world, has a buoyant tourism economy but that has fuelled concerns about unaffordable housing, as high demand from visitors raises the price of housing, pushing local people out of the market.
"There are thousands of families who are living on the edge due to housing, while a few get rich with business models that expel people from their homes," said Spain's consumer rights minister Pablo Bustinduy in a statement.
But Airbnb said in a statement that it was "confident that the Ministry of Consumer Affairs' actions are contrary to applicable regulations in Spain".
A spokesperson added that since short-term rental regulations in Spain changed in July, Airbnb was "closely collaborating with Spain's Ministry of Housing to support the enforcement of the new national registration system".
Like many countries, Spain's government is concerned about how short-term holiday lets can change a neighbourhood, fuelled by a transient population of holiday-goers.
The country has been fighting a battle with thousands of Airbnb listings, banning them and clamping down on how many properties the firm can advertise. In May, there were demonstrations against the firm ahead of the busy summer season.
Spain's government said 65,122 adverts on Airbnb breached consumer rules, including promotion of properties that were not licensed to be rented, and properties whose licence number did not match with those on official registers.
Writing on social network Bluesky, Mr Bustinduy said: "We'll prove it as many times as necessary: no company, no matter how big or powerful, is above the law. Even less so when it comes to housing."
Globally, several popular tourist cities place heavy restriction on Airbnb, including Barcelona, New York, Berlin, Paris and even San Francisco, where Airbnb was founded.
The tech firm started up in 2007 but became hugely popular around 2014, as tourists looked for cheap accommodation without the tax costs imposed on hotels.
Users swelled as anybody could become a "host" and make some extra cash from renting out their spare room - though many major cities have since placed limits on these types of rentals, as complaints of noisy house parties and absent hosts became an issue.
Latest Stories
-
Underlying inflation expectations re-anchored – Dr. Asiama
2 minutes -
Ghana’s Cybele Energy Limited launches oil exploration in Guyana
11 minutes -
There has been significant reconciliation among Kussasis, Mamprusis in other towns – Asantehene
24 minutes -
BoG Governor urges banks to support real sector after policy rate cut
27 minutes -
FIFA introduces $60 Supporter Entry Tier tickets for World Cup 2026
31 minutes -
Gov’t pledges definitive position on Bawku Mediation Report within 24 hours
32 minutes -
Bawku mediation report should bind on all parties – Asantehene
34 minutes -
Asantehene demands enforcement of law recognising Naba Azoka II as Bawku Chief
34 minutes -
Prudential Bank trains merchant partners on POS usage in Accra and Kumasi
42 minutes -
MGL, poultry farmers roll out X’mas Egg Market to tackle egg glut
51 minutes -
ORIGIN8A: Decoding the hidden meaning and intentionality behind Samini’s new album title
53 minutes -
Both sides willingly presented themselves for Bawku mediation process – Asantehene
57 minutes -
I’m not here to say who was right or wrong – Asantehene on Bawku peace process
1 hour -
Asantehene presents Bawku Peace Mediation Report to Mahama
1 hour -
Analysis: Ghana’s oil exports drop by over $1bn in the first 10 months of 2025
2 hours
