Barcelona Doubles Tourist Tax to Highest Level in Europe
The Spanish city of Barcelona, capital of the Catalonia region in northeastern Spain, has announced it will double the tourist tax on visitors in a move aimed at regulating tourist flow and supporting the local housing market in one of Europe’s most visited cities.
The Catalan Parliament passed a new law increasing the tax on tourists staying in hotels in the city, effective April 1, 2026. Rates will rise from €5–7.50 per night to €10–15, depending on the hotel’s category.
This increase is part of Barcelona’s efforts to address the impacts of overtourism, which local residents blame for rising property prices and worsening the housing crisis. A plan has also been announced to ban short-term rentals by 2028.
Before the tax adjustment, Barcelona ranked eleventh among European cities in accommodation taxes, according to 2025 booking platform data, while Amsterdam led the list with fees reaching approximately €18.45 per day.
The measures have prompted mixed reactions in the tourism and hospitality sectors. Some hotel workers expressed concern about the potential effect on visitor numbers, while supporters argue the move is necessary to balance tourism with residents’ quality of life.
Quick reader summary
The Spanish city of Barcelona, capital of the Catalonia region in northeastern Spain, has announced it will double the tourist tax on visitors in a move aimed at regulating tourist flow and supporting the local housing market in one of Europe’s most visited cities. This update matters to residents in Germany and readers following social, transport or public-service decisions because it may affect planning, travel, public-service use or the next practical step a reader should take.
Why this update matters
The value of this story is not only the headline. Readers need to know who may be affected, whether the measure is final or still developing, and where to check the official version before acting on it.
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- Check the federal or state-level source because implementation may vary by region.
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Official sources to check
- German Federal Government
- The relevant ministry, state authority or local office
Frequently asked questions
Does this mean the measure is already in force?
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Editorial note: This update was editorially reviewed on July 11, 2026, with practical verification points added to help readers check the official source before taking action.
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