Spain's Ley de Vivienda (Housing Law, 2023) introduced penalties for landlords who raise rents above the permitted cap in officially designated 'stressed rental market areas' (zonas de mercado residencial tensionado). The Valencian Community — which covers the Costa Blanca — has not yet applied stressed zone status to any municipalities. Most Costa Blanca rental properties are therefore currently unaffected by the penalty provisions. However, the law's annual rent cap (replacing the CPI index from 2025) applies nationally to all long-term residential rentals.
In June 2023, Spain's coalition government passed the Ley por el Derecho a la Vivienda — the Housing Rights Law — which introduced significant changes to the rental market. Headlines focused on the rent cap and landlord penalties, creating concern among property investors in Spain. For Costa Blanca new build investors, the practical impact is more limited than media coverage suggests — but the full picture is worth understanding before making an investment decision.
What the Law Actually Says
The Ley de Vivienda (Housing Law) contains several provisions affecting landlords:
1. National annual rent increase cap. For all long-term residential rentals (vivienda habitual — not tourist lets), annual rent increases are capped:
This cap applies nationally, regardless of whether the area is a 'stressed zone'. All long-term residential landlords in Spain are subject to this annual cap.
2. Stressed zone designation. The law allows regional governments (Comunidades Autónomas) to declare specific areas as 'zonas de mercado residencial tensionado' (stressed rental market areas) where:
In stressed zones, the penalties and additional restrictions kick in:
3. Large landlord definition and tax implications. Landlords with 5+ residential properties (or 8+ in stressed zones) are classified as 'grandes tenedores' (large landlords). In stressed zones, grandes tenedores face stricter obligations and potentially higher tax exposure on rental income.
For most individual international buyers on the Costa Blanca — who own 1–3 properties — the grandes tenedores provisions are irrelevant.
Does the Law Affect Costa Blanca Rental Properties?
Stressed zone designations — where things stand: The designation of stressed zones is a regional government decision — not a national one. Each Comunidad Autónoma decides whether to apply and which areas to include.
As of 2026:
This means that all rental properties in the Costa Blanca (Alicante province, Valencian Community) are currently outside the stressed zone framework. The enhanced penalties, rent freezes, and grandes tenedores obligations do not apply.
The national annual cap does apply to long-term residential rentals on the Costa Blanca. If you rent your Costa Blanca property on an annual contract to a tenant using it as their primary residence, annual increases are capped by the IRAV index.
Tourist rentals are exempt from the rent cap. If you operate your Costa Blanca property as a tourist rental (Airbnb/Vrbo/Booking.com), the Housing Law's rent cap provisions do not apply. Tourist rental is governed by separate regulations (NRU, VT registration) with no price controls.
What to watch: The Valencian Community's political composition may change, and future governments could apply for stressed zone designation in Alicante city or other areas. This remains a regulatory watch point rather than a current concern.
Impact on Tourist Rental Investment Returns
For Costa Blanca new build investors focused on tourist rental (the predominant investment model for international buyers), the 2023 Housing Law has minimal direct impact:
No price controls on tourist rental rates. You can set and adjust your nightly/weekly rates at market prices, raise rates annually, or adjust dynamically based on demand — without legal constraint.
No penalty provisions apply to tourist rental. The grandes tenedores classification and stressed zone provisions are explicitly limited to long-term residential rental. A portfolio of tourist rental properties is not affected by these rules.
NRU regulation is the relevant framework. The regulation that directly affects Costa Blanca tourist rental investors is the national tourist rental registry (NRU) requirement, not the housing law. All tourist lets require NRU registration and platform-displayed licence numbers.
The tax incentive structure for long-term rental. While the housing law creates penalties in stressed zones, it also creates incentives for landlords who choose long-term rental and keep rents at or below certain thresholds. In non-stressed areas, the existing 60% income deduction for long-term residential rental (vivienda habitual) continues — a significant tax advantage for buy-to-let investors who prefer the long-term model over tourist rental management.
What Changed in 2026 and the Regulatory Outlook
The IRAV cap (from 2025): The previous CPI-linked rent cap has been replaced by the IRAV index, which the INE publishes quarterly. The IRAV is designed to be more stable than the volatile CPI figures seen in 2022–2023 (when Spanish inflation peaked above 10%). For long-term landlords on the Costa Blanca, the IRAV cap means predictable, moderate annual increases — not the sharp rises that triggered the original political pressure for the housing law.
The short-term rental regulation landscape: The EU Short-Term Rental Regulation (adopted 2024) requires all platforms to share rental data with national authorities. This data transparency measure is expected to tighten NRU compliance monitoring — properties rented without a licence will be more easily identified by inspectors. This is not a price control but is a compliance management consideration for tourist rental investors.
Developer response: New build developers on the Costa Blanca have not significantly changed their investment-product offering in response to the housing law, given the absence of stressed zone designation in the Valencian Community. Developer marketing continues to emphasise tourist rental returns and lifestyle investment, with the NRU process addressed in off-plan sales presentations.
The broader context: The housing law's primary targets are large landlords in urban centres (Madrid, Barcelona, Valencia city) where the rental affordability crisis is acute. The Costa Blanca holiday and retirement market — characterised by individual international investors with 1–3 properties — is structurally different from the urban rental markets the law was designed to address.
Sammanfattning
For Costa Blanca new build investors, Spain's landlord tax penalty provisions are not a current concern. The Valencian Community has not designated stressed zones, tourist rental is explicitly outside the rent cap framework, and most international buyers own well below the grandes tenedores threshold. The annual IRAV cap on long-term residential rental is the only provision that directly applies — and only if you use your property as a long-term rather than tourist rental.
The regulatory watch point is future Valencian Community government decisions on stressed zone designation. Staying informed via a local property manager or solicitor is the practical risk management approach.
Browse our Costa Blanca new build investment listings or contact us for an up-to-date rental yield analysis.
Vanliga frågor
1Does Spain's rent cap law affect Costa Blanca rental properties?▼
2Does the Spanish housing law affect tourist rental (Airbnb/holiday let) on the Costa Blanca?▼
3What is the annual rent increase cap in Spain for 2026?▼
4Is the Costa Blanca a stressed rental zone in Spain?▼
5Will Spain's housing law affect the value of my Costa Blanca investment property?▼
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