Tourist Rental License in Andalusia
Estepona & Marbella Guide — 2026
If you are buying property on the Costa del Sol with the intention of earning rental income — whether through Airbnb, Booking.com, or direct bookings — you need to understand the legal framework before you purchase. Operating a tourist rental without proper registration is illegal in Andalusia and can result in significant fines. This guide covers everything you need to know.
Do You Need a License to Rent Your Property?
Yes. In Andalusia, if you rent your property to tourists for stays of less than two months, you are legally required to register it as a Vivienda con Fines Turisticos (VFT) with the Junta de Andalucia's Tourism Registry. This is not optional — it is the law, and enforcement has increased significantly in recent years.
The VFT system applies to entire properties rented out for short-term tourist stays. It does not apply to long-term rentals (contracts of 12 months or more under the Spanish Tenancy Act) or to individual room rentals within your primary residence, which fall under different regulations.
Why This Matters Before You Buy
Not every property can obtain a tourist rental license. Some community of owners' statutes prohibit short-term rentals. Some new developments have specific restrictions. Verifying rental license eligibility before you purchase is critical if rental income is part of your investment plan. This is one of the first things we check for clients who intend to rent.
Requirements for a Tourist Rental License
Your property must meet specific habitability and equipment standards set by the Junta de Andalucia. These are not particularly onerous for modern apartments, but they are strictly checked:
Property Standards
- Air conditioning or heating — The property must have climate control appropriate to the season of rental. On the Costa del Sol, air conditioning is effectively mandatory for summer rentals.
- Hot water supply in kitchen and bathroom.
- First aid kit readily available and stocked.
- Complaint forms (hojas de reclamaciones) — official Junta de Andalucia forms must be available for guests.
- Tourist information — You must provide guests with local tourist information, emergency numbers, and house rules.
- Emergency contact — A contact person available 24 hours who can respond to emergencies or guest issues.
Bedroom Requirements
- Each bedroom must have direct ventilation (a window that opens).
- Each bedroom must have natural light.
- Bedrooms must meet minimum size requirements.
Equipment & Amenities
- Fully equipped kitchen — fridge, stovetop, cookware, utensils, crockery.
- Clean bed linens and towels — changed between guests and at least weekly for longer stays.
- Cleaning — The property must be cleaned before each guest arrival.
- Wi-Fi — While not legally required, it is practically essential for tourist rentals.
How to Apply
The application process in Andalusia uses a declaracion responsable (responsible declaration) system. This means you declare that your property meets all requirements, and the authorities may inspect to verify. The steps are:
- Prepare your documents:
- Property deed (escritura) or proof of ownership from the land registry
- Certificate of habitability (cedula de habitabilidad) — confirms the property meets living standards
- Your NIE number or Spanish ID
- Declaracion responsable form (available from the Junta de Andalucia)
- Energy efficiency certificate
- Submit your application to the Junta de Andalucia's Tourism Registry (Registro de Turismo de Andalucia). This can be done online through the Junta's electronic portal or in person at a local office.
- Receive your VFT number. Processing typically takes 15 to 30 days. Once approved, your property is assigned a unique VFT registration number (e.g., VFT/MA/12345).
- Begin advertising. You can now list your property on rental platforms — but you must display your VFT number on every listing.
Pro Tip
Many owners use a gestor (administrative agent) or lawyer to handle the VFT application. The paperwork is manageable but must be done correctly. A gestor typically charges 200 to 500 euros for the service and ensures nothing is missed.
Important Regulations
Once your property is registered, you have ongoing legal obligations:
- Display your VFT number on all advertising — Airbnb, Booking.com, your own website, social media posts, printed materials. Platforms are increasingly required to verify this, and listings without a valid VFT number face removal.
- Report guest information to police — You must register all guests through the Sistema de Entrada de Viajeros (SES, formerly the Guardia Civil's web portal). This must be done within 24 hours of guest arrival and includes passport details, nationality, and dates of stay.
- Provide complaint forms — Official Junta de Andalucia complaint forms must be available. Guests have the right to file formal complaints, and you must facilitate the process.
- Maintain insurance — Liability insurance covering guest injuries or property damage is strongly recommended and may become mandatory.
- New restrictions are emerging — Some municipalities in Andalusia are beginning to restrict the issuance of new tourist rental licenses, particularly in areas where locals feel tourism is affecting housing availability. Stay informed about local regulations.
Estepona: The Growing Market
Estepona represents one of the most attractive rental markets on the Costa del Sol for several reasons:
- Currently still issuing new VFT licenses — Unlike some more saturated areas, Estepona continues to accept new tourist rental registrations. However, this may change as the town continues to grow, so acting sooner rather than later is wise.
- Rapidly growing short-term rental market — As Estepona's profile rises internationally, tourist demand is increasing, but the supply of licensed rentals has not yet caught up. This creates good occupancy rates for well-managed properties.
- Popular rental areas:
- Beachfront developments — Walking distance to the sea commands premium nightly rates.
- Golf urbanisations — Properties near Estepona Golf, El Paraiso, or Atalaya Golf attract sports-focused tourists.
- Old town apartments — Estepona's charming old town, with its murals, flower-lined streets, and local restaurants, appeals to cultural travellers.
- New developments with pools and amenities — Modern complexes with communal pools, gyms, and landscaped gardens perform exceptionally well on platforms like Airbnb.
Marbella: The Established Market
Marbella's rental market is more mature and more competitive. Key considerations:
- More saturated market — Marbella has a higher density of existing tourist rental properties, which means competition for bookings is stronger. Quality of presentation, reviews, and pricing strategy matter more here than in emerging markets.
- Community restrictions are common — Some urbanisations in Marbella have held votes among owners to restrict or prohibit short-term tourist rentals within the community. This is legal under Spanish horizontal property law if approved by the required majority. Always check the community statutes (estatutos de la comunidad) before purchasing a property you intend to rent short-term.
- Strong demand areas:
- The Golden Mile — Between Marbella town and Puerto Banus, consistently high demand from luxury tourists.
- Puerto Banus — Nightlife, marina, designer shopping — attracts a younger, higher-spending demographic.
- Marbella Old Town — Boutique charm, restaurants, and walkability.
- Nueva Andalucia — The "Golf Valley" — strong demand from golf tourists year-round.
- Higher purchase prices — Properties in Marbella cost more than Estepona, which affects your return-on-investment calculation. Run the numbers carefully.
Estepona vs Marbella for Rental Investment
As a general rule: Estepona offers better entry prices and a growing market with less competition, making it attractive for investors seeking stronger percentage yields. Marbella offers higher absolute rental rates but at higher purchase prices and in a more competitive landscape. Both can work — the right choice depends on your budget, risk appetite, and investment timeline.
Tax Implications of Rental Income
Rental income from Spanish property is taxable in Spain regardless of where you live. The tax treatment differs based on your residency status:
EU / EEA Residents (Non-Resident in Spain)
- Tax rate: 19% on net rental income (after deductible expenses).
- Deductible expenses: Property insurance, community fees, maintenance and repairs, cleaning costs, management fees, IBI (property tax), depreciation (3% of construction value per year), mortgage interest, utility bills paid by the owner.
- Filing: Quarterly modelo 210 tax returns.
Non-EU Residents (Non-Resident in Spain)
- Tax rate: 24% on gross rental income — no deductions allowed.
- Filing: Quarterly modelo 210 tax returns.
- Important: This is a significant difference. A non-EU owner with 20,000 euros in rental income and 8,000 euros in expenses pays 24% on the full 20,000 (= 4,800 euros), while an EU owner pays 19% on 12,000 (= 2,280 euros). The disparity is substantial.
Even If You Don't Rent
- Deemed rental income (imputacion de rentas): If you own a property in Spain and do not rent it out, the Spanish tax authorities still consider that it generates a theoretical income. This is calculated at 1.1% of the cadastral value (valor catastral) of the property if the cadastral value has been revised in the last 10 years, or 2% if it has not.
- Tax on deemed income: 19% for EU residents, 24% for non-EU residents, applied to the deemed income figure.
- This applies to all periods the property is not rented — even if it is your holiday home that you use for two months per year, you owe deemed income tax on the remaining ten months.
Double Taxation Treaties
Spain has double taxation agreements with most countries, which means you should not pay tax twice on the same income. However, the mechanics of claiming relief vary by country. A tax adviser familiar with both Spanish tax law and the tax system in your country of residence is essential to avoid overpayment.
Property Management: The Passive Income Solution
Earning rental income from abroad requires either a lot of your personal time or a reliable management partner on the ground. Spanish Riviera offers full rental management services designed to make your property investment genuinely passive:
- Listing creation and optimisation — Professional photography, compelling descriptions, competitive pricing strategy for Airbnb, Booking.com, and other platforms.
- Guest communication — Inquiry responses, booking confirmations, pre-arrival information, in-stay support, and review management.
- Check-in and key exchange — Meet-and-greet or smart lock setup with clear instructions.
- Cleaning and laundry — Professional turnover cleaning between guests, linen and towel service.
- Maintenance — Routine property upkeep, emergency repairs, appliance replacement, pool and garden maintenance.
- Financial reporting — Monthly income statements, expense tracking, and annual summaries for your tax filing.
- Tax filing support — Coordination with your tax adviser for quarterly modelo 210 submissions.
- Guest police registration — We handle all SES guest reporting on your behalf.
How Spanish Riviera Helps
If rental income is part of your investment strategy — and for many of our clients, it is — we build that into the process from day one. Here is what that looks like:
- Before purchase: We verify that the property you are considering can legally obtain a VFT license. We check community statutes, local regulations, and any restrictions that could prevent you from renting. This single step has saved clients from making costly mistakes.
- During purchase: We coordinate with your lawyer to ensure the purchase contract does not contain clauses that would restrict rental activity.
- After purchase: We handle the VFT registration process, set up your listings, furnish and equip the property to rental standards if needed, and begin managing bookings.
- Ongoing: Full property management so you can earn rental income from your Costa del Sol investment without managing it day-to-day.
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