holidayaccommodation
“You can't really top waking up in the morning to see llamas on your front porch waiting for their breakfast,” says Anaïs of a recent pet-sitting experience in New Zealand. Along with her partner Steven, the Spaniard has been travelling the world with TrustedHousesitters since 2021. The platform connects holidaying pet owners with responsible travellers looking for unique, home-away-from-home experiences. “We wanted to switch to travelling full-time, so we decided to get remote jobs and leave everything behind,” Anaïs tells Euronews Travel. “It was the best decision we've ever made, opening do...
Euronews (English)
Short-term rental properties have reportedly been smeared with excrement as anti-tourism protests reach fever pitch in Spain. According to Spanish daily newspaper ABC, several apartments in the Andalusian capital Seville have been targeted, with lockboxes containing keys being covered in brown muck. The incidents coincide with a new proposal by the city mayor to limit licences for Airbnb-style short-term rentals. It would cap tourist apartments at 10 per cent of the total accommodation in certain areas. However, some believe the proposed restrictions do not go far enough, with the main opposit...
Euronews (English)
In Spanish cities suffering from overtourism, rules have slowly been introduced to help regulate numbers, including limits on the number of tourist rentals. Despite this, statistics from the Spanish government show that the number of tourist apartments has increased by nine per cent in the last year, with more than 340,000 now registered. This means in some cities there is one tourist rental for every 1.5 square kilometre and for every 139 locals. But tourist overcrowding is just part of the issue. The other side is Spain’s severe housing crisis, which means fewer and fewer people can afford i...
Euronews (English)
Spanish tourism is booming. According to its National Institute of Statistics, April saw a record 7.8 million visitors enter the country, which received 24 million travellers overall in the first quarter of 2024, up 18 per cent from the previous year. Inevitably, this influx of visitors has had an impact on prices - and local feelings \- with the average hotel room price surging 12 per cent to €135 a night. Which might explain why there’s also been an increase in a seafaring alternative. The ‘Airbnbs of the seas’A number of boat rental platforms haveset sail in the past decade, where private o...
Euronews (English)
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