
Barcelona protesters block tourist bus and spray water on holidaymakers
As the busy summer season nears, Spain's first notable anti-mass tourism protest of the year has taken place in Barcelona.
Protesters next to Barcelona's Sagrada Familia basilica held up a tourist bus on Sunday, shouting the now common anti-tourism slogans while spraying holidaymakers on board with water.
Demonstrators also covered the front of the bus with a large banner reading 'Let's put out the tourist fire. June 15th – Day of struggle against touristification', suggesting a bigger protest is scheduled to take place on that date.
Some of the protesters were members of various organisations and platforms from across Europe who travelled to Barcelona this weekend to participate in a forum and debate the problems of mass tourism.
They used megaphones to read out messages denouncing all the problems caused by tourists and overcrowding, and called for plans to put a stop to it.
The incident with the bus lasted approximately 10 minutes before Mossos d'Esquadra police arrived at the scene and detained around 20 participants.
This isn't the first time Barcelona locals have spoken out against mass tourism. The city has been suffering from its effects for at least a decade - much longer than other Spanish cities - and there have been many protests over the years, while anti-tourism graffiti and slogans have become a common sight across the city.
Back in 2017, there were several incidents such as locals destroying tourist bikes and slashing the tyres of a tour bus.
And last summer, some 2,800 people marched along Las Ramblas to demand a new economic model that can reduce the number of tourists who visit every year.
It was on this occasion that a small group of protesters sprayed tourists with water pistols as they sat in restaurants along Barcelona's famous boulevard, images which made the news around the world.
A total of 15.5 million tourists visited Barcelona in 2024, a city which has a population of around 1.7 million, meaning that during parts of the year – particularly in summer – visitors outnumber locals.
Other issues that tourism creates in the city is overcrowding, a rise in prices, more rubbish and pollution – particularly from cruise ships.
Barcelona is not the only Spanish city that has taken its tourism protests to new levels, beyond just marching and shouting.
Last July in Seville, locals covered Airbnb-style lockboxes in excrement.
In Málaga anti-tourism stickers appeared across the city with messages such as 'go f*cking home' (a tu puta casa) and 'stinking of tourist' (apestando a turista).
And in Mallorca, fake signs were put up at the entrance of beaches reading 'polluted sea water' 'beware of dangerous jellyfish', 'beach closed' and 'caution - falling rocks', to dissuade visitors from going there.
In the biggest of the Balearic Islands alone there were a total of five mass protests against overtourism last year, but many other destinations have joined those above, including the Canary Islands.
Alicante, Valencia, Madrid, Granada, Ibiza, Girona and Cantabria were among other places in Spain which held their own anti-mass tourism protests in 2024.
One of the major issues locals are protesting is the fact that tourism drives up housing and rental prices and also takes properties off the market to be used as tourist accommodation instead.
So far in 2025 the focus of protests in Spain has been more on the housing crisis than overtourism, but as the two issues go hand in hand in many cases, this incident in Barcelona is unlikely to be the last time this year that locals speak out against the effects of mass tourism on life in their cities.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Local Spain
11 hours ago
- Local Spain
Bilbao and New York now linked by three direct flights a week
With the rise in the number of American visitors to Spain, United Airlines has launched a new route between the Basque city of Bilbao and New York. The inaugural flight arrived in Bilbao on June 1st and more flights will continue throughout the summer. This is the first transatlantic flight to the US operated from Bilbao. United Airlines offers three weekly flights from Bilbao to New York on Wednesdays, Fridays, and Sundays at 12:30pm, and from New York to Bilbao on Tuesdays, Thursdays, and Saturdays at 9:15pm. The round-trip ticket price costs €700, and the flight takes 8 hours and 30 minutes. A total of 100 flights will be scheduled up until September 24th, with a total of 17,600 seats and the capacity of each plane at 176 passengers. The mayor of Bilbao, Juan María Aburto, stated that this new route is an "opportunity for the internationalisation" of the country and that he hopes the service will be consolidated and continue beyond the summer. The United States set a new record in 2024, with 4.2 million American tourists visiting Spain, and even more are expected this year. This was already an 11.2 percent increase compared to 2023. There are now direct flights to the US from five Spanish cities, including Bilbao, Madrid, Barcelona, Málaga and Palma de Mallorca. From these cities tourists can fly to Boston, New York, Washington DC, Chicago, Miami, Los Angeles, Philadelphia, San Francisco, Orlando, Charlotte, Dallas and Atlanta. Bilbao is one of the top destinations in the Basque Country, known for its excellent cuisine, contemporary art and maritime heritage. It's also a good gateway city to explore the rest of the region including the foodie city of San Sebastián. Its top sight is of course the Guggenheim, designed by Canadian American architect Frank Gehry.


Local Spain
14 hours ago
- Local Spain
How tourist lets in Spain are pushing locals out of city outskirts
Despite the increasing amount of regulations aimed at controlling short-term lets in Spain, tourist rentals remain so profitable for many families and businesses that the phenomenon seems unstoppable. Just over 1.5 percent of properties in Spain are now tourist lets, but these are just the official numbers that don't factor in the unlicenced properties. Unsurprisingly, Airbnb-style lets are no longer limited to Spanish city centres and there are plenty on the outskirts too. Neighbourhood associations are reporting that this trend is driving residents not only out of the zonas centro (city centres), but out of the outer lying barrios (neighbourhoods) too. As tourist apartments located further out come with lower prices, they're proving popular among cost-cutting holidaymakers. In Madrid, locals are demanding that new restrictions on tourist apartments be extended to the entire city and not just the central areas. Those particularly affected by the increase in tourist apartments are those in Tetuán, Puerta del Ángel, San Lorenzo and Puente de Vallecas, traditionally working-class neighbourhoods of the Spanish capital. The mayor's new Plan Reside has been dubbed Plan Expulsa (Expulsion Plan) or Plan Especula (Speculate Plan) as a result. The opposition Socialists have criticised that within the last few months investment firms have bought more than 30 buildings in Puerta del Ángel to be turned entirely into tourist apartments. In the neighbourhood of Sant Antoni on the outskirts of Valencia, many new tourist apartments are being created and the council estimates that they could increase the population of the area by five percent. According to Ximo Muñoz, a member of the neighbourhood association, it will be very difficult for the area to be able to sustain such growth. And the problems are being witnessed not just in the outskirts of Valencia but also in nearby towns such as Manises and Quart de Poblet, where prices have increased by 42 percent compared to two years ago, or in Burjassot and Mislata, where housing is now 45 percent more expensive. A similar situation is being seen in Málaga, where neighbourhoods away from the centre are now the scene of stag and hen-dos, the constant rumbling of suitcase wheels and parties until the early hours of the morning. According to data from Málaga city hall, 37,000 malagueños (locals from Málaga) have been forced to leave the southern city over the past five years, due primarily to unaffordable housing. All these examples show how residents of Spanish cities who opted to live in the outskirts as a way of paying less are being pushed further out still as gentrification expands. Demand for long-term rentals and properties for sale in these barrios far outweighs supply, and tourists lets, including unlicenced ones, are playing a pivotal role in this. Spain's Ministry of Consumer Affairs recently ordered Airbnb take down 65,935 illegal tourist let ads from its website. In 2024, a report from Madrid Town Hall showed that there were more than 15,200 illegal tourist rentals in the city, one of the greatest concentration of them in the country. In the Andalusian province of Málaga there are 43,366 illegal tourist homes, according to data from the Ministry of Consumer Affairs, which represents more than half of 85,000 apartments illegally advertised as tourist accommodation in Andalusia. And in Valencia, the local government believes that of the 12,000 tourist apartments in the city, the vast majority of them are illegal. To try and curb the problem in Barcelona, the city's mayor even said he would aim to ban all tourist rental flats by 2028.


Local Spain
3 days ago
- Local Spain
Seven places to escape the heat in Madrid
Madrid is famous for a lot of things. Its culinary and cultural offerings, for one, and its many parks and public spaces, as well as its metropolitan people and the hustle and bustle of big city living. Speak to any Madrileño about the city, however, and they'll likely remind you of a drawback: the summer heat. As anyone who's lived in a major city before knows, high temperatures hit differently in capitals and summers in Madrid can be especially suffocating. That's why there's usually a big exodus from the landlocked capital every summer, especially in August, when locals head to the costas in the south-east of the country in areas such as Valencia and Alicante. However, that's not possible for everyone and some are stuck in city all summer. Fortunately, both the capital and the wider Madrid region is home to several places – whether separate pueblos, parks or specific spots in town — where you can escape the summer heat, for a while at least. We can't guarantee that it won't still be hot during a heatwave, but they're still likely provide a cooldown or some respite as temperatures drop at night. Cooler places in Madrid region The clue's in the name - Rascafría, a small town of cobbled streets and panoramic views of nearby mountains - is a welcome escape from the city with cool summer temperatures. With average July temperatures of between 26C - 16C, the heat in Rascafría (seen in photo above) is significantly lower than in Madrid and makes a perfect a summer retreat that can be reached by public transport from Madrid. Navacerrada Described in Spanish media as Madrid's 'quintessential mountain village', Navacerrada, in the north of the region, is one of the coolest places you'll find. That's why it has a population of roughly 2,500 during the winter but balloons to 12,000 over summer, mostly Madrileños escaping the sweltering city heat. Nestled in the Sierra de Guadarrama mountain range, the average maximum temperature in the summer months stays around 22 degrees. Cuenca Alta del Manzanares park The Cuenca Alta del Manzanares park, just north of the city, is a protected natural area. Swimming in the river is banned, so you can't take a dip, sadly, but the park his hidden in the mountains and with the nearby water, temperatures are generally lower up there with average August highs of around 30C, which isn't so bad compared to the sweltering city at that time of year. Somosierra Somosierra is particularly desirable in summer as it's the highest village in the Madrid region (1,433 metres above sea level) and a place where average temperatures are a little lower than in the capital, with averages of 21.2C. Another picturesque pueblo, Somosierra is a little over an hour's drive from the capital. Public transport takes roughly two hours and, crucially, the area is surrounded by stunning hiking routes and scenery where you can get out the city and enjoy some fresh air. Sierra del Rincón The Sierra del Rincón mountain range is another protected area with average annual temperatures of between 9 and 12 degrees, making it a perfect destination to take shelter from the heat even in summer. Looking at weather data, summer averages are roughly 8-10C lower than in the capital, and the hundreds of different tree types there provide ample shade. Sierra del Rincón includes the municipalities of La Hiruela, Horcajuelo de la Sierra, Montejo de la Sierra, Prádena del Rincón and Puebla de la Sierra, so it's worth a day out to explores new towns and is just over an hour from Madrid. Cool spaces in city For those braving the August temperatures and staying in town over summer, Madrid capital is also home to a few places where you can escape the heat, momentarily at least. Salón de Baile - Círculo de Bellas Artes The Salón de Baile, an iconic room at the Círculo de Bellas Artes, opens its doors to the public over summer and is transformed into a space designed to combat the 'heat island' effect, which often occurs in big urban centres such as Madrid. Reopened as a 'Climate Refuge', it becomes a large green square full of plants, with free entry, and will be open from 11am to 9pm from July 11th to September 8th. The Círculo de Bellas Artes also has a great terrace, too, which is great for cooling down in the evenings while enjoying views of the city. The Jardín Botánico Madrid's lush botanical garden makes the heat easier to bear. Not only because of the shaded areas and more pleasant temperatures, which tend to be a little lower than out on the street, but because the gardens themselves are worth a visit and a nice distraction from the heat (adult tickets cost €4). It's situated right next to the city's iconic Retiro Park, which is where the a large number of madrileños go in search of some greenery and shade during summer.