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British tourist is shocked to be charged extra for two ICE CUBES at Spanish bar

British tourist is shocked to be charged extra for two ICE CUBES at Spanish bar

Daily Mail​22-04-2025

A British tourist was left fuming after being charged extra for two ice cubes at a Costa del Sol beach bar.
Brit Viv Proops, who visited the Havana beach bar in Estepona, took to social media to rant about the extra cost.
'On Playa del Cristo beach today. Ordered an ice coffee at Havana Beach Bar and was charged for a coffee and charged extra for two ice cubes. Is that normal?', the Brit wrote.
'Is ice always an extra billable item ? Seems a bit petty minded in my opinion!!', she added.
Ms Proops said she was charged 4.50 euros for a coffee, and an additional 50 cents for ice cubes.
Social media users were quick to come to the tourist's defence, saying the extra charge was 'not normal' and branding the beach bar as a 'rip off'.
'That's ridiculous. I would not go back there', one user wrote.
Another said: 'People need to stop going to these places. Everyone is getting ripped off'.
'That is just pathetic, and then they wonder why people go and never go back a second time', a third added.
Havana Beach Bar told English speaking newspaper Spanish Eye that the reason for the extra charge was due to the costs or running an ice machine.
'We use a professional industrial ice machine that cost us over 9,800 euros, and it consumes a significant amount of electricity daily', a spokesperson for the bar said.
'We understand it might seem minor, but in our setting where everything is brought close to the sea with comfort in mind, small extras help cover the high operational costs.'
Locals are becoming increasingly fed up with the rise in costs in tourist hot-spots, arguing that holidaymakers are to blame for increased prices.
Earlier this month, tens of thousands of furious Spaniards took to the streets across the country to demand a solution to a housing crisis that they say has been fueled by mass tourism.
The demonstrations in major Spanish towns and cities including Madrid, Barcelona, Malaga and Palma de Mallorca come as the country finds itself struggling to balance the promotion of tourism and addressing citizens' concerns over increasing housing costs.

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