International
Spanish Cabinet Approves Bill Penalising Empty Homes, Rewarding Lower Rents

Under the law, regional governments can declare areas as in “high demand” when the average household spends over 30% of its net income on rent or mortgage costs and bills and if property prices have risen more than 5% above inflation.
Spain’s first housing law inched closer to becoming a reality on Tuesday after the cabinet approved a draft text that will reward landlords who lower rents and penalise those with multiple empty homes.
The ruling Socialist Party had been at loggerheads with junior coalition partners Unidas Podemos for months over the bill but hammered out an agreement last month as part of a broader accord to pass the 2022 budget.
Under the law, regional governments can declare areas as in “high demand” when the average household spends over 30% of its net income on rent or mortgage costs and bills and if property prices have risen more than 5% above inflation.
A general income tax rebate for landlords will drop to 50% from 60% but will stay at the same level for those who have refurbished or improved their properties in the last two years.
It would rise to 70% for landlords who put properties on the market for the first time and rent them to people aged 18-35, or who make their properties available for state-subsidised social housing.
In high demand areas, landlords who drop rent by at least 5% from their previous contract will qualify for a rebate of 90%.
In a bid to clamp down on consistently empty properties, people who own more than four homes will face higher property taxes if one or more of their homes remain continuously uninhabited for two years, barring refurbishment works and other exceptions.
The draft legislation also targets the lack of accessible housing, defining “large landlords” as any entity owning 10 or more properties, reserving 30% of new-builds for social housing – and providing fiscal incentives for developers who do so.
With social housing representing less than 2% of all homes according to the OECD, Spain lags behind European peers such as Britain, France and Italy, where subsidised housing respectively represents 17%, 14% and 4% of each country’s stock of homes.
Source: Reuters
(The story has been published from a wire feed without modifications to the text. Only the heading has been changed)
ALSO READ: Eldeco Raises Rs 275 Crore Debt From Tata Capital Housing Finance Ltd

- Allied Industries1 month ago
Yes Bank-DHFL: Rana Kapoor’s Wife, Daughters Remanded To Judicial Custody
- Blogs1 month ago
Legal Checklist For Indian Proptech Startups In India
- Press Releases3 weeks ago
Proptech Totality Appoints Digvijay Chauhan As Chief Business Officer
- International1 month ago
Evergrande Troubles Punish China Property As Contagion Concern Spreads
- International1 month ago
USA: Rising Costs, Shortages Of Building Materials Rippling Across Homebuilding Industry
- Trends1 week ago
Mumbai Is The Least Happy City In The World To Buy A Home: Study
- Infrastructure2 weeks ago
PM Launches Gati Shakti: National Master Plan For Infrastructure Development
- Trends1 month ago
Puranik Builders Files Draft Papers With Sebi To Raise Funds VIA IPO