By Marc Menendez-Roche •
Updated: 29 Nov 2024 • 10:23 • 3 minutes read
A busy Bilbao cafe. Spain’s controversial new tourist rules: Safety measure or bureaucratic nightmare? Euro Weekly News. R
ed Tape Turbulence: New Traveller Registry Sparks Fury in Spain.
Credit: Shutterstock, Todamo.
Spain s new traveller rules are sparking outrage across the country, as industry leaders warn of severe consequences.
December 2 is set to bring chaos to Spain’s travel industry, as new bureaucratic rules leave travel agents, hotel owners, and car hire firms fuming.
The government’s latest real-deal headache dubbed the Traveller Registry has industry insiders up in arms. Slated to kick off on December 2, the scheme will force agencies, hotels, and even car hire firms to collect buckets of personal data from customers, sparking privacy fears and warnings of spiralling travel costs.
Travel industry seething
As previously reported by Euro Weekly News, agencies, already bogged down with paperwork, have slammed the move as a bureaucratic nightmare. They see this as yet another assault on small businesses and on the industry as a whole. With 95% of agencies being small businesses, often run by just one employee, critics warn the new rules could push struggling firms to the brink.
Many argue that the frustration goes beyond mere paperwork it’s about survival. True or not, the prevailing sentiment among small business owners is that the Spanish government s actions represent a relentless challenge to the self-employed and small business operators.
Hotel owners, too, are far from rolling out the welcome mat. Cehat, the country’s top hotel association, slammed the plan as a privacy overreach that could tarnish Spain’s reputation as a top-tier destination.
Bags of data required
The Royal Decree ( Real Decreto 933/2021 ) demands a goldmine of information from travellers: full names, gender, ID numbers, nationality, birth date, home address, phone numbers, emails, and even family ties if travelling with children.
But wait, there’s more Service providers must also spill the beans on their own operations, from company IDs and contact info to payment details, leaving businesses grumbling about the sheer magnitude of the data dump.
All this must be filed via an online system within 24 hours of service and signed off by travellers over 14. Under-14s? Their guardians are on the hook for that paperwork.
Privacy vs practicality
The Ministry of the Interior insists it’s much ado about nothing, claiming no extra information is required beyond what’s already collected. But sceptics, including digital platforms and car hire companies, have branded these claims as laughable , saying the system is riddled with glitches, despite government claims it’s been fully operational since January 2023.
Outrage in Spain
The controversy has reached fever-pitch in Spain’s Senate, where the Partido Popular (PP) rallied allies PNV, Junts, and even VOX to pass a motion calling for another delay to the rollout. Critics of the plan accuse the government of railroading the industry without proper consultation.
Unsurprisingly, the ruling left-wing PSOE party, along with their coalition comrades, pushed back. “This is about modernising our laws for new hospitality trends like tourist homes,” they argued, citing the need to regulate an evolving industry.
What is the new law for tourists in Spain?
Under the new law, up to 18 pieces of personal information will be taken from every traveller. This can include:
Phone number and email address.
Payment information, including card details and bank account numbers.
Fellow traveller names and your relationship to them.
Check-in and check-out dates and times.
Will your holidays cost more?
Industry insiders warn that if the registry goes live, the extra admin could hit customers where it hurts: their wallets. With businesses under pressure to stretch working hours or hire extra hands experts predict higher travel costs could be on the horizon.
For now, it’s a waiting game. Will the government heed the Senate’s call to delay, or will December 2 mark the start of a new bureaucratic badge of honour for Spain s Civil Service?
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Written by
Marc Menendez-Roche
Marc is a writer, teacher, and language enthusiast with a passion for making complex topics simple and accessible.
With a background in business and legal communication and an interest in educational neuroscience, Marc has spent over a decade teaching and writing.
Now, as part of the team at Euro Weekly News, Marc enjoys diving into entertaining topics and stories that matter to the community.
When he’s not writing, Marc loves practising martial arts, playing football, cooking up a storm in the kitchen, or spending quality time with friends and family, but above all, Marc enjoys spending time with his son, Macson.
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