SHARE
COPY LINK
For members

RENTING

The loophole landlords in Spain are using to bypass the 3% rent cap

Spain's Housing Law set a limit of 3 percent on rental price rises for 2024, but some landlords have found a legal loophole to bypass the cap and increase rents beyond it.

The loophole landlords in Spain are using to bypass the 3% rent cap
Some landlords in Spain are using a legal loophole to circumvent the rules and charge their tenants rent increases of more than 3 percent. (Photo by Ludovic MARIN / AFP)

Spanish landlords are finding legal loopholes to get around rental price caps outlined in the government’s flagship housing legislation.

Spain’s Housing Law, passed back in 2023, was a wide-ranging bill that shifted agency fees onto landlords, created rental price indexes, and established ‘stressed’ rental zones, among many other things.

For renters in Spain, however, (and landlords too, no doubt) the most eye-catching clause was the one concerning rental price caps. For tenants, this was particularly welcome at a time when rental costs have skyrocketed in Spain in recent years — as 2023 ended, rents were on average 9.4 percent more expensive than the previous year, according to data from Idealista.

READ ALSO:

Before the Hosing Law, during the first five years of rental contracts in Spain the landlord had the right to increase the price each year by the same percentage as the CPI. But the new law capped them for 2023 and 2024, and established an index that will replace the CPI reference.

In 2023 the limit was 2 percent, but in 2024 a 3 percent cap will apply, whatever the level of inflation. That is to say, in theory landlords may not raise the price of their contracts already in force above 3 percent. Unfortunately, the cap does not usually apply to new contracts, nor those signed after 2019.

READ ALSO: Five key points about Spain’s new housing law

However, reports in the Spanish media in recent weeks suggest that some landlords are using a legal loophole to circumvent the rules and charge their tenants rent increases of more than 3 percent.

But how’s that possible, and what’s going on here?

In a phrase: cumulative increases (incrementos acumulativos in Spanish). Essentially, the law allows landlords who didn’t increase the rent by 2 percent in 2023 (the legal cap as per the legislation) to add it onto the 3 percent cap for 2024, making the rent increase 5 percent.

José Ramón Zurdo, director of the Rental Negotiating Agency, told 20 Minutos that “the law always refers to a specific period, in this case the years 2023 and 2024. In those years, the update ceiling is 2 percent and 3 percent respectively, but it does not say that it cannot be accumulated and that, therefore, higher increases can be applied in certain cases.”

And the rises could even theoretically surpass that. Experts warn that increases could be claimed according to the price indexes (in other words, how much rent can be increased as per the contract) for all the years in which they have not been applied, essentially applying them retroactively.

REAS ALSO: Where can I rent a studio for a good price in Spain in 2024?

“It is possible to take them up to the limit periods, which is five years. If they [rent increases] have not been waived, it is possible to claim them,” Zurdo explains. This means that the increases in some cases “could be more than just 5 percent, but in some cases up to 10 percent or 15 percent”.

But who is to blame here? Though many renters will blame landlords for using this cumulative increase trick, experts place the blame with the government.

Arantxa Goenaga, a civil law expert and partner at Círculo Legal, says the legal loophole is a consequence of a law that “has been done badly”.

“You cannot modify this index, this increase, by decree, and not modify the LAU [Urban Lease Law], because you are creating a contradiction in the laws,” she adds.

According to Goenaga, the problem is that the law “lacks legal precision, it seems that laws are not made by lawyers, and this is giving rise to many problems.”

READ ALSO: Is it better for landlords in Spain to rent to temporary or long-term tenants?

Member comments

Log in here to leave a comment.
Become a Member to leave a comment.
For members

PROPERTY

Why Spain is looking to Vienna to fix its housing crisis

Spain is trailing behind the rest of the EU when it comes to social housing and has one of the lowest proportions of stock, so could replicating the Austrian capital's model be the solution?

Why Spain is looking to Vienna to fix its housing crisis

According to figures from Spain’s Land and Housing Observatory, in 2020 just 2.5 percent of total constructions in Spain were for social housing, far lower than in countries such as Austria, where it was 24 percent, the Netherlands, with 30 percent, and Denmark at 20.9 percent. 

Spain is one of a small handful of EU countries that have surprisingly low social housing provisions. Spain ranks 18th in the EU overall and is joined at the bottom of the table by countries such as Romania (1.5 percent), Estonia (1.7 percent), Croatia (1.8 percent) and Portugal (2 percent).

Spain’s 2.5 percent figures are also much lower than the wider European average of 9.3 percent. In recent years, Spain has not even managed to complete 10,000 social housing units per year, compared to 60,000 a decade ago.

READ ALSO – EXPLAINED: How Spain plans to address its huge lack of social housing

Furthermore, public housing has become increasingly privatised in recent years, affecting most of the almost 2.5 million subsidised homes built since 1981, when the first plan was approved. In 2012, the construction of social housing plummeted and dropped from 50,000 homes annually to just 9,200 in 2022.

The Viennese model

For decades now, Vienna, the Austrian capital, has increased its stock of price-controlled social housing and has stood out for its housing policy.

Although there is social housing throughout the country, the majority of it is concentrated in the capital city. 

The Vienna City Council has become the biggest homeowner in Europe – around 60 percent of residents live in one of 220,000 properties subsidised by the public sector, and the city invests up to €600 million annually in affordable housing models.

By increasing social housing and limiting rent, the value of housing has also been limited and prices have been regulated. For example, in Vienna, rent is around €9 per m/2, according to the consulting firm Deloitte.

This figure is much lower than that of the rest of the European capitals, compared to London or Paris, for example, where the rental price per m/2 is around €30. In comparison, rent in Barcelona and Madrid is around €17 and €14 m/2 respectively.

The requirements to be able to access social housing in Vienna are also very broad. Basically, you need to be 17 years old or older, be registered Vienna and earn more than €43,000 net annually. Rent can also not represent more than 30 percent of your income.

READ ALSO: Spain needs to build 1.2 million affordable rental homes in a decade

How Spain is planning on replicating the Vienna model

Spain, like many EU countries, has begun to turn towards the Viennese model.

Madrid in particular hopes to increase the real estate stock by 70,000 homes in four years, of which up to 40,000 will be dedicated to social housing according to regional president Isabel Díaz Ayuso.

Like in Vienna, Madrid hopes to balance the real estate market naturally without limiting prices. For example, in Vienna where the private real estate stock has been regulated, 60 square meter homes can vary between €600 and €700 per month. This is almost impossible in Madrid and Barcelona, where a home with the same characteristics can exceed more than €1,000 per month.

The Spanish government recently approved a plan to allocate 50,000 ‘Sareb’ homes to bolster its dwindling social housing stock. La Sociedad de Gestión de Activos Procedentes de la Reestructuración Bancaria or ‘Sareb’ was created eleven years ago to buy real estate assets from banks that went bankrupt during the 2008 financial crisis, and has been state-run since 2022.

Sánchez followed up on this 50,000 pledge by announcing the financing of a further 43,000 homes for social housing paid for with €4 billion of European funds.

“I want to announce that, in addition to the mobilisation of 50,000 Sareb homes, we are going to finance the development of another 43,000 new homes for social rent and rent at affordable prices,” the Prime Minister said.

He also criticised Spain’s “embarrassing” social housing stock compared to Europe, and reinforced his “commitment” to “move forward so that housing is a right and not a problem for the majority of citizens”. 

Having an extensive public housing stock allows prices to be lowered and ensures that there’s sufficient supply.

Christian Schantl, the head of the International Relations department of the public company Wiener Wohnen, the entity that manages public rentals in the city of Vienna, has advised Spain that to do this, they should not sell public housing under any circumstances.

In an interview with El País he said: “You cannot completely copy and paste the system, it would not work. One thing [the Spanish Government] should not do is sell its public housing. This is very important because many cities in Europe have made that mistake and are now facing serious problems. So that’s the first thing: never sell what you have. And then, there are some elements that are important to take into account, such as the financial situation, the necessary land, the legal framework and housing policies,” he continued.

SHOW COMMENTS