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WHAT CHANGES IN SPAIN

What changes about life in Spain in January 2024

Measures to help with the cost of living crisis, Three Kings' Day, pension rise, cap on rents, January sales, road tolls and more. Find out about all the important changes and events that will take place in Spain during January 2024.

What changes about life in Spain in January 2024
What changes in Spain in January. Photo: Capotina Entretenimientos, Andrea Piacquadio and Burak the Weekend / Pexels

Pensions increase

Contributory pensions will rise by 3.8 percent from January, while the minimum contributory pensions will increase by 6.9 percent. Pensions for widows with family responsibilities will increase by 14.1 percent from €905.9 currently up to €1,033.6 per month. Non-contributory income and the Minimum Living Income (IMV) will also increase by 6.9 percent.

This means that the average retirement pension will increase by €734 per year or €52 per month.

The Three Kings arrive 

On January 5th, the Three Kings will arrive in Spain, bringing with them stacks of presents to fill the shoes of Spanish children all over the country. Most cities in Spain hold Three Kings’ parades on the night of the 5th when the kings and their entourage bring elaborate costumes, music, sweets and floats to streets around the country.

January 6th, Epiphany Day or Día de Los Reyes is another public holiday in Spain, a time when families gather to open presents and enjoy more feasting. Most shops and public institutions will be closed on this day. 

READ ALSO: Why Spain loves the Three Kings more than Santa

January sales begin

After Reyes (Kings’ Day) the January sales officially begin in Spain. High street stores from the Inditex Group – Zara, Zara Home, Massimo Dutti, Pull & Bear, Bershka, Stradivarius and Oysho will begin their sales on Sunday, January 7th. 

Spain’s biggest department store El Corte Inglés will also be slashing its prices from the 7th. Meanwhile, clothing store Mango will begin its sales on January 3rd. 

Cortefiel, Springfield and Pedro del Hierro, as well as H&M all began their sales already, which will continue until February. 

READ ALSO: Everything that changes in Spain in 2024

Measures to help with the cost of living crisis maintained

The Spanish government recently announced a new decree that would extend some of the anti-inflation measures into the new year.

The VAT reduction on gas bills will be extended for the first four months of 2024 until the cooler weather ends. It will go from 5 to 10 percent between January and March.

The reduction of VAT on basic food items will also continue until June 2024. Like during 2023, this will include a reduction of 4 to 0 percent for essential foods (such as milk, bread, eggs, pulses and vegetables) and from 10 percent to 5 percent for oils and pastas.

Other forms of aid include eliminating bank commissions at ATMs for those with disabilities and the elderly, as well as the prohibition of carrying out evictions of the most vulnerable. Find out all about these and the other measures that will be extended into 2024

VAT on electricity will increase but discounts will remain

The government will increase the VAT rate on electricity from 5 to 10 percent, which it was reduced to in 2021. It will remain that way throughout 2024.

Despite the increase, the VAT on electricity will remain far below the normal rate of 21 percent, which it was before the crisis.

Transport discounts have been extended

Discounts and free public transport tickets have been extended once again, meaning that you’ll be able to get your bonus passes from the start of January. Earlier this month Sánchez announced that public free transport would likely only be continued for children, young people, and the unemployed, but rules mean it’s now extended to all passengers. 

This means the government will offer a 30 percent discount on public transport as before, while each region will be responsible for adding a further discount to extend this reduction. Passengers can obtain free travel by paying a €10 deposit on Cercanías or Rodalies commuter trains and a €20 deposit on Media Distancia (mid-distance) trains. This will be returned to them if they have made a total of 16 journeys during three months.

Self-employed to pay new social security fees

The amount of social security tax that autónomos (self-employed workers) in Spain will pay this year will change once again from last year, so it’s important to be aware of how much you’ll have to stump up every month.

Fees will be reduced further for those on low incomes, while they will increase for those who earn more.

How much you pay depends on which of the 15 brackets you fall under, dictated by your monthly net earnings. Last year the social security payments ranged from €230 up to €500 per month, while this year they will go from €225 to €530. 

Limit on rent increases

Rental contracts may not increase by more than three percent in 2024 as part of the Housing Law. This means that tenants whose rental contract has come to an end and must be renewed can negotiate with their landlord as to the increase that will be applied. If no agreement is made, however, it cannot exceed three percent. 

If the landlord is a large holder (owns more than 10 urban properties), the limit of the annual variation in rent may also not exceed three percent.

Toll rate increases

Toll fees on highways will go up between 5 and 6.65 percent from January, depending on the specific conditions of each.

Specifically, the 2024 rate review means an increase of 6.65 percent for the AP-46 and AP-7 Alicante-Cartagena; 6.55 percent for AP-9; 5.12 percent for AP-68; 5.07 percent for the AP-6, AP-51, AP-61, AP-53, AP-71 and AP-7 Málaga-Guadiaro, and 5 percent for the AP-66.

Airport strikes

After postponing walk-outs when the government stepped in as an intermediary in negotiations, Spanish trade unions have reinstated calls for strike action by Iberia workers over key January travel dates at airports across Spain: January 5th, 6th, 7th and 8th.

Those striking belong to Iberia Airport Services – the airline’s subsidiary that provides ground services, including passenger transfer, loading and baggage collection and ramp services to planes – and which crucially handles ground services for several other airlines.

Iberia Airport Services operate at airports across Spain, which could therefore be partly affected by the stoppage, but the main focus of the stoppages will be Madrid’s Barajas airport.

There is another airport strike in the Spanish capital which was called with almost immediate effect on December 31st 2023 and which is ongoing as of January 2nd.

It involves ground movement controllers, who assist air traffic controllers at Spain’s biggest airport by controlling the flow of aircraft and other vehicles on taxiways and runways.

READ MORE: What’s the latest on Spain’s January airport strikes?

A possible rise in the minimum wage

Although a rise in the minimum wage or SMI is not yet official and the government has yet to decide how much it will be, the increase likely happen at some point this month or will at least be retroactive from January 1st. 

Spain’s minimum is currently €1,080 gross per month over 14 payments (€15,120 gross per year), an amount that has been in place since February 2023. While no one yet knows exactly how much it will increase, there has been some speculation and various proposals.

The Spanish Confederation of Small and Medium Companies (CEOE-Cepyme) proposed raising the SMI by six percent over the next two years, to €1,112 over 14 payments in 2024 and to €1,145 in 2025.

The unions have made a counter proposal increase that reaches 60 percent of the average salary as they claim that the evolution of the price of basic products, such as food, must be taken into account. This equates to €1,200 over 14 payments instead.

READ ALSO: What we know so far about Spain’s next minimum wage increase

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WHAT CHANGES IN SPAIN

KEY POINTS: Everything that changes in Spain in May 2024

Mortgage price drops, help for young people to buy a house, new obesity medication, Catalan elections, lots of fiestas, public holidays and more - here's what's in store for Spain in May 2024.

KEY POINTS: Everything that changes in Spain in May 2024

May 1st public holiday
El Día del Trabajador or Labour Day in Spain is a public holiday in Spain’s 17 autonomous communities and is held on May 1st. In 2024, May 1st will fall on a Wednesday, mid-week.

It will be a holiday in all regions across Spain, so no matter where you live you will most likely have this day off. Schools, most businesses and shops will also be closed on this day. 

May 2nd holiday in Madrid 
May 2nd is also a public holiday in Madrid and commemorates the day in 1808 when the population rose up against Napoleon’s troops in the Peninsula War.

Refusing to give into French demands to surrender, the Spanish made their last stand in an archway to the barracks before being killed.

Schools will be closed and streets of Malasaña will be filled with art, music, dancing and events to mark Dos de Mayo including stages set up in Plaza Commendadores, Conde Duque, Plaza San Ildefonso.

READ ALSO: What is ‘Dos de Mayo’ and why does Madrid celebrate it?

Number of tourists to soar
While officially May is the shoulder season in Spain, its good weather marks the start of the mass tourist arrivals, which usually reach their pinnacle in July and August.

The Ministry of Industry and Tourism is anticipating a surge in the number of tourists this May, however, with 9.49 million expected to arrive in May. This will be 14 percent more than in the same month of 2023, according to forecasts by Turespaña. It’s estimated tourists will spend almost €12,000 million in the fifth month of 2024, an increase of around 22 percent compared to the same period last year.

Catalan regional elections
Catalonia’s President Pere Aragonès announced in mid-March that he was dissolving the Spanish region’s parliament and would call early elections, after his proposed budget was rejected by the assembly.

This means that the new elections will be held on May 12th. Originally, they been set for early 2025. May 2nd is the last day to request a vote by mail, while May 6th is last day to vote by mail. On May 10th marks the electoral campaign ends at midnight and then May 12th will be the actual election day. 

Vigo Airport to close for refurbishment
Back in October 2023, the city of Vigo in Galicia announced that its airport would close in order to carry out refurbishments. The comprehensive remodel on the airport’s runway will leave the city without a working airport for almost the entire month of May, meaning no flights will be running in or out of the city. It will last from May 6th to the 30th and will include an investment of €30 million for the rehabilitation of its 2,400-meter deteriorated runway.

Two exclusive international flights from Barcelona
Barcelona-El Prat Airport will launch an exclusive route directly to Hanoi, the capital of Vietnam. In the month of May, Vietnam Airlines will operate two special flights, according to the Aeroinfo Barcelona-El Prat X (formerly Twitter) account. The first flight will take place on May 1st and the second on May 8th.

So far only these two flights have been announced and there are no more guarantees for future flights directly between Barcelona and the Vietnamese, so you might want to take advantage while you can.

Mortgage price drop for 4 million households

Banks are preparing to reduce mortgage re-payments, on average, by around €50 per month starting in the second half of the year. The fall in interest rates will be welcome news for four million people who have variable-rate mortgages and have seen their payments increase month after month, in recent years.

The 12-month Euribor averaged 3.609 percent in January, below the 3.679 percent in December. This is the third consecutive month that this index has fluctuated downwards. 

Help for young people to buy a house 
Starting in May, banks could help young people and families with children to buy a home by giving them access to state-backed mortgages. This measure will allow some 50,000 beneficiaries to access mortgage loans on favorable conditions, with the possibility of financing up to 100 percent of their first home.  It will be available for all those under the age of 35 with an annual income less than €37,800 gross and for families with children under their care, providing that they haven’t bought a property previously.  

READ ALSO: Spain’s govt to act as first home guarantor for young people and families

New obesity medication
From May 1st, one of the most anticipated drugs to fight obesity will become available in Spain. It has been developed by Novo Nordisk and is called Wegovy. The Danish company has warned that “given the unprecedented high global demand for Wegovy, the supply of this drug will be carried out in a limited and responsible manner in each country. It’s not currently included as part of the National Health System.

The new drug is a physiological regulator of appetite and calories and deals with receptors in the brain.

Help to complete annual tax return for over-65s
The income tax campaign for 2023-2024 is well underway, but many taxpayers are finding it difficult to complete their tax returns. Among them, those over 65 years of age tend to be the group with the greatest problems.

In order to solve this issue, the government is promoting a special aid plan for them, which will be offered in more than 500 small municipalities, in 46 provinces, with less than 3,000 inhabitants. Help will be offered from May 7th in collaboration with the different town councils. In order to benefit from it you will have to make an appointment starting on April 29th.  

Mother’s Day on May 5th

Unlike Father’s Day in Spain, which is always celebrated on the fiesta of San José on March 19th, Mother’s Day changes each year.

It is celebrated on the first Sunday in May, which this year will fall on May 5th. Spain has been celebrating Mother’s Day in this way, changing each year for the past 59 years.

It is typically celebrated by children giving gifts to their mothers and going for celebratory family meals.

Teachers’ strike in Valencia region

Teachers from public schools and institutes in the region of Valencia are set to go on strike on Thursday, May 23rd, according to The Platform in Defence of Public Education. The platform has called on teachers and families from all non-university public education establishments to participate in the mobilisation.

Students will also be able to join the strike from 3rd year of secondary school. The walkout will be staged in order to put a stop to cuts and force a negotiation that improves the conditions of the teachers and schools. 

A month of fiestas

May is a month packed full of festivals in Spain, particularly in the south of the country and the city of Córdoba. Córdoba in fact has a whole month of celebrations in May beginning with the Cruces de Mayo from April 26th to May 1st, where flower-adorned crosses will be set up across the city. This will be closely followed by the Patios Festival from May 2nd to 12th, in which visitors can see inside the city’s private walled gardens, decorated with flowers for the occasion.

A couple of hours to the southwest the Romería del Rocío will be taking place in the small Huelvan village from May 17th to the 20th. During the event more than one million people will make the pilgrimage to Rocío, many on horseback, filling its sandy streets with a lively atmosphere.

While in northern Spain, there are more flowery scenes at the Temps de Flors in the Catalan city of Girona. During the festival held from May 11th to the 19th, elaborate art installations created from plants and flowers will be set up across the historic Jewish quarter, city walls, cathedrals and churches.

Weather in May
According to meteorologists from Eltiempo.es this May will be warmer than normal throughout Spain, although the northwest and north of the peninsula will experience lower temperatures than the rest of the country.

The month will begin, however with above-average rainfall in the northeast of the peninsula, including the Balearic Islands, the Pyrenees, northern Aragón, Catalonia and Navarra. Rainfall is predicted to be slightly below average in the Canary Islands and some areas of southern Andalusia.

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