Now Reading
Protesters against overtourism take to the streets of southern Europe
Dark Light

Protesters against overtourism take to the streets of southern Europe

Reuters

BARCELONA/MADRID—Thousands of people took to the streets of cities in southern Europe on Sunday to demonstrate against overtourism, firing water pistols at shop windows and setting off smoke in Barcelona, where the main protest took place.

“Your holidays, my misery,” protesters chanted in the streets of Barcelona while holding up banners emblazoned with slogans such as “mass tourism kills the city” and “their greed brings us ruin.”

Tourists walk toward one of Park Guell’s entrances after exiting a bus, as tensions grow between neighbours and tourists due to overcrowding on the bus lines serving Park Guell and the nearby neighbourhood of Turo de la Rovira, in Barcelona, Spain, June 12, 2025.

Under the umbrella of the SET alliance—Sud d’Europa contra la Turistització, or Catalan for “Southern Europe against Overtourism”—protesters joined forces with groups in Portugal and Italy, arguing that uncontrolled tourism was sending housing prices soaring and forcing people out of their neighborhoods.

Barcelona, a city of 1.6 million, drew 26 million tourists last year.

People hold a banner as they attend a protest against mass tourism, in Barcelona, Spain June 15, 2025.

Authorities in the north eastern Spanish city said around 600 people joined the demonstration there, some firing water pistols or setting off colored smoke and putting stickers saying ‘Neighborhood self-defense, tourist go home’ on shop windows and hotels.

Outside one hotel, an agitated worker confronted the protesters saying he was “only working” and was not the venue’s owner.

A tourist walks on a banner that reads buses are for neighbors not for toursim, while anti-tourism activists across southern Europe team up to pressure authorities to take action against overcrowded cities as they prepare to participate in simultaneous large-scale protests across Spain, Portugal, and Italy on Sunday, in Barcelona, Spain, June 14, 2025.

There were similar demonstrations in other parts of Spain including Ibiza, Malaga, Palma de Mallorca, San Sebastian and Granada. Protests in Italy took place in cities including Genoa, Naples, Palermo, Milan and Venice, where locals oppose the construction of two hotels that will add around 1,500 new beds to the city, the organizers told Reuters.

In Barcelona, the city government said last year it would bar apartment rentals to tourists by 2028 to make the city more livable for residents.

See Also

Protesters shout anti-tourism slogans at tourists sitting at a bar, in Palma de Mallorca, Spain, June 15, 2025.

‘Nuisance’

“I’m very tired of being a nuisance in my own city. The solution is to propose a radical decrease in the number of tourists in Barcelona and bet on another economic model that brings prosperity to the city,” Eva Vilaseca, 38, told Reuters at Sunday’s demonstration in Barcelona, dismissing the common counterargument that tourism brings jobs and prosperity.

International travel spending in Europe is expected to rise by 11 percent to $838 billion this year, with Spain and France among the countries set to receive record numbers of tourists.

A protest in Lisbon was scheduled for later on Sunday afternoon.

Have problems with your subscription? Contact us via
Email: plus@inquirer.com.ph, subscription@inquirer.com.ph
Landine: (02) 8896-6000
SMS/Viber: 0908-8966000, 0919-0838000

© The Philippine Daily Inquirer, Inc.
All Rights Reserved.

Scroll To Top