STR Unpacked

STR Unpacked

The Events Capital With No Beds

3 min · 2 de jun de 2026
Portada del episodio The Events Capital With No Beds

Descripción

Next week the Pope arrives in Barcelona. But forget the Pope for a second. Look at the calendar behind him. Mobile World Congress: 109,000 people. Smart City Expo World Congress. The UIA World Congress of Architects. 142 international congresses in 2025 fourth most of any city on earth. Barcelona has spent a decade becoming the events capital of Europe. And it worked. Now here's the number nobody puts next to that one. Barcelona has ~39,000 hotel rooms. That number is frozen. Hotel room supply grew 0.5% in five years. Not per year. In total, 2019 to 2024. There is exactly one hotel under construction in the city right now. This isn't an accident. The building moratorium is designed to stop new hotels. So when 100,000 people land in the same week, the hotels can't conjure rooms. They're legally capped. Which leaves one type of accommodation that can actually flex to absorb a peak: Short-term rentals. The exact thing Barcelona is removing all 10,101 licences, gone by 2028. That's an estimated ~46,000 tourist beds (averaging ~4.6 per licence, per the city's own PEUAT census). More than Barcelona's entire hotel-room stock. So read those facts together: → A growing pipeline of mega-events → A hotel base frozen by law → More flexible beds than the city has hotel rooms being deleted You can freeze the hotels. You can ban the apartments. Pick one and you can still argue it. Do both while actively recruiting more events and you haven't managed overtourism. You've just guaranteed the city sells out, prices spike, and visitors get priced into the next town. The Pope is just the version of this story with a date on it.

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Portada del episodio The Events Capital With No Beds

The Events Capital With No Beds

Next week the Pope arrives in Barcelona. But forget the Pope for a second. Look at the calendar behind him. Mobile World Congress: 109,000 people. Smart City Expo World Congress. The UIA World Congress of Architects. 142 international congresses in 2025 fourth most of any city on earth. Barcelona has spent a decade becoming the events capital of Europe. And it worked. Now here's the number nobody puts next to that one. Barcelona has ~39,000 hotel rooms. That number is frozen. Hotel room supply grew 0.5% in five years. Not per year. In total, 2019 to 2024. There is exactly one hotel under construction in the city right now. This isn't an accident. The building moratorium is designed to stop new hotels. So when 100,000 people land in the same week, the hotels can't conjure rooms. They're legally capped. Which leaves one type of accommodation that can actually flex to absorb a peak: Short-term rentals. The exact thing Barcelona is removing all 10,101 licences, gone by 2028. That's an estimated ~46,000 tourist beds (averaging ~4.6 per licence, per the city's own PEUAT census). More than Barcelona's entire hotel-room stock. So read those facts together: → A growing pipeline of mega-events → A hotel base frozen by law → More flexible beds than the city has hotel rooms being deleted You can freeze the hotels. You can ban the apartments. Pick one and you can still argue it. Do both while actively recruiting more events and you haven't managed overtourism. You've just guaranteed the city sells out, prices spike, and visitors get priced into the next town. The Pope is just the version of this story with a date on it.

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Portada del episodio Porto Just Killed 1,413 Listings With a Missing PDF

Porto Just Killed 1,413 Listings With a Missing PDF

Everyone said 20 May was the day Europe's "wild west" of short-term rentals ended. Less than two weeks in, the first city to actually pull listings didn't touch the new EU rules. Porto cancelled 1,413 licences. Roughly 13% of its entire registered stock. The trigger? Not a night cap. Not a ban. Not the EU's new data system. A missing insurance document. 🔻 1,413 AL registrations cancelled no proof of civil liability cover filed 🔻 50–60% sit in the historic centre, where they can NEVER be reactivated 🔻 The EU "mega-regulation" had nothing to do with it So who actually loses? Not the platforms. Not the professional manager with clean files. The casual host who let a document expire. This isn't a war on short-term rentals. It's a clear-out of the amateurs and the pros just inherited the supply. Is your compliance file audit-ready? Or are you one missing PDF from a permanent cancellation?

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Portada del episodio Up 13.6 percent!

Up 13.6 percent!

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Portada del episodio Built From the Front Lines: The STR Software Forged in Switzerland and Bali

Built From the Front Lines: The STR Software Forged in Switzerland and Bali

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Portada del episodio They Sold Us Plumbing. The Weapon Comes Next.

They Sold Us Plumbing. The Weapon Comes Next.

Eight days ago the EU's short-term rental data regulation went live. Most of the industry filed it under "compliance admin" and moved on. That was the wrong thing to watch. Remember how this was sold to us? "It's just a data rail. It doesn't ban anything. It doesn't cap anything. It only makes local rules enforceable." Now look at what's being built directly on top of it. The Affordable Housing Act lands this year. It will give national and local authorities tools to identify "areas under housing stress" and apply caps on overnight stays, seasonal restrictions, even temporary freezes on new licences. So the thing that was "just data" eight days ago becomes the foundation for the thing that can switch your market off. The data layer was never the destination. It was the plumbing. The policy weapon was always the point. And here's the part that should sting. The same regulation sold to us as harmonisation is, by Airbnb's own EU affairs lead, already splintering into 27 different national systems. One law. 27 portals. And the compliant operator carries the cost of every single one. I'm not saying it's all downside. If you run a clean, licensed portfolio, stressed-area caps quietly remove your unlicensed competition and hand you pricing power. That's real. But don't let anyone tell you the regulatory story ended on 20 May. It didn't end. It just moved up a floor. The arguing has stopped. The building has started. How are you reading the housing act for your markets? Defensive moat, or the beginning of the squeeze?

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