By using this site, you agree to the Privacy Policy.
Accept
The Spanish EyeThe Spanish EyeThe Spanish Eye
Notification Show More
  • Home
  • News
  • Travel
  • Events
  • Health
  • Politics
  • Property
  • Opinion
  • About Us
  • Contact
Reading: Revealed: Squatters in Spain are skirting new laws designed to kick them out faster – while many remain unaffected
Share
The Spanish EyeThe Spanish Eye
Search
  • Home
  • News
  • Travel
  • Health
  • Politics
  • Property
  • Opinion
  • About Us
  • Contact
Have an existing account? Sign In
Follow US
The Spanish Eye > Crime > Revealed: Squatters in Spain are skirting new laws designed to kick them out faster – while many remain unaffected
CrimeNewsProperty

Revealed: Squatters in Spain are skirting new laws designed to kick them out faster – while many remain unaffected

Have you been affected by squatters? Email [email protected]

Last updated: May 12, 2025 12:48 pm
Laurence Dollimore
Published: May 12, 2025
Share
Footage from a recent squatter eviction on the Costa del Sol
SHARE

The highly-anticipated anti-squatter law was billed as a long-awaited fix for one of Spain’s most hated legal headaches.

Contents
The ’15-day eviction’Courts are overwhelmed‘Inquiokupas’ are not addressed by new laws

Organic Law 1/2025 arrived with political fanfare earlier this year, promising swift justice that would empower property owners to boot out illegal occupiers.

READ MORE: Moment anti-squatter force reclaims home on the Costa del Sol

However, just a few months in, and it seems the reality is far from what was promised, with squatters already finding ways to manipulate the law to their favour.

The ’15-day eviction’

At the heart of the new law is a fast-track eviction process that vows to remove squatters within 15 days.

- Advertisement -

But, according to the legislation, this only works ‘if the squatting is clearly illegal and uncontested’.

According to a report by OK Diario, squatters now routinely produce documents that question this premise, in a bid to delay the process.

While some are laughable, others are very convincing. More importantly, most are enough to claim that there was a prior rental agreement between the occupier and landlord.

Under the law, any such document forces a judge to take a closer look. Suddenly, that ‘express’ eviction morphs into a standard judicial procedure that drags on for weeks, if not months.

There is reportedly an online network of squatters that helps them create fake contracts to show to the courts and cast doubt on claims that they are squatting illegally.

There’s no shortage of guides, forums, and backchannels where squatters can also learn the latest delay tactics and share how to outwit the system.

Courts are overwhelmed

None of this would matter quite so much if the courts could keep up. But in major cities like Madrid, Barcelona, and Valencia, they cannot.

- Advertisement -

Judges facing dozens of cases a day don’t have the time – or often the legal clarity – to act decisively under the new rules.

And it’s not just the squatters who are exploiting the system’s slowness. Legal ambiguity, inconsistent interpretations, and bureaucratic bottlenecks mean even the most airtight cases can stall.

‘Inquiokupas’ are not addressed by new laws

Perhaps the most glaring omission in the legislation is its failure to address so-called inquiokupas.

These are tenants who enter homes legally with a rental contract but then stop paying and refuse to leave.

Since they’re not technically squatters, they’re not covered by the express eviction mechanism. They remain the landlords’ problem – and a growing one at that.

For small property owners, especially those relying on rental income, this is more than a legal nuisance, it’s financial ruin.

- Advertisement -

These cases still follow the old legal route, a slow, expensive process that can stretch on for years.

Crisis for Spain’s cava: Major producer announces lay offs after years of drought
Watch: Scandal as ‘narco tunnel’ between Spain and Morocco reveals drugs were trafficked through military unit’s home
Watch: Spanish police issue online scam warning for fake ‘i’m not a robot’ checks
Warning for British homeowners in Spain: The MANY symbols criminals leave on front doors – and what they mean
‘Meteotsunami’ warning is extended in Spain: Holiday island is placed under alert for ‘rissaga’ phenomenon until Sunday morning
TAGGED:spain newssquatters

Sign Up For Newsletters

Be kept up to date! Get the latest breaking news delivered straight to your inbox.
Please wait...

Thank you for signing up!

Share This Article
Facebook Email Print
Leave a Comment

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

You must be logged in to post a comment.

Follow

Find us on Social Media
FacebookLike
XFollow
YoutubeSubscribe
Popular News
Costa del SolExclusiveNews

Brit’s pub is vandalised in La Duquesa just weeks after burglars stole charity tins

Laurence Dollimore
May 3, 2025
Fury as tourist cafe in Spain introduces ‘table hogger’ surcharge: Locals blame ‘outsiders’
Watch: Ultra-right group in Spain is investigated for ‘hate crime’ over anti-immigration video
Tourists and locals visiting Sevilla’s Feria de Abril from tonight are warned of €10,000 fines
‘It’s just so good… it’s ridiculous’: American TikTokers react to tapas dishes in Sevilla

Categories

  • News
  • Costa del Sol
  • Crime
  • Costa Blanca
  • weather
  • Travel
  • Andalucia
  • Canaries
  • Exclusive
  • Life in Spain

The Spanish Eye

Your first look at what’s happening in Spain - All the latest news, opinion and analysis
Quick Link
  • Home
  • News
  • Register for Free access
  • Contact
Top Categories
  • News
  • Travel
  • Health
  • Property

Get News straight to your inbox

Subscribe to our newsletter to get our newest articles instantly!

Please wait…

Thank you for signing up!

© The Spanish Eye 2024 - All rights reserved | Privacy Policy
Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Username or Email Address
Password

Lost your password?

Not a member? Sign Up