Tourist Licence Guide for Holiday Rentals in Andalusia (Costa del Sol Edition)

If you want to rent your Costa del Sol property to holiday guests on platforms like Airbnb or Booking.com, you’ll keep hearing one phrase:

“You need a tourist licence.”

Let’s explain what that actually means in Andalusia, how it works on the Costa del Sol, and where a company like SunnyCoast Homes fits into the process.

Quick disclaimer: this is general information, not legal advice. Always check specifics with a lawyer or gestor – especially because the rules are evolving.

1). What is a “vivienda de uso turístico”?

In Andalusia, holiday rentals are regulated as viviendas de uso turístico (VUT) – tourist-use dwellings.

The base rules come from:

Decreto 28/2016, de 2 de febrero, which first regulated viviendas con fines turísticos

Decreto 31/2024, de 29 de enero, which updated and tightened that regulation

If you:

Rent a flat or house short-term (usually under 2 months per guest), and

Advertise it on platforms, your own website, agencies, etc.,

then you’re expected to register it as a VUT and comply with the standards.

2). Basic legal requirements (in plain language)

To register a tourist rental in Andalusia, you normally need:

Legal title

You are the owner, or you have documented permission from the owner to run it as a tourist rental.

Occupancy or first-occupation licence (licencia de ocupación / LPO)

This proves the property is legally habitable under planning law. Town halls can ask for this or an equivalent certificate.

Minimum equipment and services (from the decrees)

Adequate furniture for the property’s capacity

Cooling and heating (with timeframes depending on province/climate)

Bed linen, towels, basic kitchen equipment

Cleaning between stays

Information for guests (rules, emergency numbers, complaint forms, prices)

24/7 contact number

You must provide guests with a phone number available 24 hours in case of issues.

Registration in the Registro de Turismo de Andalucía

You submit a “declaración responsable” (responsible declaration) to the tourism registry, usually online, including property and owner details.

You then get an official registration code (VFT/VUT-XX-XXXX) that must appear in all advertising.

3). What changed with Decreto 31/2024?

The 2024 update didn’t scrap the system – it tightened it.

Among other things, it:

Updated definitions and clarified that VUTs are a tourism accommodation service, not just “renting your home”

Gave municipalities more tools to limit new registrations in saturated areas

Added more detail to quality and equipment rules

Tightened controls to make it harder to register flats that don’t match urban planning (for example, in zones where the town hall has limited tourist homes)

That’s how we ended up with:

Málaga city blocking new tourist registrations in certain neighbourhoods

The Junta de Andalucía cancelling thousands of VUTs that didn’t comply with urban or tourism rules.

4). The new national registry

On top of the Andalusian rules, Spain has created a state-wide registry for tourist and seasonal rentals.

The idea is that:

Each property gets a national registration number

Platforms (Airbnb, Booking, etc.) must show this number on listings and remove those that don’t have one within a short deadline

This comes from a national royal decree (2024) aimed at improving control and fighting illegal rentals.

In practice, it means:

In the future, if your property isn’t properly registered at both regional and state level, it will be very hard to advertise it on major platforms.

5). Where SunnyCoast Homes fits in

We’re not your lawyer – and we don’t pretend to replace that – but as local managers we:

Help you understand if your property can be registered as a VUT before you buy or convert

Coordinate with your lawyer/gestor and the Registro de Turismo process

Make sure the day-to-day operation (equipment, information, guest handling, complaint forms) actually matches what the law expects

Keep you ahead of changes – especially when town halls like Málaga tighten rules in certain zones

If you want to rent your Costa del Sol property legally and sleep at night, getting the tourist licence part right is step one. We’re here to make sure step two – running it properly – is just as professional.