Rental, Management & Yield

Renting Out a Property on Mallorca: Owner Use, Long-Term Rental or Holiday Letting?

Which rental model suits which property, what opportunities and risks owners should know, and why tourist letting requires particularly careful scrutiny.

Anyone buying a property on Mallorca should consider its future use early on. There are major legal, tax and organisational differences between pure owner use, classic long-term rental, seasonal rental and tourist holiday letting. This guide offers orientation for buyers and owners; it does not replace individual legal, tax or administrative advice.

The most important decision: residential or tourist use?

On Mallorca, not every short-term rental is automatically permitted. The key factor is whether the property is used as living space or marketed for tourist purposes. Long-term rental and genuine seasonal rental generally fall within the framework of Spanish tenancy law. Holiday letting, on the other hand, is a tourist activity and is subject to Balearic tourism legislation, island planning, municipal rules and additional obligations.

For buyers, this means: a villa with an existing, properly documented tourist licence is valued differently from an apartment in a multi-family building where new tourist places may be excluded. Even the best location does not replace a thorough check of the register entry, zoning, community rules, building law and tax implications.

Owner use: maximum control, ongoing costs

Owner use is the simplest form of use in everyday life: the property remains available for family, friends and longer stays. It avoids tenant defaults, guest management and many rental obligations. However, the owner bears all ongoing costs themselves: IBI, waste fees, community fees, insurance, maintenance, pool and garden care, energy, security and local care during absence.

Even without letting, a Spanish property can be tax-relevant. The Spanish tax authorities treat certain non-let properties as a source of notional rental income; non-residents should regularly check Modelo 210.

Long-term rental: stable cash flow

Long-term rental to residents who use the property as their permanent home is often the most predictable rental model. It does not require a tourist licence, can reduce vacancies and addresses a structurally strong demand for housing on Mallorca. At the same time, residential tenancy agreements include protective mechanisms in favour of the tenant, including statutory minimum terms and extension rights.

Important aspects include a clean contract, credit check, deposit, inventory report, clear utility cost regulation, maintenance planning and tax classification of income.

Seasonal use: flexible, but not a sham model

Seasonal rental or temporary letting can make sense when a tenant uses the property for a clearly limited purpose: for example, a work assignment, a semester of study, a renovation phase or a fixed-term stay. However, a contract is not automatically a seasonal rental just because it is short-term. The temporary purpose should be documented and consistent in practice.

Holiday letting: attractive, but most heavily regulated

Holiday letting can be economically attractive because Mallorca has strong international demand, high peak prices and a long season. At the same time, it is the riskiest option if the property is not clearly eligible for a licence. Requirements include, among others, DRIAT, tourist register entry, permitted places, suitable zoning, habitability certificate, insurance and compliance with tourist service obligations.

On Mallorca, PIAT and zoning determine where tourist letting is possible. Since 2025, the framework has been further tightened: new tourist places in multi-family buildings are severely limited, and new or reactivated places are generally to function without increasing the total number.

Opportunities and risks compared

UseOpportunitiesRisks
Owner useFull availability, low administrative effort, emotional returnNo rental income, ongoing costs, possible tax imputation
Long-term rentalPredictable cash flow, less tourist regulation, social demandLess flexibility, tenant protection, maintenance and default risk
Seasonal rentalMore flexible than long-term rental, suitable for fixed-term staysRisk of misclassification as tourist use, tax-sensitive
Holiday lettingHigh daily rates in good locations, own use possible outside booked periodsLicence, zoning, community and sanction risks; high operational effort

Checklist before purchase or start of letting

  • Is the property properly documented in terms of building and residential law?
  • Is there a valid Cédula de Habitabilidad or comparable basis?
  • Is the property located in a zone suitable for tourist letting?
  • Does a tourist register entry exist, and does it match the property, places and owner data?
  • Has the homeowners' association approved, restricted or prohibited tourist use?
  • Who handles tax returns, tourist tax, guest registration, cleaning, emergency telephone and insurance?
  • Is the expected net return after vacancies, agency fees, maintenance, taxes and community costs still plausible?

The most important buyer rule is: first check usability, then calculate returns. On Mallorca, it is not just the location that matters, but the interplay of tourism law, island planning, municipality, homeowners' association, tax status and operational implementation.

Sources

Thomas Mallorca Real Estate S.L.

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