Planning a Trip to Spain? Don't go.

Discussion in 'Economics' started by VicBee, Dec 2, 2024.

  1. VicBee

    VicBee

    I say... BOYCOTT SPAIN!

    https://www.euronews.com/travel/202...new-personal-data-in-a-crackdown-on-organised

    Going to Spain on holiday? You’ll be asked for new personal data in a crackdown on organised crime
    hotels and other tourism operators will have to collect and report over 40 pieces of information for accommodation bookings and over 60 for car rental bookings.
    By Rebecca Ann Hughes
    Published on 02/12/2024

    Hotels and other tourism operators will have to collect and report over 40 pieces of information for accommodation bookings and over 60 for car rental bookings.

    Starting today, tourists arriving in Spain will have to provide more personal data to authorities.
    Information requested will include home address and their relationship to children travelling in the same party.

    Data will be collected by hotels, holiday rentals, campsites, travel agencies and car rental companies.

    Spanish officials say the increased checks, part of a royal decree, are part of a wider crackdown on organised crime.

    However, hotels have been protesting the introduction of the rules saying it will negatively impact the visitor experience.
    What extra data will tourists in Spain have to provide?
    From 2 December, hotels and other tourism operators will have to collect and report over 40 pieces of information for accommodation bookings and over 60 for car rental bookings.
    They are already required to send the full name, email address and passport or ID number of guests to authorities within 24 hours.

    New information includes payment details, home address, phone numbers, the number of guests in a party and family relationship details.
    The data will then be uploaded onto a platform which will be monitored by Spanish security forces.
    The new measures apply to mainland Spain and its islands, including the Balearics and the Canary Islands.

    Businesses which do not comply face fines of up to €30,000.
    Spanish hotels protest new data collection rules
    Hoteliers have been calling for the new decree to be dismissed or watered down.

    CEHAT, Spain’s leading hotel association, succeeded in postponing its introduction, which was originally slated for January 2023.
    But other than that, the group says they have received no communication from the authorities or offers of solutions.

    “We have been requesting dialogue and concrete proposals for months to guarantee legal security and the viability of the sector, but we have not received any response,” Jorge Marichal, president of CEHAT, said in a press release.

    CEHAT has now said it is considering legal action due to the “negative impact that this regulation will have on the hotel sector and travellers themselves”.
    “Given this lack of political will, we are forced to propose legal avenues to protect both business owners and travellers,” added Marichal.

    How will the new rules impact travellers?
    CEHAT says the new regulations will mean more complex and tedious administrative procedures, compromising visitors’ accommodation experience.
    Travel agencies have said the procedures will impinge on people’s privacy and add a bureaucratic burden they cannot afford.

    This may increase working hours and, as a consequence, push up prices for travellers.
    The European Travel Agents' and Tour Operators' Associations (ECTAA) and Spanish travel agency group ACAVE have warned about “severe repercussions for the European tourism market and the protection of travellers' personal data”.

    How does this differ from other EU countries?
    In other EU countries, hotels and other forms of accommodation are also required to check guests’ passports or IDs.
    In several countries, including Croatia, Italy and Germany, information including names, contact details and ID numbers must be reported to authorities.
    Copyright © euronews 2024
     
    Akuma to Shin Tenshi likes this.
  2. maxinger

    maxinger

    Then go to Syria or the Gaza Strip. It is safer than Spain.
     
    apdxyk, TheMordy and TheDawn like this.
  3. VicBee

    VicBee

    It's a return to the dictatorship. Even the Stasi was less intrusive.
     
    Akuma to Shin Tenshi likes this.
  4. How does this differ from other EU countries?
    In other EU countries, hotels and other forms of accommodation are also required to check guests’ passports or IDs.

    Dear VicBee, you could have removed the country from the title, it is the whole Europe like that.
    But yeah, don't go. I agree with you, don't go.
     
    EdgeHunter likes this.
  5. Nobert

    Nobert

    That would be a win win situation.

     
  6. TheDawn

    TheDawn

    Yeah this is the standard nowadays. For entry to many countries, you have to be fingerprinted. It's a Brave New World!!
     
  7. TheDawn

    TheDawn

    I think it's their strategy. Well it's their fault, making their Olympic opening ceremony so memorable with the torch-lighting moment.

    They have nobody but themselves to blame for making their city so beautiful.
     
  8. Pekelo

    Pekelo

    >part of a royal decree

    What the King wants, the King gets.
     
  9. cesfx

    cesfx

    Then stay away from Italy too.

    Hotels BnB etc have been passing ID details to authorities for decades.

    It's the law... And to be fair, it's just like through an airport.
    What difference does it make unless you are some war criminal like Putin or Netanyahu?

    Anyway, if tourism (specially digital nomads) were to slow down, locals would be happy.
     
    NoahA, Picaso and Drawdown Addict like this.
  10. Barcelona is a bit different on this topic, people are not able to afford places to live anymore, it is also happening in Ibiza. They protest because it is unbearable.
     
    #10     Dec 2, 2024