Costa del Sol Property Rental Guide 2026: How to Maximise Your Yield
The Costa del Sol's 12-month season is its defining investment advantage. A villa in the Alps or Tuscany might earn for 10 weeks; a well-located villa here earns for 35–45 weeks.
Short-Term Holiday Lets: The VUT Licence Question
The Licensing Requirement
In Andalucía, all short-term (under 2 months) holiday lets require a Vivienda de Uso Turístico (VUT) licence. You cannot legally list on Airbnb, Booking.com, or any holiday rental platform without one.
Applying for a VUT licence requires:
- ◆ The property to meet minimum habitation standards (certificado de habitabilidad)
- ◆ Documentation confirming you are the owner (or authorised to rent)
- ◆ Property meets specific safety requirements (fire extinguisher, first aid kit, tourist complaints form visible)
The licence is granted by the Junta de Andalucía (regional government), not the local town hall — though local zoning restrictions (below) can block applications.
Marbella's Zoning Restrictions
Marbella town hall has designated certain areas as saturated zones where no new VUT licences will be granted. This includes parts of central Marbella, the immediate Golden Mile corridor, and some apartment complexes. Before purchasing any property specifically for short-term rental, your lawyer must confirm:
1. Whether the zone is open to new VUT applications
2. Whether the property's community statutes permit tourist rentals (many communities actively prohibit it)
3. Whether an existing VUT licence exists and can transfer with the sale
The premium value of existing VUT licences: Properties with transferable VUT licences in restricted zones command 10–20% premium over comparable unlicenced properties, reflecting the scarcity of licence availability.
Benahavis and Estepona: Different Regime
The municipalities of Benahavis and Estepona have generally more open licensing regimes. New applications are being processed and approved in many zones, making these areas more attractive for investors specifically targeting holiday rental returns.
Short-Term Rental Pricing Strategy
Getting pricing right is the difference between 60% and 90% occupancy at comparable revenue.
Peak Season Pricing (July–August)
This is when you earn your year. Premium properties with private pools should be priced at the upper end of the market for their category. Do not underprice peak season — demand is inelastic in July–August for quality properties.
Indicative peak week rates (2026):
Shoulder Season Strategy
May–June and September–October are your strongest opportunity to improve total revenue. Renters in these months are typically better guests (fewer large groups, more couples and small families), longer-staying, and less price-sensitive than pure summer beach tourists.
Price shoulder season at 60–75% of peak rates. Accept 7-night minimums in July–August; reduce to 4–5 nights in shoulder season to fill gaps.
Winter Strategy
The Costa del Sol winter market is underappreciated. Golf tourism from November to March is significant. The "winter sun" market from Northern Europe (particularly Germany, Belgium, and Scandinavia) generates consistent demand.
Price winter at 40–60% of peak. Accept longer minimum stays (2–4 weeks) to reduce changeover costs. Consider monthly rates for December–February, when individual week demand is lower.
Property Management: DIY vs Agency
Self-Management
If you are based nearby or can be flexible with your time, managing short-term lets yourself through Airbnb or direct booking eliminates the management fee (typically 15–25%) and gives you direct guest communication. The challenge: changeovers, maintenance response, and being available for guest queries. Not practical for most absentee owners.
Full-Service Management Agency
A good property management company handles:
- ◆ Listing on multiple platforms (Airbnb, Booking.com, VRBO, direct)
- ◆ Pricing management and calendar management
- ◆ Guest communication, check-in/check-out
- ◆ Cleaning and linen
- ◆ Maintenance response
- ◆ VUT licence compliance (invoicing, guest registration with authorities)
Fees: 15–25% of gross rental revenue, plus cleaning fees charged to guests separately.
What to look for in a management company:
- ◆ Track record and references from other owners
- ◆ Technology platform (automated messaging, dynamic pricing)
- ◆ In-house cleaning team (not subcontracted — quality control)
- ◆ 24/7 guest response capability
- ◆ Transparent accounting and monthly owner statements
Hybrid Models
Some owners use a management company for guest communication and logistics but handle their own pricing and channel management via software (PriceLabs, Wheelhouse). This can reduce management fees while maintaining professional operations.
Long-Term Lets: The Alternative Strategy
Who Rents Long-Term?
The Costa del Sol has a growing long-term furnished rental market driven by:
- ◆ International professionals relocating with their companies
- ◆ Families doing the "rent before you buy" strategy (increasingly common)
- ◆ Remote workers who want a base for 6–12 months
- ◆ Retirees who are not yet ready to purchase
Advantages
- ◆ Predictable, steady income
- ◆ No VUT licence required (contracts over 2 months)
- ◆ Lower management overhead — no frequent changeovers
- ◆ Tenant typically maintains the property better than holiday renters
- ◆ Simpler tax treatment in some cases
Pricing (Furnished, 12-Month Contracts, 2026)
Legal Framework for Long-Term Rentals
Contracts over 2 months in Spain are regulated by the Ley de Arrendamientos Urbanos (LAU). Key points:
- ◆ Minimum tenancy: The law effectively protects tenants for 5 years (3 years, plus optional 2-year extension if the landlord does not need the property back)
- ◆ Deposit: Maximum 2 months
- ◆ Rent increases: Capped at official CPI index
- ◆ Eviction: Spanish eviction process has improved but can still take 6–12 months if contested
Use a Spanish lawyer to draft long-term contracts. Standard templates downloaded online may not reflect current law.
Calculating Your Net Yield
Always model net yield, not gross. A typical calculation:
Example: €500,000 property, short-term rental strategy
Annual gross rental income: €40,000
Less: Management fees (20%): -€8,000
Less: Cleaning/linen (covered by fees): €0
Less: Platform fees (built into rates): €0
Less: Insurance (holiday let): -€800
Less: Community fees: -€2,400
Less: Utilities (owner's share): -€1,200
Less: Maintenance/repairs (1% of value): -€5,000
Less: IBI and local taxes: -€2,000
Less: Tax on rental income (at 19% net for EU resident): -€4,000
Net income: approximately €16,600/year = 3.3% net yield
This is a conservative model. A well-run property in a strong location with a good management company should achieve higher gross revenue and thus a better net yield. The 3–5% net yield range is realistic for most well-purchased properties on the Costa del Sol.
Our Advice
The order of priority for rental investors:
1. Confirm VUT licence availability before exchanging contracts
2. Check community statutes allow tourist lettings
3. Choose location for rental demand, not just personal preference
4. Engage a reputable management company before completion
5. Model net yield conservatively — it is always lower than the gross number developers quote
Looking for investment property with strong rental potential? Contact Luxury Spanish Homes for a curated selection of rental-ready properties with existing VUT licences.
Luxury Spanish Homes provides independent buyer advisory services across the Costa del Sol.
www.luxuryspanishhomes.com | [email protected] | +44 7814 193722