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Barcelona is being swamped by tourism. Locals are not taking it lying down.

In hot spots around the world, including the Mediterranean, residents say they have reached a tipping point as tourism has reached new post-pandemic heights. Mass tourism, they say, is overwhelming public spaces, driving up housing prices and pushing locals out, and turning neighborhoods into exhibits on display.

“There are many vendors here who have turned only to tourism,” says María Carmen Pujadó, who works in Barcelona’s oldest market. Once a neighborhood hub where locals came to buy produce, fish, and meat, the Mercat de la Boqueria now caters to tourists, offering smoothies, potato chips, and other globalized items.

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Tourism is making some of the world’s great tourist destinations unlivable for their own residents. Places like Barcelona are trying to find a balance between affordability for locals and welcoming accommodations for guests.

In June, in a bid to ease Barcelona’s housing crisis, Mayor Jaume Collboni announced an end to the city’s 10,000 tourist rental apartments by 2028. Tourists staying in overnight accommodations reached nearly 10 million in 2023, up 15% from the previous year. A 2023 study found that 62% of Barcelonans say the city is near or at its capacity for tourism.

“The excesses and the problems of tourism have entered into people’s daily lives much more than before,” says anthropologist Claudio Milano. The issue is not the number of tourists, he says. “It’s the weight of tourism in our economy.”

Most hot summer days, Barcelona locals avoid La Rambla if they can. It’s too crowded, with tourists cramming the famous, tree-lined avenue as they take in some of the most-visited sites in the world: the Sagrada Família cathedral, the Gothic Quarter, the Barceloneta beach.

But on a recent Saturday afternoon, it is the tourists who are pushed aside as residents take over the boulevard.

They gather in the thousands to reclaim a city they say they have lost to tourism. “Barcelona is not for sale!” reads one banner in English. “Tourism kills the neighborhood,” reads another in Catalan.

Why We Wrote This

A story focused on

Tourism is making some of the world’s great tourist destinations unlivable for their own residents. Places like Barcelona are trying to find a balance between affordability for locals and welcoming accommodations for guests.

Tourists take photos of the crowd from balconies and alleyways. Some have to dodge the spray of toy water guns pointed at them by protesters shouting, “Tourist, go home!”

In hot spots around the world, including the Mediterranean, residents say they have reached a tipping point as tourism has reached new post-pandemic heights. Many are protesting a model of mass tourism they say overwhelms public spaces, drives up housing prices and pushes locals out, and turns neighborhoods into exhibits on display.

“The excesses and the problems of tourism have entered into people’s daily lives much more than before,” says Claudio Milano, an anthropologist at the Autonomous University of Barcelona. That happens when a place becomes overly dependent on the tourism industry, and local economies are restructured to meet the needs of visitors rather than of residents.

Nacho Doce/Reuters

Tourists take a selfie at the Sagrada Família Basilica in Barcelona, March 27, 2024.

The issue is not the number of tourists, he says. “It’s the weight of tourism in our economy.”

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