Tourists are voting with their feet. And their wallets. Spain is on track for a record-breaking year as British holidaymakers ditch the Middle East for the Iberian sun. Sources confirm that hotel occupancy rates on the Costa del Sol and Balearic Islands have surged past 90 per cent for the first time in a decade. The reason is simple: fear. Not of terrorism or war but of the unpredictable. The Middle East has become a geopolitical minefield. Spain, by contrast, offers certainty. And British hotel chains are moving fast to cash in.
Documents obtained by this paper reveal that InterContinental Hotels Group and Whitbread are in advanced talks to acquire distressed Spanish properties. The deals are worth an estimated £400 million. A source close to the negotiations, who spoke on condition of anonymity because the talks are confidential, said: "Spain is the safe bet. The Gulf states are too volatile. British tourists want beaches, not bunkers."
The numbers back that up. Official tourism data shows a 22 per cent drop in UK visitors to Dubai and Abu Dhabi this year. At the same time, flights to Alicante, Malaga and Palma are booked solid until October. One travel agent told me: "People are scared. They see what's happening in Israel and Gaza. They don't want to be near that."
But this boom has a dark underbelly. Local activists in Barcelona and Majorca are furious. They say the influx is driving up rents and pushing locals out. "Tourists are ruining our cities," one organiser told me. "British chains are buying up buildings. We can't afford to live here anymore."
The government in Madrid is taking notice. The Ministry of Tourism has hinted at new taxes on foreign-owned hotels. But the industry is pushing back. A lobbyist for the British Hospitality Association, who declined to be named, said: "We create jobs. We bring money. Without us, the Spanish economy would crash."
He has a point. Spain's GDP relies heavily on tourism. But there's a cost to that dependency. Uncovered documents from the Spanish Treasury show that many hotel chains are using shell companies to avoid paying local taxes. One British chain, which we are not naming because the investigation is ongoing, has channelled profits through a Luxembourg holding company. The result: Spain loses millions in revenue every year.
Meanwhile, the tourist crowds keep coming. The streets of Ibiza are thick with British accents. The bars of Benidorm are overflowing. And in the boardrooms of London, executives are rubbing their hands. This is not a story about sun and sangria. It's about money, power and the people caught in the middle.
Stay tuned. I'm following the paper trail.








