High-rise apartments and cranes on a Balearic coastline, reflecting housing pressure and rising property values.

When a Housing Shortage Fills the Coffers: Record Revenues in the Balearic Islands and the Islands' Bill

When a Housing Shortage Fills the Coffers: Record Revenues in the Balearic Islands and the Islands' Bill

In 2025 the Balearic Islands recorded for the first time more than €6 billion in tax revenue — driven mainly by high property prices and rising incomes. But who pays the price?

When a Housing Shortage Fills the Coffers: Record Revenues in the Balearic Islands and the Islands' Bill

Key question: Is a record budget of more than six billion euros something to celebrate when the islands are losing housing?

The figures from Palma are clear: in 2025 the Balearic government collected about €6.015 billion — a new high. The breakdown holds a few surprises: the property transfer tax provided the largest boost and poured around €742 million into the coffers, an increase of 13 percent. Income tax contributed more than €2.57 billion, roughly €475 million more than the year before. At the same time other items fell: value added tax shrank to about €1.594 billion (-14%), and inheritance tax dropped to around €85 million (-6.9%). Eco and sewage charges moved little or declined slightly (eco tax €142.6m, sewage fee around €90m).

Economically this is a classic mix: strong revenues, but with problematic ingredients. In many streets of Palma you can see it almost daily: estate agent signs, notary appointments by the hour, construction cranes in Portixol's harbor. At the same time people get up early at the Olivar market and calculate how they will manage the next rent payment. This imbalance is the quiet cause of the record: the tighter the market, the higher the prices — and the heavier the tax receipt for the public purse (see Balearic Islands in the Price Squeeze: Who Can Still Afford Mallorca?).

Critical analysis: the numbers reflect what is already felt on the street, but they also obscure contradictions. Rising incomes and many expensive property sales mask that the tax structure ultimately benefits those who sell properties at high prices or earn high wages. That may stabilize the budget in the short term, but it changes the social geography of the islands. If revenues from the property transfer tax become a main pillar, much depends on the real estate market — which is volatile and socially problematic. This trend is examined in Balearic Islands: Housing Becomes a Luxury — Who Will Stay on the Island?.

What is often missing in public debate: the connection between revenues and how the budget is used. The balance reads like a success — but only if you do not ask what the money is spent on. Does a significant share of these extra millions go directly into programs to create affordable housing, into municipal new builds, or into support for long-term rental contracts? Or does the money end up in general expenditures that do not solve the availability and affordability problem? Recent reporting on expected rent increases underscores the urgency: Balearic Islands: Rents to rise by an average of €400 in 2026 — who will pay the bill?.

An everyday scene says more than many columns of numbers: on a Tuesday morning a young family stands in a housing office in La Soledat. The landlord sold the property at a high price, the buyer plans a luxury conversion. The family is not eligible for the offer, and the app on their phone shows new listings — far beyond their budget. Meanwhile a phone rings in the town hall office: a call from an investor who wants to buy strategically freed-up properties. These parallel worlds are bitter reality and explain why a record budget is not automatically “good news” for everyone. The scene is similar to descriptions in When Living Rooms Become Bedrooms: How Mallorca Suffers from a Housing Shortage.

Concrete solutions (not pious wishes, but feasible):

- Dedicated allocation of transfer tax revenues: A statutory share of the property transfer tax (e.g., 20–30%) should automatically flow into a fund for social housing. This would ensure the windfall is used purposefully.

- Speculation levy: A time‑graded tax on quick resales (flipping) can dampen perverse incentives and generate additional funds.

- Vacancy and second‑home levy: Municipalities should be given instruments to tax permanently vacant properties and channel the proceeds into affordable housing.

- Renovation and rental incentives: Incentives for owners to rent out vacant apartments on a long-term basis instead of putting them on the holiday market.

- Stronger role for municipalities: Local councils should receive planning capacity and financing models to run their own social housing programs.

All these measures need not only money but political priority. It is not enough to revel in record numbers when people in the neighborhoods experience life as more expensive and insecure. Tax revenues can and must be targeted to counter the social hardening of the housing market.

Conclusion: the Balearic Islands earned more in 2025 than ever before. That is reality. The much more important question is whether these revenues make the islands more resilient and fairer — or whether they simply polish the mirror of what is going wrong in the housing market. If politics does not link the revenues to the causes, the record remains a bitter tally for many.

Frequently asked questions

Why did the Balearic Islands collect record tax revenue in 2025?

The main reason was the strength of the property market, especially the property transfer tax, which brought in far more money than before. Higher income tax receipts also lifted the total, while other taxes such as VAT and inheritance tax fell. In short, expensive property sales and rising incomes pushed the public coffers to a new high.

Does a record budget in Mallorca mean the housing crisis is improving?

Not necessarily. Higher tax revenue can strengthen the public budget, but it does not automatically create more affordable homes or lower rents in Mallorca. The key question is whether the money is directed into social housing, rental support, and other housing solutions.

How does the property transfer tax affect Mallorca’s public finances?

The property transfer tax is one of the most important sources of income for the Balearic government, and it rose sharply in 2025. When property prices and sales are high, this tax brings in much more money. That helps the budget, but it also shows how closely public finances depend on a tight housing market.

What does the housing shortage in Palma mean for ordinary residents?

For many residents in Palma, the housing shortage means higher rents, fewer realistic options, and more pressure to move farther away or share homes. People looking for long-term rentals often face prices that are far beyond their budget. The result is growing insecurity even for working households.

What is the situation like for families trying to find housing in La Soledat, Mallorca?

Families in La Soledat can run into the same problem seen across Mallorca: homes are sold at prices that push them out of the market, and the new use of a property may no longer fit a family’s needs. For many, that means waiting lists, limited offers, or having to look elsewhere. The pressure is especially hard on households that need stable, long-term housing.

Why is Portixol often mentioned in discussions about Mallorca’s property market?

Portixol has become a visible example of how fast the property market in Mallorca has changed, with new development activity and high-value sales shaping the area. That kind of activity can increase tax revenue, but it also adds to concerns about affordability and displacement. It is one of the places where the pressure on housing is easy to see.

What housing measures are being discussed for Mallorca?

The proposals include dedicating part of property transfer tax revenue to social housing, taxing quick property resales, and creating penalties for vacant homes or costly second homes. There is also interest in incentives that encourage long-term rentals instead of holiday lets. These ideas aim to connect public revenue more directly with the housing shortage.

Is higher tax revenue in the Balearic Islands good news for renters?

Not by itself. Higher tax revenue can give the government more room to act, but renters only benefit if that money is used to increase housing supply, support affordable rentals, or reduce speculative pressure. Without that link, record revenue and rising rents can happen at the same time.

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