TL;DR: In southwest Mallorca, rental license zones categorize properties as fully permitted, prohibited, or conditionally allowed for tourist rentals. Buyers must verify official zone classification and plaza availability through legal certificates before purchasing, especially after April 2025 restrictions. Detached houses in approved zones with available quotas remain the most accessible options for legal tourist rental licenses.
TL;DR:
Southwest Mallorca rental licence zones determine whether a property can legally operate as a tourist rental, based on municipal zoning and island-wide quota controls. The Balearic Islands classify every property into one of three official zone categories: zona apta (fully permitted), zona no apta (prohibited), and zona con condicionantes (conditionally permitted). These designations, managed by the Consell Insular de Mallorca, directly affect whether you can register a property for tourist rental income. The April 2025 decree tightened these rules further, making it more important than ever for buyers to verify rental eligibility before exchanging contracts.
Tourist rental zones are divided into three categories, and each carries very different consequences for investors. Understanding the difference before you buy can save you from a costly mistake.
Zona apta is the most desirable classification. Properties in this zone are eligible to apply for a tourist rental licence, known formally as an ETV (Estada Turística en Vivienda). Eligibility does not guarantee a licence, but it is the essential first condition.
Zona no apta means tourist rental is legally prohibited. Properties in these areas cannot generate legal short-term rental income, regardless of how attractive the property looks or what a listing claims. Buyers who purchase in zona no apta expecting rental returns will find themselves unable to register.
Zona con condicionantes sits between the two. These conditionally permitted zones often carry additional criteria such as building-type restrictions, minimum distance requirements from other tourist properties, or seasonal rental limits. The conditions vary by municipality and are updated periodically by the Consell Insular de Mallorca.
The zone classification also interacts with property type. Detached houses, semi-detached houses, and terraced houses are treated differently from apartments in multi-family buildings. Since april 2025, apartments in multi-family buildings face far stricter restrictions across the island.
Pro Tip: Always request the official zone classification certificate from the local Ajuntament (town hall) rather than relying on a property listing or an agent’s verbal confirmation. The certificate is the only document that carries legal weight.
Zone classification is only half of the equation. The second layer is the tourist plaza cap, and many buyers overlook it entirely.
Mallorca operates an island-wide cap on tourist plazas, which are the total number of licensed tourist beds permitted across the island. Mallorca’s total cap sits at around 430,000 plazas, divided by property type and geographic area. When a category reaches its cap, no new licences are issued until existing ones are relinquished or expire. This means a property can sit in a zona apta and still be unable to obtain a licence because the quota for that area is already full.
The interaction between zone status and plaza availability works as follows:
A property in a zona apta with no available plazas cannot receive a new tourist rental licence. Zone status and plaza availability must both be confirmed before purchase.
The single-family house category is currently the most accessible route to a new ETV licence in southwest Mallorca. Detached villas, traditional fincas, and terraced townhouses in zona apta areas with available plazas represent the strongest investment case for rental income. Buyers focused on apartments face a much narrower path, particularly after the 2025 regulatory changes.
Due diligence on rental eligibility requires checking several official sources. Buyers who rely on sellers or agents for licence status confirmation regularly encounter problems after purchase.
The cadastral reference number is the definitive identifier for a property’s zoning classification. You should request an official zoning certificate from the local Ajuntament using this reference, rather than relying on physical inspection or property listings. Visual inspection alone is insufficient to confirm rental eligibility. A property that looks like a detached house may be classified differently in the municipal zoning map.
Follow these steps before committing to a purchase:
Pro Tip: Ask your lawyer to obtain a nota simple from the Land Registry alongside the zoning certificate. Together, these two documents give you a complete picture of ownership, encumbrances, and planning classification.
You can also review the purchase checklist from Vogue Properties Mallorca, which covers the key steps for buying property in Mallorca, including rental eligibility verification.
The April 2025 decree represents the most significant tightening of tourist rental rules in Mallorca for many years. New full ETV licences for apartments in multi-family buildings are now generally prohibited across the Balearic Islands. The change focuses eligibility firmly on detached, semi-detached, and terraced houses, subject to municipal zoning and plaza quotas.
The decree also transferred regulatory authority from the regional government to the Consell Insulars, meaning each island now manages its own zoning plans and quota systems independently. For Mallorca, this makes the Consell Insular de Mallorca the primary authority on zone classifications, and those classifications are updated periodically. What was a zona apta two years ago may have been reclassified since.
New tourist rental licences in Palma for multi-family buildings have been frozen since 2017. The 2025 decree extended equivalent prohibitions island-wide for new multi-family registrations. Buyers who purchased apartments in Palma expecting rental income after 2017 found themselves unable to register, and the same risk now applies across southwest Mallorca and the wider island.
For investors in the resale market, the key question is whether an existing ETV licence transfers with the property. In most cases, licences are tied to the property rather than the owner, but the transfer must be formally registered. Buyers should confirm this with their lawyer before proceeding.
The current regulatory environment rewards careful property selection. Buyers who focus on the right property types and locations can still build a legal, profitable tourist rental in southwest Mallorca.
The southwest of Mallorca, covering areas such as Calvià, Andratx, and the coastline towards Palma, contains a mix of zona apta and zona no apta designations. Coastal villas and hillside fincas in these areas often sit in desirable zones, but the specific classification varies street by street in some municipalities.
Southwest Mallorca rental licence zones are classified into three categories, and both zone status and plaza quota availability must be confirmed before any purchase intended for tourist rental income.
The single most common mistake I see is buyers relying on what a seller or listing agent tells them about a property’s rental licence status. I have seen transactions where the seller genuinely believed the property was in a zona apta, only for the official zoning certificate to reveal a zona no apta classification. The seller was not being dishonest. They simply had not checked.
The second mistake is assuming that an existing ETV licence automatically transfers. It usually does, but the formal registration of that transfer is a legal step that must be completed. Buyers who skip this step can find themselves owning a property with a lapsed or invalidated licence.
The decentralisation of regulatory authority to the Consell Insular means the rules are genuinely dynamic. A zone that permitted new licences eighteen months ago may now be saturated or reclassified. This is not a stable regulatory environment, and it requires active monitoring, not a one-time check at the point of purchase.
My practical recommendation is straightforward. Engage a lawyer before you identify a property, not after. Use that lawyer to run zone and plaza checks on any property you are seriously considering. And if you are focused on rental income as a primary investment driver, concentrate your search on detached villas and fincas in confirmed zona apta areas with available plazas. The southwest Mallorca property zones guide from Vogue Properties Mallorca is a useful starting point for understanding which areas carry the strongest rental potential.
— Sophie
Vogue Properties Mallorca works with buyers who want rental income as part of their investment strategy, and that means doing the zone and plaza checks before a property reaches your shortlist.
The team at Vogue Properties Mallorca has over 20 years of experience across southwest Mallorca and the wider island. Every property presented for rental investment purposes is assessed against current zone classifications and ETV eligibility criteria. Buyers can also access trusted legal professionals through the agency for independent due diligence. Browse the current selection of investment properties in Mallorca or view the full range of villas with rental licences to find properties already cleared for tourist rental registration.
Zona apta means the property sits in a zone where tourist rental licences are permitted. The property must still meet plaza quota requirements and pass all other legal checks before a licence is granted.
Since april 2025, new ETV licences for apartments in multi-family buildings are generally prohibited across the Balearic Islands. Detached, semi-detached, and terraced houses in zona apta areas remain eligible, subject to plaza availability.
Request an official zoning certificate from the local Ajuntament using the property’s cadastral reference number. Cross-reference this with the Consell Insular de Mallorca’s PIAT zone maps to confirm the current classification.
Mallorca’s tourist plaza cap limits the total number of licensed tourist beds on the island to around 430,000. If the quota for a property category in a given area is full, no new licences are issued, even for properties in zona apta.
In most cases, an ETV licence is tied to the property and transfers with it, but the transfer must be formally registered. Always confirm this with an independent lawyer before completing a purchase.