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Date Published: 01/04/2026
Mallorca plans major clampdown on tourist overcrowding
The island wants to cap accommodation, ease traffic and put residents first as it moves away from a growth-at-all-costs model
Mallorca is preparing for a major shift in direction as the Consell moves to tackle overcrowding, traffic chaos and pressure on local life. The island’s leaders say the aim is simple: protect residents’ quality of life and stop a growth model that has already pushed Mallorca to its limit.The most striking step is a planned reduction in the legal cap on tourist accommodation. The current limit stands at 430,000 beds, but the administration intends to cut any room for future growth and keep supply at current levels before the end of this term. President of the Consell de Mallorca Llorenç Galmés says the island has already reached its physical and social limits, and that the focus now must be on stability rather than expansion.
The strategy also reflects a broader change in thinking about tourism. Official figures show visitor numbers remain steady at around 13.5 million a year, but the message from the island’s executive is that success will no longer be measured simply in volume. Instead, the new approach puts quality and culture at the centre, while also encouraging a more respectful type of visitor. The hope is that signs of deseasonalisation will help spread pressure more evenly across the year.
Ports and roads
The plan is not only about beds and hotels. The Consell has also asked the Balearic Islands Port Authority to install licence plate recognition cameras in the ports of Palma and Alcúdia. These smart cameras would help track the arrival of rental cars and foreign private vehicles more accurately and on a monthly basis.
That information is expected to form the legal basis for a future vehicle regulation law, which would give the authorities a clearer picture of how traffic is building up and how best to control it. In practical terms, it is part of a wider effort to prevent the island’s roads from becoming overwhelmed at the busiest times of year.
For Mallorca, this is being presented as a turning point. Rather than continuing to chase more and more visitors, the island wants to slow things down, protect daily life for residents and make sure tourism fits within what the island can realistically handle. The measures are still being developed, but the direction is already clear.
You might also be interested in: Climb to new heights with the most exciting hiking routes in Mallorca
Image: avoncliff/Pixabay
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