Spain is cashing in on chaos. Sources confirm the country’s tourism industry has smashed all records this year, with visitor numbers surging past pre-pandemic highs. The reason? Middle East conflict is driving travellers to safer European shores. The British travel sector is scrambling to adapt as holidaymakers abandon traditional routes through the Levant and Gulf regions.
Documents obtained by this desk show that Spain’s hotel occupancy rates climbed to 92 per cent in July, up 7 points from last year. The Balearic and Canary Islands are bursting at the seams. Airlines have added over 200 extra flights from UK airports to Spanish destinations since April. Ryanair and easyJet are running at capacity.
But the boom comes with a dark underside. Local housing activists in Barcelona and Palma warn that overtourism is pushing rents beyond reach for residents. “We’re being priced out by holiday lets,” one organiser told me, speaking on condition of anonymity. The Generalitat has announced a crackdown on unlicensed apartments, but enforcement remains patchy.
The winds shift fast. One seasoned industry analyst said the shift reflects a deeper pivot in travel patterns. “The Middle East was a growth corridor post-Covid. Now it’s a risk corridor. UK tour operators are rerouting fleets and renegotiating contracts on the fly.”
Meanwhile, the UK Travel Association reports a 15 per cent drop in bookings to Egypt, Israel, and the UAE. That gap is being filled by Portugal and Greece, but Spain remains the big winner. Holiday prices on the Costa del Sol have risen 12 per cent year on year.
Somebody somewhere is making a killing. Insiders whisper that large Spanish hotel chains have been quietly bought up by Gulf sovereign funds in recent months. The money flows, the bodies stay hidden. Authorities are not commenting.
For the average British family, it means higher costs and longer queues. Heathrow and Gatwick are bracing for another record August. The real story, though, is how geopolitical tremors reshape an entire industry. The sun may shine on Spain’s beaches now, but the clouds are building on the horizon.








