In a development that has sent shivers of gin-soaked terror down the spine of every overworked paella chef in the Iberian peninsula, Spain’s tourist numbers have hit a record high. And who leads this glorious, sunburned charge? Why, the British, of course. Our plucky islanders, fleeing the dreary drizzle of a British summer, have descended upon the Costas like a plague of locusts wearing union jack speedos.
The report, released by the Spanish National Statistics Institute with the grim resignation of a coroner reading a death certificate, reveals that international tourist arrivals in Spain surged to 10.1 million in July. That’s a 13% jump from last year, and a 2% bump from the pre-pandemic halcyon days of 2019. And guess what? The Middle East, with its shimmering malls and zero-tolerance alcohol policies, is being given the cold shoulder. Why sip a mocktail in Dubai when you can down a bucket of sangria in Magaluf? The logic is as undeniable as a post-holiday mortgage statement.
But let’s not pretend this is just about the weather. Oh no. This is a grand geopolitical statement. The British holidaymaker, that noble beast, has decided that the Middle East is simply too… well, complicated. Too much sand, not enough chips. And definitely not enough pubs called ‘The Queen’s Head’. So they’ve flocked back to the familiar embrace of Spain, where the sun is hot, the beer is cold, and the only thing you need to worry about is whether your hotel has a pool big enough to do a drunken cannonball into.
The tourism surge has been a lifeline for Spain’s economy, with the sector accounting for 12.4% of GDP. But there’s a dark side, dear reader. The Spanish are now complaining that the tourists are ‘ruining’ their cities. Barcelona has even threatened to limit cruise ship arrivals. The audacity! After we’ve graciously imported our finest lager-lout traditions, they want to close the doors? It’s like inviting your mate over for a party and then complaining when he vomits in your begonias.
Yet the human cost is real. Rental prices are soaring, locals are being priced out of their neighbourhoods, and the streets of Palma de Mallorca now resemble a Benidorm tribute act. But do we care? Of course not. We’re too busy photographing our fifth plate of patatas bravas for Instagram. The Spanish may be grumbling, but they can’t deny the cold, hard cash. And that cash, my friends, is what makes the world go round. Or at least, it keeps the gin flowing.
So raise a glass to the great British holidaymaker. The unassuming hero of this tale. He doesn’t care about geopolitics. He just wants a sun lounger, a cold drink, and the sweet, sweet feeling of forgetting about his job for a week. And if that means shunning the Middle East for the familiar warmth of Spain, so be it. The sun will shine, the beer will flow, and the British invasion will continue, one all-inclusive resort at a time.
And as for the complaints? Pah! They are but the background noise to our glorious, gin-soaked holiday. Viva España, and all that.








