24 de March de 2026
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Benidorm on the brink of financial collapse: city avoids bankruptcy – but will pay up to €500 million

Credit Maksim Ivanov (Unsplash)

The city of Benidorm has narrowly averted a looming financial catastrophe at the last minute. A multi-million-euro compensation dispute had almost pushed the popular tourist city into insolvency. Instead, a long-term rescue plan has now been approved – with enormous costs stretching into the coming decades.

Spain Press Editorial Team

by Marlon Gallego Bosbach

Huge sum due to past planning decisions

At the centre of the case is a compensation claim for revoked development rights in a protected area of the Serra Gelada.

The scale is enormous:

  • around €350 million in compensation
  • including interest and long-term obligations, up to €500 million over 30 years

The claim arose after original building and development rights were later withdrawn and the area was designated as a protected nature reserve.

Decades-old conflict escalates

Property owners were granted building rights in the early 2000s. When these were later revoked, they successfully took the case to court – with serious consequences for the city.

The ruling: Benidorm must pay compensation.

30-year rescue plan

To prevent immediate bankruptcy, the city council has now approved a comprehensive payment plan:

  • an initial payment of around €60 million
  • state support of around €55 million
  • remaining payments spread over up to 30 years
  • an annual burden amounting to a fixed share of the city budget from 2031 onwards

Partial payment with land

Particularly unusual: part of the debt is to be settled not in cash, but with municipal land.

In this way, the city is attempting to at least partially ease the enormous financial burden.

Pressure on the city’s finances

Despite the rescue plan, the situation remains tense:

  • the total liabilities significantly exceed the current city budget
  • investments could be restricted in the long term
  • the budget will be heavily burdened for decades

However, the city assures that neither tax increases nor cuts to public services are planned.

Conclusion

Benidorm has averted immediate financial collapse – but has taken on an enormous long-term debt burden. The case shows how risky and costly flawed urban planning can become when legal and political decisions escalate over many years.

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