Squatters and okupacion in Spain: what property owners need to know about unauthorised occupation (2026)
Spain's okupa laws in 2026: allanamiento and usurpacion crimes, the LO 1/2025 15-day fast-track, Andalusia's recovery programme and non-resident prevention.
Squatters and okupacion in Spain: what property owners need to know about unauthorised occupation (2026)
Unauthorised occupation of property, known in Spain as okupacion, is a criminal offence, not a civil dispute. It falls under two distinct offences in the Codigo Penal: allanamiento de morada (art. 202) when the property is a dwelling, and usurpacion (art. 245) when it is not. Spain recorded 14,875 okupacion-related offences in 2025, down 9.4 per cent from 2024, according to the Ministry of the Interior. The Ley Organica 1/2025, de 2 de enero, in force since 3 April 2025, added both offences to the fast-track criminal procedure with a trial target of approximately 15 days from denuncia, materially shortening the path from complaint to resolution for non-resident owners. Catalonia recorded 6,290 court demandas for occupation (5,913 penal, 377 civil), 39.7 per cent of the national total, and Andalusia has become the region with the most quarterly court demandas, while the Junta has launched a dedicated recovery programme for public housing.
What is okupacion and is it a crime in Spain?
Okupacion is the Spanish term for the unauthorised occupation of a property by people who have no legal right to be there. It is a criminal offence, not a tenant dispute, and it is prosecuted under two articles of the Codigo Penal depending on the nature of the property occupied.
The distinction matters because the penalty and the procedure differ. Article 202.1 of the Codigo Penal defines allanamiento de morada: entering or remaining in another person’s dwelling against their will, punishable by six months to two years in prison. Article 245.2 defines usurpacion pacifica: occupying a property that does not constitute a morada without authorisation, punishable by a fine of three to six months.
The key question is whether the property qualifies as a morada, which Spanish courts interpret broadly. The Fiscalia General del Estado, in its Instrucion 1/2020, confirmed that second residences count as morada even when not continuously inhabited, provided they retain the character of a private living space (STS 852/2014). A holiday apartment in Marbella that the owner visits several times a year is a morada. An empty commercial premises is not.
How does allanamiento de morada differ from usurpacion?
The two offences protect different legal interests. Allanamiento de morada protects the intimacy and privacy linked to a dwelling. Usurpacion protects the patrimonial right to peaceful possession of a property. The practical consequence for an owner is which procedure applies and how quickly they can act.
| Feature | Allanamiento de morada (art. 202 CP) | Usurpacion pacifica (art. 245 CP) |
|---|---|---|
| Protected interest | Privacy of the dwelling | Patrimonial possession |
| Property type | Dwelling (morada), including second residences | Non-dwelling property, empty buildings, commercial premises |
| Penalty | 6 months to 2 years prison | Fine of 3 to 6 months |
| Court | Tribunal del Jurado (or Audiencia Provincial) | Juzgado de delitos leves |
| Fast-track (post-2025) | Yes, under art. 795 LECrim | Yes, under art. 795 LECrim |
| Trial target | ~15 days from denuncia | ~15 days from denuncia |
The Fiscalia’s Instrucion 1/2020 notes a qualitative shift: part of the occupation phenomenon is now driven by organised criminal groups with a profit motive, creating what the Fiscalia called “ilicitas y muy lucrativas empresas inmobiliarias de lo ajeno” (unlawful and very lucrative real estate businesses using other people’s property). This is why the 2025 reform was introduced.
What did the Ley Organica 1/2025 change?
Ley Organica 1/2025, de 2 de enero, de medidas en materia de eficiencia del Servicio Publico de Justicia, entered into force on 3 April 2025. Its key change for property owners is the amendment of art. 795 LECrim to include both allanamiento de morada and usurpacion within the fast-track criminal procedure (juicio rapido). The fast-track procedure sets a target of approximately 15 days from the filing of the denuncia to the trial, a significant reduction from the previous framework, where the average eviction timeline could stretch to two years under the ordinary procedure.
Before this reform, usurpacion was processed as a delito leve through the slow standard procedure, and allanamiento went to the Tribunal del Jurado. The Fiscalia General del Estado confirmed in Circular 1/2025 (26 June 2025) that both offences can now be channelled through the fast-track procedure, which is a complete and differentiated process, not merely an accelerated version of the ordinary one. The reform also introduced conformidad sin limite penologico, allowing occupants to accept a plea agreement and eviction without a full trial.
The practical effect: a non-resident owner who files a denuncia for allanamiento can expect the case to move from denuncia to trial in approximately 15 days, rather than the months or years the pre-2025 framework could take. The Fiscalia’s Circular binds all prosecutors to pursue these cases actively. Judges can also order the immediate eviction of occupants as a precautionary measure before the trial, if the property owner requests it.
How many okupacion cases are there in Spain?
The Ministry of the Interior published 2025 data in April 2026 showing 14,875 okupacion-related offences (allanamiento and usurpacion combined) registered across Spain, a 9.4 per cent decline from 2024. The 2024 figure was 16,426, itself a 7.4 per cent rise from 2023’s 15,289, so the 2025 number represents a return toward the 2023 baseline after a one-year spike.
Separately, the Consejo General del Poder Judicial records court demandas (formal lawsuits) rather than police offences. In 2025, Catalonia filed 6,290 demandas (5,913 through the penal route, 377 through the civil route), accounting for 39.7 per cent of the national total despite holding 16.6 per cent of Spain’s population. Andalusia followed with 2,610 demandas, then the Valencian Community with 2,158 and Madrid with 1,727 (1,541 penal, 186 civil). The gap between the 14,875 police-recorded offences and the much lower court demanda count reflects the fact that many cases do not reach the courts: police intervene during the flagrante window, occupants leave voluntarily, or the owner chooses the civil route. The CGPJ’s own data puts the average time to a firm sentence in an okupacion case at approximately 23.3 months, a figure the 2025 fast-track reform is designed to compress.
| Data point | Value | Source |
|---|---|---|
| Okupacion offences (allanamiento + usurpacion), 2025 | 14,875 (down 9.4 per cent from 2024) | Ministry of the Interior, via EFE |
| Okupacion offences, 2024 | 16,426 (up 7.4 per cent from 2023) | Ministry of the Interior |
| Catalonia court demandas, 2025 | 6,290 (5,913 penal, 377 civil), 39.7 per cent of national | CGPJ, via El Debate |
| Andalusia court demandas, 2025 | 2,610 | CGPJ, via El Debate |
| Madrid court demandas, 2025 | 1,727 (1,541 penal, 186 civil) | CGPJ, via El Debate |
| Average time to firm sentence | ~23.3 months | CGPJ |
| Pre-reform average eviction timeline | Up to 2 years under ordinary procedure | Spanish Property Insight / FGE |
| Post-reform fast-track trial target | ~15 days from denuncia | Art. 795 LECrim (LO 1/2025) |
The European Parliament issued a warning to Spain in 2025, demanding stronger legal measures to expedite evictions and reaffirming that the right to private property is a fundamental right of the European Union. The 2025 reform is the Spanish government’s legislative response.
How does Andalusia’s anti-okupacion programme work?
Andalusia led the Consejo General del Poder Judicial’s quarterly court demanda ranking for the second quarter of 2025, recording 105 demandas, 21.5 per cent of the national total, ahead of Catalonia (88), the Valencian Community (50), Madrid (33) and Murcia (32). For the full year, however, Catalonia retained the overall lead with 6,290 demandas against Andalusia’s 2,610, but the quarterly data shows Andalusia trending upward on the court-lawsuit measure.
The shift partly reflects the LO 1/2025 requirement that owners attempt negotiation or mediation before filing a criminal demanda, which has redirected some cases through the civil courts and alternative resolution routes. The Plataforma de Afectados por la Okupacion y la Inquiokupacion estimates the true figure is far higher than the CGPJ count, calculating that around 13,000 Andalusian families are affected when inquiokupacion (non-paying tenants) is included, with 81 per cent of all reported cases being inquiokupacion rather than pure okupacion.
The Junta de Andalucia has responded with the Sistema Andaluz de Lucha contra la Ocupacion Ilegal, operated by the Consejeria de Fomento, Articulacion del Territorio y Vivienda. The system provides personalised legal advice to victims of illegal occupation, informs them of the available criminal and civil routes for recovery, and coordinates with the Agencia de Vivienda y Rehabilitacion de Andalucia (AVRA) on the public housing stock. Since 2019, AVRA has processed more than 2,800 procedimientos for illegal occupation of public housing and over 1,300 eviction expedientes, conducting more than 141,000 verifications and recovering 4,538 publicly owned homes. The occupancy rate of public housing has fallen from 13 per cent in 2022 to 9.4 per cent. The Junta has also excluded people convicted of illegal occupation from access to protected housing.
For non-resident owners on the Costa del Sol, the Andalusian system is a free advisory resource: access requires only being over 18 and empadronado (registered on the padron) in an Andalusian municipality. It complements, but does not replace, the private lawyer and criminal denuncia route.
Is the 48-hour rule real?
No statute in Spanish law sets a 48-hour deadline. The figure comes from the doctrine of flagrancia: if police discover the occupation while it is happening, they can act immediately because the offence is being committed in their presence. Legal practitioners commonly cite 48 hours as the practical window within which flagrancia is most likely to be established, but it is a guideline, not a fixed rule.
Once the flagrante window passes, the police will not remove the occupants without a judicial order. The owner must then file a denuncia (criminal route) or an interdicto (civil route). The 2025 reform does not change this. What it does change is the speed of the criminal route once the case enters the system. Property owners who discover occupation should contact the police immediately, have their land registry certification ready (obtainable online in approximately seven hours, per the Fiscalia’s Instrucion 1/2020), and instruct a lawyer the same day.
How can a non-resident owner recover possession?
There are two legal routes, and they can run in parallel.
The civil route is the interdicto de recobrar la posesion under art. 250.1.4 of the Ley de Enjuiciamiento Civil. Ley 5/2018, de 11 de junio, reformed this provision specifically for cases of illegal occupation of a dwelling. The key change: if the occupants do not answer the demand within the legal period, the court proceeds to sentence immediately. This closed a loophole where occupants could stall proceedings by failing to appear.
The criminal route is a denuncia for allanamiento or usurpacion. Since April 2025, this is processed through the fast-track procedure with a trial target of approximately 15 days. The owner must present a land registry certification proving title, and the police atestado should document the circumstances of the occupation, the identity of the occupants, and the owner’s express objection.
A non-resident owner should not attempt to remove occupants personally. Spanish law treats self-help eviction cautiously, and an owner who uses force may themselves face criminal charges. The independent lawyer is the necessary intermediary for either route.
What is inquiokupacion and why does the 2025 law not address it?
Inquiokupacion is the phenomenon where a tenant enters a property legally through a rental contract, then stops paying rent and exploits civil procedure to delay eviction. It is not the same as okupacion: the tenant had a legitimate right to enter, and the dispute is about the non-payment of rent, not the illegal occupation of an empty property.
The 2025 reform does not address inquiokupacion because it is a civil landlord-tenant matter governed by the Ley de Arrendamientos Urbanos (LAU), not a criminal okupa case. In Catalonia alone, over 5,000 eviction lawsuits for rent arrears were filed in 2025, far exceeding the 377 civil okupacion demandas in the same region. These cases account for approximately 80 per cent of all housing-related court cases in Catalonia.
For non-resident landlords facing inquiokupacion, the recovery route is the civil eviction process under the LAU, which has its own timeline and procedural rules distinct from the criminal fast-track procedure introduced by LO 1/2025. Rent default insurance can cushion the financial blow of a non-paying tenant while the legal process runs.
How can owners prevent okupacion?
Prevention is more effective and far cheaper than recovery. The measures that work for non-resident owners on the Costa del Sol are straightforward:
- Occupancy signals: lights on timers, a car in the driveway, regular visits by a neighbour or property management service. A property that looks lived in is less likely to be targeted.
- Alarm systems with monitoring and police response: a monitored alarm is the single most effective deterrent for an absent owner. The alarm must be connected to a central receiving station (central receptora de alarmas) authorised by the Ministry of the Interior under Orden INT/316/2011, so that a trigger generates a police dispatch, not just a silent log. An alarm that triggers a police visit during the flagrante window can result in immediate removal. Perimeter sensors, door contacts and a visible external siren cover the most common entry points (doors, windows, garden access). Monthly monitoring costs in Spain typically range from EUR 25 to EUR 60, a fraction of the cost of an eviction.
- Remote monitoring and smart locks: Wi-Fi cameras and video doorbells let a non-resident owner check a property from abroad in real time. Smart locks with temporary codes allow a trusted local contact to inspect without handing over a physical key that can be copied. These systems do not replace a monitored alarm, but they add a layer of early warning.
- Community vigilance: in urbanisations and apartment blocks, the comunidad de propietarios can agree a protocol for reporting suspicious activity at empty units. The community president or administrator can act as a first responder.
- Insurance: standard property insurance typically does not cover okupa damage. Some Spanish insurers now offer specific okupa coverage as an add-on, which may include legal costs for eviction. Legal protection insurance (defensa juridica) can sometimes cover the legal costs of an eviction proceeding, so check your policy.
- Registry certification: keep an electronic land registry certification accessible. The Fiscalia’s Instrucion 1/2020 identifies this as the primary document police need to act, and it can be obtained online.
- Periodic inspections: for owners absent for months at a time, a local property manager or neighbour conducting weekly checks is the cheapest early-warning system. The cost of a break-in repair and an eviction far exceeds the cost of a management fee.
- Short-let compliance: if you let the property to tourists, ensure your VFT registration and community approvals are current, because a lapsed or unauthorised let can blur the line between a tenant and an occupant. See the Costa del Sol short-let rules.
What should you do if you find your property occupied?
Act immediately. The first 48 hours are the window in which police intervention is most likely to succeed without a court order. Call the police, present your land registry certification, and file a denuncia the same day. Do not attempt to enter the property or confront the occupants. Instruct a Spanish lawyer immediately to file either the criminal denuncia or the civil interdicto under art. 250 LEC.
If the property is your dwelling, the crime is allanamiento de morada and carries the higher penalty. If it is a non-dwelling property, the crime is usurpacion. In either case, the 2025 reform channels the case through the fast-track procedure, with a trial target of approximately 15 days. The common mistakes buyers make in Spain include failing to insure against this risk and leaving a property visibly empty for months. Owners should also be aware that prolonged occupation can, in extreme circumstances, raise adverse possession (usucapion) questions, though the statutory periods are long (10 to 20 years) and rarely succeed against a registered owner who objects.
This guide is general information, not legal or tax advice. Rules change and individual circumstances differ. Verify current requirements with an independent lawyer (abogado) or tax advisor (gestor/asesor fiscal) before acting.
Frequently asked questions
- Is squatting legal in Spain?
- No. Occupying someone else's property without authorisation is a criminal offence in Spain. If the property is a dwelling (morada), it is allanamiento de morada under art. 202 CP, punishable by six months to two years in prison. If it is not a dwelling, it is usurpacion under art. 245 CP, punishable by a fine of three to six months. The difference turns on whether the property constitutes a morada, which Spanish courts define broadly to include second residences.
- Can police evict squatters within 48 hours?
- There is no 48-hour statute in Spanish law. Police can act immediately only when the occupation is caught in flagrante, meaning the perpetrators are discovered in the act. The 48-hour figure is a practical guideline cited by legal practitioners, not a fixed deadline. Once the flagrante window passes, removal requires a judicial order, either through the criminal fast-track procedure or a civil interdicto under art. 250 LEC.
- What did the 2025 reform change for property owners?
- Ley Organica 1/2025, de 2 de enero, in force since 3 April 2025, amended art. 795 LECrim to include both allanamiento de morada and usurpacion in the fast-track criminal procedure (juicio rapido). The trial target is approximately 15 days from denuncia, a significant reduction from the previous framework. The reform also allowed conformidad, a plea agreement, without any penalty ceiling, so occupants can accept eviction and a reduced sentence without a full jury trial.
- How does a non-resident owner remove squatters?
- There are two routes. The civil route is the interdicto de recobrar la posesion under art. 250.1.4 LEC, reformed by Ley 5/2018 so that if the occupant does not answer the demand, the court can issue sentence immediately. The criminal route is a denuncia for allanamiento or usurpacion, now processed through the fast-track procedure under LO 1/2025. A lawyer (abogado) is required for either route and the owner must prove title with a land registry certification.
- What is inquiokupacion and does the 2025 law address it?
- Inquiokupacion is the phenomenon where a tenant enters a property legally through a rental contract, then stops paying rent and exploits civil procedure to delay eviction. The 2025 reform does not address it, because inquiokupacion is a civil landlord-tenant dispute governed by the LAU, not a criminal okupa case. In Catalonia alone, over 5,000 such eviction lawsuits were filed in 2025, far exceeding the 377 civil okupacion demandas in the same region. These cases account for approximately 80 per cent of all housing-related court cases in Catalonia.
- Does home insurance cover okupa damage?
- Most standard Spanish home insurance policies do not cover damage caused by squatters, because the occupation is classified as a deliberate act by third parties rather than a covered peril. Some insurers offer specific okupa coverage as an add-on. Non-resident owners should check their policy carefully and consider a dedicated alarm or property-management service, which is the most effective prevention measure.
Sources and data
- Ley Organica 10/1995, de 23 de noviembre, del Codigo Penal (arts. 202 y 245) — BOE
- Ley 1/2000, de 7 de enero, de Enjuiciamiento Civil (art. 250) — BOE
- Instruccion 1/2020 de la Fiscalia General del Estado sobre allanamiento de morada y usurpacion de bienes inmuebles — BOE
- Circular 1/2025 de la Fiscalia General del Estado sobre delitos de usurpacion y allanamiento de morada — BOE
- Ley 5/2018, de 11 de junio, de modificacion de la Ley 1/2000 de Enjuiciamiento Civil (ocupacion ilegal de viviendas) — BOE
- Ley Organica 1/2025, de 2 de enero, de medidas en materia de eficiencia del Servicio Publico de Justicia — BOE
- Allanamientos y usurpaciones de vivienda caen un 9,4 per cent en 2025 (Ministerio del Interior data) — EFE
- Sistema Andaluz de lucha contra la ocupacion ilegal y de asesoramiento para la proteccion de la vivienda — Junta de Andalucia
- Estadisticas de criminalidad: Allanamiento / Usurpacion de inmuebles — Ministerio del Interior