Currently, visitors from outside the European Union (EU), including the UK, can visit
Schengen countries for 90 days in every 180-day period.
According
to a report by Publituris, Spain will ask Brussels to lift this rule for
British tourists, with Spain's Secretary of Tourism, Fernando Valdés, stating that
this restriction "goes against the interests of Spain", adding that “it
is a rule that, unfortunately, is not something that Spain has established by
itself or can get rid of”.
Spain
now intends to pressure Brussels to exempt British tourists from the rule, stating
to the press in Spain that “it is in the country's interest to lobby and
convince [the EU] to make an exception”.
Before
the pandemic, Spain received around 84 million tourists a year, with 17 million
traveling from the UK, with that number falling with the start of pandemic
restrictions.
However,
the numbers have started to rise again this year, with 1.8 million Britons
visiting Spain in the first quarter of 2022.
With
tourism accounting for around 12% of Spain's GDP, Brexit has made travel
between the two countries more difficult as the UK pulled out of EU-wide free
movement agreements.
Negotiations
on residence and tourism permits stalled, and in May of this year, British
expats were banned from driving in Spain using UK driving licenses after the
negotiations failed.
However,
Spain is eager to see the British return, with details of a bilateral agreement
that will allow tourism workers to remain in Spain during the holiday season.