New laws target overtourism at popular travel destinations – Paradise Post

New laws target overtourism at popular travel destinations – Paradise Post

By Lacey Pfalz, TravelPulse

Overtourism is a constant theme in the travel world, and it has been growing since the pandemic. Destinations that had received large numbers of tourists enjoyed a well-deserved break from the congestion during lockdowns and travel bans.

Then they suddenly experienced large waves of tourists returning once the world reopened.

TravelPulse has written a lot about overtourism, highlighting how different places are creating laws to target specific problems that overtourism creates, such as strain on fragile local environments or historic sites, higher housing costs associated with too many short-term vacation rentals and overcrowding.

Overtourism also creates new trends for travelers, like detour destinations and destination dupes, which focus on more affordable and less-known places that provide similar experiences to other, more crowded destinations.

Here’s a big-pictures look at the changes, in particular those made at places we have reported about in the past year or so.

Amsterdam

Amsterdam is one of the significant destinations creating the most laws restricting or curbing overtourism in recent years. It gained global headlines last year when it banned new hotel construction in the city and announced a plan to halve the number of cruise ships docking in Amsterdam by 2028.

In July, it announced it would halve the number of large cruise ships docking in the city by 2026 and eliminate its Veemkade port by 2035.

Amsterdam residents took to the streets in protest this past December, complaining that the number of tourists makes parts of their city unlivable and drives up housing prices.

Nice, France

On Jan. 24, 2025, the mayor of the French city of Nice signed an order banning all cruise ships with over 900 passengers from visiting the city, a move that will likely begin this July. The mayor also wants to convert the city’s ports to allow smaller ships to plug into shore power when docked.

While no large ships were scheduled to stop at Nice this summer, its schedule will welcome 124 smaller and mid-sized ships that meet the new requirement.

Spain

Spain made quite a few headlines last year about overtourism. Residents in destinations like Barcelona and Palma de Mallorca took to the streets by the thousands last summer to protest crowds of tourists and the ensuing housing crisis, mainly due to many short-term vacation rentals.

Source: Paradise Post