Is Alfés rent-controlled?
No. Alfés (Segrià, Lleida) is noton Catalonia’s declared list of zones de mercat residencial tensionat — 271 of the region’s 947 municipalities are, and Alfés is not among them. So the rent on a new long-term lease here is freely agreed; the statutory LAU protections (minimum term, deposit caps, indexed annual rises) still apply in full.
Only 1 rental contract was registered in Alfés in 2025 — too few for the source to publish an average.
Not on the 2024 declared list.
LAU protections still apply.
Average not published — 1 contract in 2025.
Lleida average (MIVAU 2025).
For wider context: 21 of Lleida province's 231 municipalities are declared rent-stress zones (Generalitat); Registradores does not separately publish a 2024 foreign-buyer share for Lleida.
What thismeans if you’re buying in Alfés
- Buying to let? The rent on a new lease is not capped in Alfés — but model the yield on the registered average above, not on portal asking prices, and remember in-contract rises are index-limited.
- Buying it to live in? Nothing here restricts you — tenancy rules only matter if you let the home out.
- Counting on tourist income? Short-lets still need the municipality’s HUT licence — availability is town-by-town, so verify before you rely on it.
- A demand signal. Not being declared means Alfésdidn’t meet the rent-stress thresholds the Generalitat applied in 2024 — context worth weighing on rental demand and resale liquidity.
In Alfés to rent or to buy? Check the property first.
Paste any listing and VeoTrust gives an honest verdict in minutes — for renters, whether the asking rent is fair and within the legal cap and what it really costs a month; for buyers, the cadastre, registry, rent-control status and the real taxes.
The rules that do apply in Alfés
Spain’s 2023 housing law (Llei 12/2023) lets regions declare rent-pressure zones, and Catalonia has declared 271 of them — Alfésis not one, so no new-lease cap applies here. What does apply, everywhere in Spain, is the tenancy law itself (LAU, Ley 29/1994): the tenant’s right to stay five years (seven when the landlord is a company), a deposit of one month plus at most a two-month additional guarantee, the agency fee on the landlord, and in-contract rises limited to once a year by the official reference index. The declared list is reviewed periodically, so Alfés’s status can change — this page reflects the current official list.
Is Alfés rent-controlled?+
No — Alfés is not on the Generalitat's declared list of zones de mercat residencial tensionat (271 of Catalonia's 947 municipalities, Resolucions TER/800/2024 and TER/2408/2024), so the rent on a new long-term lease is not capped here. The list is reviewed periodically, so status can change.
Does that mean a landlord in Alfés can charge anything?+
On a new lease the price is freely agreed. But Spain-wide tenancy law (LAU, Ley 29/1994) still applies in full: within a running contract the rent can rise at most once a year and only by the official reference index; the deposit is one month plus at most a two-month additional guarantee; the agency fee is the landlord's (Ley 12/2023); and the tenant can stay 5 years (7 if the landlord is a company). Only 1 rental contract was registered in Alfés in 2025 — too few for the source to publish an average.
Can I short-let (tourist rental) in Alfés?+
Short-term tourist lets are a separate regime everywhere in Catalonia: they need a tourist-use licence (HUT) from the municipality, and availability varies town by town — check Alfés's town hall rules before counting on tourist income.
What does this mean if I'm buying in Alfés?+
Buy-to-let income in Alfés is not rent-capped, which simplifies yield maths — but model it on registered rents, not portal asking prices. Purchase taxes are the same as anywhere in Catalonia: roughly 10–13% on top of a resale price (ITP, notary, registry), or 10% IVA + 1.5% AJD on a new build.
Sources: Generalitat de Catalunya — Agència de l’Habitatge (Resolucions TER/800/2024 + TER/2408/2024); Llei 12/2023 (Spain’s housing law); LAU (Ley 29/1994). Registered rents: INCASÒL — fiances de lloguer, 2025 (Dades obertes de la Generalitat). Province price: Ministerio de Vivienda (MIVAU 2025). Every figure public and cited; nothing estimated.
General information for people buying property in Spain — not legal, tax or financial advice. Rent-control status can change; confirm the current rules for a specific property before you rely on them.
Last reviewed June 2026.