Is Torrefeta i Florejacs rent-controlled?
No. Torrefeta i Florejacs (Segarra, Lleida) is noton Catalonia’s declared list of zones de mercat residencial tensionat — 271 of the region’s 947 municipalities are, and Torrefeta i Florejacs 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 3 rental contracts were registered in Torrefeta i Florejacs in 2025 — too few for the source to publish an average.
Not on the 2024 declared list.
LAU protections still apply.
Average not published — 3 contracts 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 Torrefeta i Florejacs
- Buying to let? The rent on a new lease is not capped in Torrefeta i Florejacs — 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 Torrefeta i Florejacsdidn’t meet the rent-stress thresholds the Generalitat applied in 2024 — context worth weighing on rental demand and resale liquidity.
In Torrefeta i Florejacs 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 Torrefeta i Florejacs
Spain’s 2023 housing law (Llei 12/2023) lets regions declare rent-pressure zones, and Catalonia has declared 271 of them — Torrefeta i Florejacsis 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 Torrefeta i Florejacs’s status can change — this page reflects the current official list.
Is Torrefeta i Florejacs rent-controlled?+
No — Torrefeta i Florejacs 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 Torrefeta i Florejacs 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 3 rental contracts were registered in Torrefeta i Florejacs in 2025 — too few for the source to publish an average.
Can I short-let (tourist rental) in Torrefeta i Florejacs?+
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 Torrefeta i Florejacs's town hall rules before counting on tourist income.
What does this mean if I'm buying in Torrefeta i Florejacs?+
Buy-to-let income in Torrefeta i Florejacs 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.