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Published 13:47 25 Nov 2025 GMT
Updated 16:41 26 Nov 2025 GMT

A travel guide has placed the Canary Islands in the ‘No List’ for next year, while it highlights the destinations facing pressure on the land and the local communities.
The annual list by Fodor’s serves as a travel guide which encourages travelling, but at the same time also warns about restraint by tourists.
It must be said, however, that a boycott is not what this annual list is calling for.
Its main purpose is to consider really well your next destination as a tourist and skip the places which most definitely need a break from people.
In fact, the locals are wondering about much more tourism they can handle.
During the first six months of the year, the eight islands saw more than 7.8 million tourists visiting and there were more than 27 million airport passengers. Compared with 2024, this was a 5% increase.
Some 35% of GDP is accounted for by the tourism in the archipelago of 2.2 million people, and 40% of the population is employed because of it. However, the popularity can prove costly.
The property development that has not been regulated, in addition to the mass tourism, have led thousands of people in protesting in the streets of Tenerife, Gran Canaria and Lanzarote, over the past two years.
Locals have said that they have had enough, while marching under the banner ‘Canarias tiene un límite‘ (The Canaries have a limit).
That being said, this is a problem that exists elsewhere.
Southern Europe, too, is facing similar issues, particularly places such as Venice, Barcelona and the islands of Santorini and Mykonos in Greece, that seem to struggle with overtourism.
According to experts, the problem lies in the people actually going to few destinations.
A senior lecturer at the Institute of Tourism and Hospitality at the University of East London, Zoe Adjey, told Metro that “one of the issues coming up time and again for Spain, Portugal and Italy in particular is that most tourists go to very few destinations”.
Further, she emphasizes that most of these countries, in fact, do not see much benefit from tourists.
As far as Canarians are concerned, for them, tourism is a lifeline but a burden at the same time.
Residents can now rent properties on sites such as Airbnb and Booking.com thanks to new government regulations, but rental prices and property values have risen to such a level that young locals can’t afford their own homes anymore.
While this makes things cheaper for tourists, it prices Canarians out of their homes.
Beaches, too, are often closed as a result of sewage runoff and pollution.
According to a report published by France24 earlier this year, wastewater with the amount equaling 40 Olympic-sized swimming pools is discharged each day into the sea around the Canary Islands.
And environmental groups in Tenerife are being alarmed by this. ATAN, one of the oldest such groups, told Fodor’s that “they are losing their identity, culture, and, ultimately, their right to exist as a community”.
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