Barcelona Eyes a €30 Cruise Fee

Barcelona politicians have backed a proposal to raise the tourist tax for some cruise passengers, with short port calls potentially facing a €30 daily charge. The measure has political support inside the city council, but it has not yet become law. It would still need approval by the Parliament of Catalonia before the city could apply the higher rate.
What Cruise Visitors Should Know
- Proposed charge: €30 per person per day
- Current charge: up to €11 for cruise stays of 12 hours or less
- Who it targets: cruise passengers making short port calls
- Time limit: less than 12 hours in port
- Not included: cruises starting or ending in Barcelona
- Approval needed: Catalan Parliament, then Barcelona City Council
- Related plan: cruise terminals cut from seven to five by 2030
The proposal is aimed at cruise visitors who spend only a few hours in the city. According to a University of Girona study presented by the Port of Barcelona, cruise passengers make up 2.5% of the city’s daily visitors on average, rising to 7.5% on the busiest days. The study also found that cruise passengers spend an average of 5.7 hours in Barcelona during a call.
If approved, the higher charge could make short cruise stops more expensive while leaving turnaround cruises untouched. It would affect visitors who arrive for a quick city visit to places such as La Rambla, the Gothic Quarter, Sagrada Família and the waterfront. Travellers starting or ending a cruise in Barcelona would still have stronger reasons to book hotels, restaurants and extra time ashore.
Barcelona is drawing a sharper line between cruise visits that use the city for a few hours and trips that bring longer stays. The proposal will not change cruise costs immediately, but it is one to watch before booking 2027 itineraries. Anyone choosing a Barcelona port call should check the final tax rules, cruise line wording and what is included in the fare.



















