Europe’s Rental Rules Reach a Turning Point

Europe’s short-term rental rules are set to change on 20 May 2026, when the EU Short-Term Rental Data Regulation comes into force. Airbnb says it is ready to comply, but warns that some Member States may not be prepared. The company says the new framework should improve data sharing between platforms, governments and local authorities across the bloc.
Airbnb says it already shares information with authorities in Europe and has adapted its systems for national registration schemes in countries including Spain, Italy and France. Its City Portal is used by more than 450 local authorities to monitor listings, flag problems and remove non-compliant properties. The new EU rules are meant to bring this kind of work into one wider system.
What Airbnb Wants
The company is asking for:
- clear timelines for national implementation;
- shared technical standards across Member States;
- proportionate rules instead of broad bans;
- consistent registration systems for hosts and platforms.
Airbnb argues that short-term rentals also support travel outside Europe’s busiest tourist zones. The company says many guests stay in neighbourhoods they would not otherwise have visited, while rural areas and smaller towns can gain extra income. During large events, such as the Milan-Cortina Winter Olympics, rentals may also spread visitors beyond the main city core.
The real test will be whether the EU rules bring order without copying the same blunt restrictions everywhere. Better data could help cities target genuine housing pressure, rather than treating all rentals as the same problem. Guests may still get flexible stays, hosts may keep extra income, and local authorities may finally have clearer numbers before making policy.



















