The Spanish government has avoided addressing land law reforms in its new housing package despite European Commission warnings that such changes are essential to resolve housing market imbalances. The Commission highlighted persistent mismatches between supply and demand, urging Spain to pass necessary legislation to accelerate urban development and reduce administrative bottlenecks. Meanwhile, the Spanish government is finalizing a housing plan that includes measures like extending rental periods but avoids tackling the stalled land law, which remains blocked in Congress. The European Executive warned in its spring 2026 package that lack of progress on this law restricts housing supply and jeopardizes broader housing goals. Industry groups like APCEspaña emphasize the need for land law reform to ensure legal certainty in urban planning and prevent project cancellations due to procedural flaws. The government had previously committed to reforming the law to access EU recovery funds, but the absence of legislative action has been replaced by the creation of the State Housing Entity (Casa 47) as a guarantee for affordable housing rights.
Procjena pristranosti (Sredina): The article presents both the European Commission’s push for land law reform and the Spanish government’s reluctance to address it, highlighting the tension between these positions without overtly favoring either side. It reports on the implications of the government’s decision without taking a firm





