Magaluf and Ibiza holidaymakers face £50k fines as tourism chiefs BAN pub crawls, booze cruises and 2-4-1 drink offers
WORRIED party organisers warned Brits would abandon Ibiza and Majorca after tough alcohol laws were brought in yesterday.
The pioneering crackdown ends pub crawls, happy hours and two-for-one cheap drink offers, and also curbs party boats - with holidaymakers who break the rules facing £50,000 fines.
Legislation approved by the Balearic Islands government is aimed at stamping out lawless drunkenness at its wildly popular party capitals.
It affects West End in Ibiza, and two resorts in Majorca - Brit favourite Magaluf, and s’Arenal, favoured by Germans.
Shops in the three areas will also be banned from selling alcohol between 9.30pm and 8am.
The crackdown, implemented through a special decree, also tackles a problem dubbed balconing in Spain.
It is meant to stop holidaymakers jumping between their hotel balconies and leaping into pools from their rooms.
Hotels, which are not currently legally obliged to kick out guests caught engaging in the dangerous practice, will be forced to expel them under the new rules.
Regional government tourism chief Iago Negueruela described the decree as an “exceptional” measure designed to tackle “a specific problem in a specific area.”
A regional government spokesman said: “It’s the first law in Europe that restricts the promotion and sale of alcohol in specific tourist areas.”
The concession of new "party boat" licences will also be suspended, with boats that are already licensed banned from embarking or disembarking tourists in the three areas covered by the decree.
Businesses who breach the new rules have been warned they could face fines of up to 600,000 euros (£510,000) and three-year closures.
The new law also takes aim at the so-called "balconing" craze.
Balconing is the term given to holidaymakers who decide to jump into a swimming pool from a hotel or apartment balcony, a stunt which claims several lives a year.
Those caught jumping from balconies face fines of up to €60,000 euros (£50,000).
Local newspapers first highlighted the regional government’s plans to tackle drunken tourism with the new decree late last year.
Respected Spanish daily El Pais, reporting on the pioneering measures today, said: “The Balearic Islands bans free bars, ‘happy hours’ and 2x1 to put a brake on the excesses of drunken tourism."
The decree, which will remain in force for the next five years, has been brought in as part of a regional government drive to halt the "cheapening" of the Balearic Islands.
A regional government spokesman said: “Efforts to promote the destination, to provide it with better quality through both public and private sector investments, and position it in an increasingly competitive and global market, have been affected recently by certain uncivic behaviour.
“Most of this type of behaviour is directly related to alcohol abuse in certain tourist areas of Majorca and Ibiza.”
Council leaders have been mounting a fightback to try to clean up the image of resorts like Magaluf since it was rocked by scandal in 2014 when a British holidaymaker was filmed performing sex acts on 24 men.
The incident led Majorca’s top politician at the time, Jose Ramon Bauza, to dub Magaluf’s notorious party strip Punta Ballena as “500 metres of shame.”
In 2018 council chiefs upped the ante against badly-behaving tourists in Magaluf by putting up street signs warning them of heavy fines for street drinking, nakedness and fighting.
The brightly coloured signs, which carried the banner line "Have fun with respect", were mounted on lampposts and other visible spots in the party resort.
One said: “Drink on the street. Penalty 500 euros.”
Another said: “Wear no clothes on the street. Penalty 400 euros.” A third said: “Shout, fight, or bother people. Penalty 400 euros.”
Most read in travel
But stag party organisers fear the “heavy-handed” legislation could backfire.
Matt Mavir, boss of , welcomed making the areas “safer for visitors”.
But he warned: “They might end up fun- policing their resorts to the point that no one wants to visit and that wouldn’t be in anyone’s interests.”
A spokesman for UK stag do operator Chilli Sauce said: “Magaluf and San Antonio are two of the party capitals of the world. It would be a great shame if that was to change.”
UK travel association ABTA said “it strongly supports steps that encourage a responsible approach to alcohol”.