Higher standard rental properties requyired in Tenerife and Spain

Higher quality rental property required in Spain and Tenerife

Holidaymakers opting for rental properties in Spain and Tenerife are looking for higher standards from their accommodation.

This is the finding of the Campaya Rental Property Market Trends 2011 report, which revealed that visitors to the country are increasingly searching for “levels of luxury equal to, if not better than, at home”.

As a result, the organisation suggested that those who invest in a property in Spain with the intention of letting it out to tourists may need to do more when it comes to furnishing and decorating the flat or house.

However, it warned that spending extra money on kitting out a property will not necessarily lead to higher rents, because the supply of such holiday homes continues to outweigh demand.

Source: PropertyShowrooms

More UK holiday makers uninsured when travelling overseas

Uninsured holiday makers to Tenerife expect the UK government to take care of the bills.

As many as 20% of UK holidaymakers are still going abroad without taking out travel insurance, a survey by travel organisation ABTA found.

More than one in four travellers mistakenly believes the UK Government will cover their bills if something goes wrong.

The poll of 2,018 consumers also found that only 44% bought travel insurance for trips in the UK.

Abta’s financial protection chief, John de Vial, said: “It is very worrying that so many people are putting their health and finances at risk by travelling abroad without insurance.” 

Source: Independent.co.uk

Investors in Tenerife and Spain benefit from more rental opportunities

Rental opportunities in Tenerife increase

Investors interested in property in Spain could benefit from more rental opportunities as more Brits choose to holiday in Europe. 

According to a new study by Abta – The Travel Association, bookings to Spain have increased by 11 per cent compared to last year, showing that the destination is becoming more popular with holidaymakers.

Short breaks are also seeing more people travelling into the country, especially to Madrid, as economies around the world recover and capital has been freed up to boost overseas stays.

“During the recession, luxury holidays were substantially affected, but have now experienced a healthy comeback,” Abta said in a statement.

Source: International Business Times

Increase in holiday home enquiries in Canary Islands

Interest in Tenerife property increases

Spring is finally in the air this week here in the chilly old British isles, and it seems UK holidaymakers have summer on their minds, if the latest data from vacation rental website Holiday Lettings is anything to go by. Surprisingly, despite growing media reports of an ‘income squeeze’ due to increasing taxes and inflation, the portal has recorded a 20% year on year increase in holiday home enquiries so far in 2011, with Spain’s Balearic and Canary Islands the big winners amongst sunseekers. 

This is good news for buy to let investors with properties in Spain’s outlying islands, who have no doubt been panicking over the last year with the market collapse on the mainland and virtually no chance of selling their home for a profit. But luckily industry predictions on the resilience of Spain as a holiday destination prompting a recovery in market demand appear to have come true – the Balearic Islands have had the single largest enquiry rate of any destination this year, whilst the Canaries were also popular earlier in the year.

The Canary Islands offer a value-for-money holiday option for cash-strapped Brits, particularly given the savings they could achieve on holiday rentals versus hotel stays. The recognised saving when renting a property is hitting home with consumers in tough economic times and Spain’s reputation for offering value for money and its longstanding place in the hearts of British holidaymakers are likely to be contributing to its popularity so far this year. Great news for property owners in Tenerife.

Overseas flights up as Brits attempt to escape the cold

More Brits moving to Tenerife to escape the cold weather?

Holiday firms have reported a leap in bookings for overseas holidays as people attempt to escape further bad weather in the UK.  Holiday firm Travel Counsellors reported a 20 per cent increase in bookings, with a large rise in the number of people opting for a break after Christmas and into January. Travel Counsellors said that more people were opting for 10-11 night breaks rather than the traditional two weeks. Online travel company lowcostholidays.com also said its website traffic was up 60 per cent since the first snow fell. Lowcostholidays.com said top searches on its site were for holidays to the Canary Islands, Dubai and Thailand. 

Hotels.com communications director Alison Couper said: ‘With the cold weather predicted to stay,  it’s evident holidaymakers want to get as far afield as possible.’ The news comes as forecasters warned that another arctic blast will bring more snow and bitterly cold temperatures to the UK this winter.  The worst-hit areas have been the north-east Scotland and eastern England.

Hopefully on arriving in Tenerife and seeing what it has to offer, some of the visitors will look to buy second homes on the island.

Fewer holidaymakers taking to the sky this year.

Less holidaymakers flying to Tenerife, the Canary Isles and Spain

Less holidaymakers flying to Tenerife, the Canary Isles and Spain

Substantially fewer holidaymakers have flown abroad this year than last, official figures have shown.

In the 12 months to June the number of visits abroad by British residents fell by 12 per cent from 63.3 million to 56.0 million – a drop of 7.3 million on the same period in the year before.

The figures from the Office for National Statistics are the latest data to indicate consumers and businesses are still being very cautious about spending money on travelling abroad.

The biggest drop came from businessmen cancelling trips or deciding to stay at home, with business trips falling by 19 per cent.  Holiday visits decreased by 12 per cent to 36.9 million. This shows once again how important it is to market your rental property in Tenerife in a professional manner, using a reliable agent and most important, at the right price point.

Earlier this week, both Thomas Cook and Tui, the two biggest tour operators in the country, said they were experiencing a very difficult summer. Thomas Cook admitted it had been forced to cut the price of holidays between May and July and its still had 160,000 unsold summer holidays.

Last month, The Daily Telegraph reported how camping in Britain had officially overtaken bed and breakfasts in popularity, as millions of families opt for the cheaper option of sleeping under canvas, with more than five million camping trips undertaken last year.

Cheaper travel may help the Tenerife economy.

Families can expect to save several hundred pounds a year because airlines  are being forced to discount prices.

Cheaper travel may help Tenerife's economy

Cheaper travel may help Tenerife's economy

Holidaymakers can look forward to a decade of cheap travel because of the global recession, according to industry experts so for those who rent out property in Tenerife this is great news.

One company estimated that the average British family spent nearly £2,092 on a holiday this year than a fall of £257 compared to 2007.

According to a Euromonitor the fall in spending has been due to families economising, staying in less comfortable surroundings and hunting for cheaper flights. In turn, this has led to companies discounting heavily as they try to cope with the dramatic drop in travel.

As a result, Euromonitor says, prices were 20-30 per cent lower this year than last and the trend is set to continue for a decade, said Caroline Bremner, the head of the research team. “People have been trading down,” she said. “The industry is caught in a vicious circle of discounting. “It will be hard to bring prices back up, even when there is a recovery, because people have got use to discounted prices.” The impact of the recession was outlined at the start of the World Travel Market in London’s docklands.

Ms Bremner also believes that Britain is set to follow America where the travel industry is now catering to the “funemployed” – people who, having lost their jobs, are spending their redundancy pay on the holiday of a lifetime.

Companies are offering discounts to the new army of jobless, using slogans like “laid off, take off” to win the business.

Package holidays had been on the wane with the increasing use of the internet and holidaymakers booking do-it-yourself holidays, hunting for the cheapest flights and accommodation. So if you have a property to rent or let for holiday or longer term, providing your price point is correct you should reap the rewards of this new era.

Investors sticking to proven locations like Tenerife following global market downturn.

The index which tracks the level of interest in certain properties and countries from visitors to the site has seen changes.

British buyers stick with traditional locations like Tenerife after the credit crunch.

British buyers stick with traditional locations like Tenerife after the credit crunch.

The United States was knocked off the top spot in August’s Investment Property watch chart

France, a favourite with British investors and holidaymakers,claimed victory in August.

Industry experts are busy predicting that traditional locations will emerge victorious from the global market downturn and that is good news for Tenerife. Mortgage specialist, Conti, found that British investors are sticking to ‘proven’ locations that offer less risk. Spain is a  traditional hotspot. The credit crunch has been particularly hard on Spain, with hoards of unsold apartments lying unfinished as developers fell foul of the credit crunch. Now, huge discounts have led to the bargain hunters circling again, pushing demand for Spanish property back up.

For France and Spain, enquiries have increased considerably with the countries accounting for 53 per cent of all 2009 enquiries so far, compared with 29 per cent in the same period last year. British buyers are sticking to the more traditional overseas locations, especially those with history of providing good rental returns. The smart investor is no longer simply looking to where the best bargains for a swift return can be found, but to where security lies for a longer term investment and Tenerife certainly meets these criteria. perhaps it is time to visit your Tenerife estate agent and see what bargains are available again.