The Capital

Report: Short-term rentals add to woes in Puerto Rico

- By Dánica Coto

SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico — Activists want stricter regulation­s of short-term rentals in Puerto Rico as the U.S. territory sees a growing number of displaced renters and a spike in housing costs, the Hispanic Federation said in a report this week.

The number of units operating as short-term rentals in Puerto Rico jumped to more than 25,000 in 2023 from about 1,000 in 2014, the report commission­ed by the federation said Wednesday.

It found that while short-term rentals create jobs, attract visitors and lead to more transporta­tion options, renters have faced evictions, the cost of goods has increased amid an economic crisis and some ecological areas have been destroyed during new constructi­on.

The report calls for creating a public registry of short-term rentals, classifyin­g them as businesses and increasing the island’s room tax from 7% to up to 11% and using the additional revenue to develop affordable housing.

“This has gotten to a point where the impacts are really palpable in Puerto Rico,” Charlotte Gossett Navarro, the foundation’s Puerto Rico chief director, said.

A factor in the increase of short-term rentals was Hurricane Maria, which pummeled the island in September 2017. Many residents migrated to the U.S. mainland afterward, while scores of new investors came to the island to buy homes and properties.

That led to a reduction in housing availabili­ty and affordabil­ity, Gossett Navarron said, adding that other factors including the pandemic also are to blame.

Now, 100 to 400 new short-term rentals are reported each month in

Puerto Rico, with apartments representi­ng 60% of properties available for that purpose.

Dulce del Río-Pineda, who has lived for 40 years on the island of Culebra just east of Puerto Rico, said she noticed a change in the housing market in the past seven years with the influx of short-term rentals.

“It’s an economic benefit,” she said. “At the same time, our young people especially find themselves without any hope of being able to buy their own home. It’s a way of making our community disappear.”

The former special education teacher, who now helps run a local nonprofit, said social inequality also has become more dramatic. Some homes on Culebra, a popular tourist destinatio­n, now cost $4 million to $8 million.

A recent study by the nonpartisa­n Center for a New Economy and the Graduate School of Planning of the University of Puerto Rico found that a 10% rise in the number of short-term rentals in a community increases housing rental costs by 7% and the property value per square foot by 23%.

Activists are calling for rent-control policies; restoring abandoned properties for long-term rentals; designatin­g six or more rental units as a small inn; and designatin­g areas where short-term rentals can operate to protect ecological and agricultur­al lands.

Various bills have proposed how short-term rentals should be operated. One under considerat­ion would award regulation and oversight of such properties to municipali­ties. But the report noted the bills do not address the impact of short-term rentals on housing, including displaceme­nt and gentrifica­tion.

Gossett noted that the study found a consensus that short-term rentals can be important for the island, and said the foundation is not seeking a ban on them.

A day before the report was released, Airbnb issued a statement saying it supports the “inclusive regulation” of short-term rentals, which will have to be registered by early June if they’re operating in the capital, San Juan.

Airbnb, which has generated more than $70 million in room tax revenues for Puerto Rico and is behind the majority of the increase in short-term rentals, also had backed a bill that called for allocating 5% of room tax revenues to municipali­ties. Legislator­s voted against it in a move that some blamed on a “power game” among lawmakers.

 ?? CARLOS GIUSTI/AP 2021 ?? A wooden Puerto Rican flag is displayed on a dock on the Condado Lagoon in San Juan, the capital. The U.S. territory is seeing a spike in housing costs.
CARLOS GIUSTI/AP 2021 A wooden Puerto Rican flag is displayed on a dock on the Condado Lagoon in San Juan, the capital. The U.S. territory is seeing a spike in housing costs.

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