30 Aug, 2024 @ 06:00
1 min read

Worried about squatters in Spain? Here’s some top tips from police to stop them entering your home

POLICE in Spain have given their top tips on preventing your home from being taken over by squatters.

It comes after a surge in so-called okupas across the country in recent years, not helped by recent laws which make it much more difficult to kick them out.

But according to the Policia Nacional, there are some steps you can take to reduce the risk of your property from being targeted.

READ MORE: Squatter fears in Spain see ‘for sale’ and ‘for rent’ signs taken down outside empty homes

The first piece of advice seems obvious; lock your door well. But police say you should do this every time you leave the house, even if you’re just nipping to your local shop or to visit a neighbour.

And if you’re going away for a longer period, make sure you have good contacts with your neighbours, who can warn you immediately if someone is trying to enter your home.

Additionally, do not post your holiday plans on social media, as this could give would-be squatters a clue that your home will be empty.

If you have the funds, invest in a high-tech and high-security front door with multiple steel locks, and put bars on your windows.

Special and strong locks can also be installed on sliding windows and doors, the police said.

If you want to install security cameras, they should be placed in areas with good lighting.

Installing an alarm system is also a good deterrent. When the alarm is triggered, it means someone is breaking and entering and therefore committing a crime, giving police greater powers to remove them immediately.

Finally, leave your home looking like people are still inside.

This means not leaving your mailbox stuffed with letters (ask a neighbour to collect them for you), leaving your doormat out and plants and decorative elements on balconies and windows in place.

Laurence Dollimore

Laurence Dollimore is a Spanish-speaking, NCTJ-trained journalist with almost a decade’s worth of experience.
The London native has a BA in International Relations from the University of Leeds and and an MA in the same subject from Queen Mary University London.
He earned his gold star diploma in multimedia journalism at the prestigious News Associates in London in 2016, before immediately joining the Olive Press at their offices on the Costa del Sol.
After a five-year stint, Laurence returned to the UK to work as a senior reporter at the Mail Online, where he remained for two years before coming back to the Olive Press as Digital Editor in 2023.
He continues to work for the biggest newspapers in the UK, who hire him to investigate and report on stories in Spain.
These include the Daily Mail, Telegraph, Mail Online, Mail on Sunday and The Sun and Sun Online.
He has broken world exclusives on everything from the Madeleine McCann case to the anti-tourism movement in Tenerife.

GOT A STORY? Contact newsdesk@theolivepress.es or call +34 951 273 575 Twitter: @olivepress

2 Comments

  1. In other words: millions of people have to turn their home into a fortress because of a stupid law that makes it difficult to kick out the squatters.

    It’s about time the Spanish government replaces that stupid law with a new law, one that severely punishes squatters and mandates that the police enforces the law and gets those squatters out of your house.

    Criminals should definitely not have more rights than law abiding citizens.

    Location : Torrevieja

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