Rent Increases in Aragon: Limits & Regulations
Understand the strict national caps and the new State Reference Index that govern residential rent increases in Aragon, Spain.
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Adjusting monthly rents in Aragon (Zaragoza, Huesca, Teruel) to combat inflation is strictly governed by national housing laws. Landlords no longer have the freedom to link rent increases to skyrocketing inflation metrics.
Rent Increase Process in aragon
Check Applicable Rules
Confirm the increase complies with frequency and notice requirements under Ley de Arrendamientos Urbanos (LAU – Law 29/1994 as amended).
Prepare Written Notice
Draft a formal written notice with the new amount and effective date.
Serve the Required Period
Deliver the notice at least 30 Days Written Notice (On Lease Anniversary) before the new rent begins.
Allow Tenant to Respond
The tenant may contest the increase through Juzgado de Primera Instancia (Civil Court) within the prescribed window.
Prerequisite: The Written Clause
The cardinal rule, universally applied across Spain: a landlord cannot raise the rent by a single cent if the right to an annual update is not explicitly drafted into the original lease agreement. If your contract in Aragon lacks an explicit clause affirming that the rent will be subject to annual revision based on an official index, the payment amount is legally frozen for the entire duration of the contract (including its mandatory 5 or 7-year extension phases).
The End of Unlimited IPC Increases
For decades, rent increases were natively pegged to the Consumer Price Index (IPC). The Spanish government shattered this link to shield tenants from massive inflationary spikes:
- 2023 Cap: Rent increases were legally restricted to a maximum of 2%.
- 2024 Cap: Rent updates were capped at a maximum of 3%.
- 2025/2026 and Beyond: The government permanently decoupled residential rent increases from the standard IPC. Landlords are now legally required to apply a New State Reference Index (designed by the INE statistics board) that imposes much tighter, consistently lower upward limits on base rents.
Demographics and "Stressed Zones"
The State Right to Housing Law (12/2023) empowers autonomous communities (like Aragon) to declare specific municipalities or neighborhoods as "Stressed Residential Market Zones" (Zonas Tensionadas).
If the regional government, or major cities like Zaragoza, declare a stressed zone, intense price controls apply:
- When signing a lease with a new tenant for a property that was rented previously, the starting rent is generally capped at the exact price the previous tenant paid in their final month.
- "Large Holders" (Grandes Tenedores—typically corporate entities or individuals owning more than 5-10 properties) may be forced to drop starting rents even further to align with heavily regulated government reference price maps, regardless of prior contracts. Aragon’s regional government has historically resisted blanket applications of these zones, but political and municipal shifts keep this a latent, powerful regulatory tool.
The Mandatory 30-Day Notice
When the annual anniversary of a lease arrives (the only time a revision is permitted):
- The landlord must formally notify the tenant at least one full month (30 days) before the month they intend to apply the new, increased rent.
- The notification must be written and detail the exact new euro amount.
- If the tenant requests it, the landlord must provide the exact official percentage index used to calculate the hike.
Sending an untraceable WhatsApp message is risky; relying on formal communication (Burofax, certified digital mail, or an addendum signed by both parties) is the only way to shield the increase from being invalidated in an Aragon civil court.
Back to Aragon Landlord-Tenant Laws Overview.
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