Tourism-driven gentrification in Europe: An unseen accelerator of city change

By Jonas Elzinga

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European Gentrification Series II, Part 3

Tourism as a catalyst for urban change

While classic gentrification theory revolves around residential mobility, reinvestment dynamics, and economic restructuring, there is a particular pattern that has taken place over the last decade throughout European cities: tourism-induced urban transformation. The changes in the neighbourhoods in Amsterdam, Barcelona, Lisbon, Prague, or Copenhagen all show striking similarities to the indicators of gentrification; still, their engine is not the internal demographic shift but rather the visitor inflows. Our analytical framework provides a window into understanding this type of process.

Mechanisms of tourism-induced transformation

Tourism reconfigures neighbourhoods via a series of mechanisms parallel to those observed during the early stages of gentrification. Short-term rentals reduce the availability of long-term housing, driving rents up and increasing turnover. Amenity ecologies dramatically shift toward visitor consumption as cafes, boutiques, cultural venues, and nightlife spots proliferate. Investment in infrastructure is next, with upgraded transportation access positioning the city in global flows. Each of these factors drives up property values and shifts neighbourhood identities well before any change in resident composition.

Mapping the correlation between growth and change

To demonstrate this dynamic empirically, we looked at tourism overnight data across European city-regions, comparing 2024 volumes (where available) against a 2010 baseline at the most granular NUTS level for which a continuous time series is available. The ranking reveals a striking pattern: the regions that have experienced the most rapid tourism growth also show the most significant changes in neighbourhood-level indicators linked to gentrification in our model. Emerging destinations such as Porto, Copenhagen, Amsterdam, Krakow, and Lisbon stand out with growth rates close to or exceeding 100% over this period, while established capitals such as Paris and Barcelona grew far more modestly. We show below a map of the fastest-growing tourism destinations based on Eurostat data:

 

Inequality and feedback cycles in the urban core

This development of tourism is not geographically uniform; the imbalance in tourism concentration within districts exacerbates spatial inequality and accelerates localised transformation cycles. For example, amenity density in our model is one of the first behavioural indicators and tends to increase fairly rapidly in tourism-exposed areas. This contributes to a feedback cycle, wherein both visitors and high-income residents are attracted. The resulting pattern of neighbourhood change is one that structurally aligns with gentrification, even in cases when the initial driver is exogenous.

Balancing appreciation with regulatory risk

Tourism-driven gentrification in the real estate sector is a two-edged sword: on one hand, it comes with appreciation, strong demand, and great rental yield potential; but on the other hand, cities respond more and more frequently with regulatory measures targeting short-term rentals, zoning schemes, and tourist taxes, aimed at mitigating displacement and congestion. By positioning an investment strategy, one has to understand these dynamics in a changing regulatory and social environment.

Shortening the urban transformation timeline

The fundamental insight here is that tourism is an accelerator; it compresses what would normally be a decade-long trajectory of urban change into a much shorter period. The full model incorporates neighbourhood-level dynamics from 2006 onward; the tourism acceleration visible across this fifteen-year window, including the pandemic dip and the rapid recovery that followed, illustrates how rapidly these exogenous forces can reshape the trajectory. In the final part of this series, we introduce the dashboard we developed to track these dynamics in real-time. It is a new decision-making tool for investors, planners, and analysts.

Let us know if you require data to monitor your portfolios’ for tourism impact.

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