Portugal: Airbnb's "Creative Destruction"
Commercial rents spike in tourist zones; restaurants face 1% higher closure rate but survivors see 16% sales jump
A new study (The Economic Footprint of Short-Term Rentals on Local Businesses: Evidence from Portugal by Ronize Cruz, Francisco Nobre, and João Pereira dos Santos) reveals how Airbnb-style rentals transform local business landscapes, especially in Lisbon and Porto. The research uses extensive firm-level data to track how different types of businesses fare when exposed to increasing short-term rentals.
Key Context & Numbers
Short-term rentals represented 47% of tourist accommodations in Portugal by 2019
Housing used for short-term rentals (2015-2020):
Porto: 12%
Lisbon: 11%
For comparison: Paris (4.6%), Madrid (3%), Barcelona (9.3%)
The study analyzed 46,928 private firms:
73% located in Lisbon
All single-establishment businesses
Tracked from 2013-2019
Major Findings
Business Closures
Areas with higher exposure to short-term rentals saw increased business closures. Most affected were businesses that had been operating with:
Had about half the sales of surviving businesses
~40,000 lower sales per worker annually
Often operated with negative profits
Closure mechanisms:
Commercial rents rose dramatically in high-rental areas after 2015
Tourist-oriented businesses saw 0.913-1.13% higher closure rates
Restaurants and bars: ~1% higher closure probability
Retail stores: significant closure increases when using broader industry categories
Surviving Businesses
Tourist-oriented businesses saw significant gains:
Employment metrics:
23% increase in hours worked
25% increase in employee numbers
28% increase in wages
Financial performance:
16% increase in sales
Significant increases in net profits
14% increase in total liabilities
17% increase in external expenses
10% increase in liquidity
Resident-oriented businesses:
16% increase in sales
11% increase in total liabilities
Some productivity gains
No significant profit changes
Hotels:
No negative impact on sales
1.27% increase in net profits
22% increase in liquidity
Local retail stores:
77% increase in sales
Significant productivity gains
New Business Formation
Higher rental areas saw:
2.5-6% higher probability of new tourist-oriented vs. resident-oriented businesses
1-2.8% higher probability of tourist businesses vs. other types
0.7-1.6% higher probability of new restaurants/bars
New businesses compared to closed ones:
Higher sales volume
No significant productivity advantages
No clear profit advantages
Higher initial costs in high-rental areas
Methodology Details
Used comprehensive firm-level accounting data
Created registry rate measure: new short-term rentals in 2016 divided by the number of dwellings
Employed shift-share instrumental variable based on:
Distance to top tourist attractions
TripAdvisor reviews
Google search data
Controlled for:
Parish unemployment rate
Population density
Firm age
Pre-treatment trends
Industry and municipality fixed effects
Why It Matters
The ripple effects of short-term rentals fundamentally reshape urban economies in ways we're just beginning to understand. We're watching entire neighborhoods transform their identity as tourist-focused areas become more distinct from residential ones. This shift is fascinating because it happens through market forces reacting to urban planning. For cities worldwide, Portugal's experience offers a crystal ball view of what happens when short-term rentals become a significant force in the local economy.
What to Watch
Keep your eyes on how other tourist hotspots handle this transformation. The real story isn't just about housing anymore – how entire urban ecosystems adapt. Watch for cities experimenting with new zoning laws to balance tourist and resident needs. Commercial real estate markets will be particularly telling – they might start pricing in the "tourist premium" in specific neighborhoods. And pay attention to the types of businesses opening in high-tourist areas. Will we see a complete transformation of business districts, with traditional local services giving way to tourist-oriented ventures? The answers to these questions could reshape urban planning for decades to come.
When tourism becomes the main source of employment and income, the local population is forced to work as servants to the visitors.