Belgium Just Showed Every Hotel Operator What Regulation Actually Looks Like When It Has Teeth
An ING study estimates nearly 5,000 homes in Brussels, Antwerp, and Ghent have been pulled from long-term housing by short-term rentals, and Belgian authorities are responding with registration mandates, €7 million in potential fines, and an EU-wide data sharing framework that could reshape how Airbnb operates across the continent.
So here's something that should matter to every hotel operator who's been watching the short-term rental regulation debate play out in slow motion for the last decade: Belgium just stopped talking about it and started doing something.
An ING bank study published this month estimates that roughly 5,000 homes across Brussels, Antwerp, and Ghent have been effectively removed from the long-term rental market because they're being operated as short-term rentals... primarily through Airbnb. Brussels alone accounts for about 3,000 of those. And here's where it gets interesting: the Brussels tax authorities are now preparing a massive regularization campaign targeting approximately 5,000 Airbnb properties for the years 2023-2025, with theoretical fines approaching €7 million and an estimated €6 million in unpaid tourist accommodation taxes. Meanwhile, the Flemish government has introduced mandatory registration numbers for all tourist accommodations advertised on platforms... effective now. No registration number, no listing. And backing all of this up is the EU Short-Term Rental Data Regulation (that's Regulation 2024/1028 for the compliance nerds), which went live on May 20, 2026, requiring platforms to share booking data with local authorities monthly.
Look, I've been watching cities try to regulate Airbnb for years. Most of them pass rules and then have zero mechanism to enforce them. What's different here is the technology layer. The EU regulation doesn't just say "hosts must register." It requires platforms... Airbnb, Vrbo, all of them... to actually verify registration numbers and share granular booking data with municipal authorities every month. That's not a suggestion. That's an API mandate. And as someone who's spent a lot of time thinking about how data flows between platforms and the people who need it, I can tell you: once the data pipeline exists, enforcement becomes automated. You go from "we hope hosts comply" to "we know exactly which ones don't." That's a fundamentally different enforcement architecture. Brussels has already acknowledged that over 90% of Airbnb listings in the city are technically illegal due to non-registration. When you combine that stat with a system that actually surfaces non-compliant listings to tax authorities in real time... the math changes fast.
Now, before the hotel industry takes a victory lap: ING economist Alissa Lefebre makes a point worth hearing. Short-term rentals are not the primary driver of housing shortages in these cities. Insufficient supply, rising construction costs, changing demographics... those are the structural problems. The 5,000 homes represent roughly 0.8% of total rental housing stock. That's real, but it's not the whole story. What IS significant for hotel operators is the pricing dynamic. European hotel RevPAR grew 4.7% year-over-year in mid-2025, with regulated cities showing particular strength. When non-compliant supply gets pulled or taxed into parity, the competitive landscape shifts. Not dramatically overnight, but structurally over time. And Airbnb's stock already reflected this... ABNB dropped 3.4% when the EU rules went live in May. Investors are pricing in a world where the regulatory arbitrage that made short-term rentals so profitable starts to narrow.
The piece of this that most people are missing is the data sharing requirement. I've consulted with hotel groups that have spent years trying to understand their actual competitive set when it includes hundreds of untracked short-term rental units. Has anyone actually built internal tools to ingest this municipal data once it becomes available? Because it will become available. The EU regulation requires it. And the hotel operator who figures out how to use that data... actual booking volumes, occupancy patterns, seasonal shifts in short-term rental supply... to inform their own revenue strategy is going to have an advantage that didn't exist six months ago. This isn't theoretical. The data pipeline is being built right now. The question is whether hotel technology vendors are building the tools to use it, or whether they're going to show up 18 months late with a "proprietary AI-powered competitive intelligence platform" that's really just a dashboard on top of a public dataset. (I have my suspicions about which one it'll be.)
Here's the actionable part, and it's not about celebrating regulation. If you're running a hotel in any European market... or frankly, any market where short-term rental regulation is tightening... do two things this week. First, find out what registration and data-sharing requirements exist or are coming in your municipality. Not the national headline. Your city. Your zip code. The rules vary wildly and the ones that matter are local. Second, start asking your revenue management vendor whether they can ingest municipal short-term rental data as it becomes available under these new frameworks. If they look at you blankly, that tells you something about how seriously they're taking this shift. The competitive set you've been guessing at for years is about to become visible. The operators who are ready to use that data will reprice smarter. The ones who aren't will keep competing against supply they can't see. That's been the game for a decade. It's about to change. Be ready before it does.