Picture yourself stepping off a bus in a sun-drenched Mediterranean city, excited to explore its famous streets and historical sites, only to be met with angry graffiti telling you to go home. Or imagine being sprayed with water pistols by frustrated locals who see your presence as the reason they can’t afford rent anymore. It sounds almost unreal, yet this is the new reality in several of Europe’s most iconic travel destinations. The travel landscape has shifted dramatically in recent years, and some places that once rolled out the welcome mat are now pulling it back. Let’s explore where travelers are no longer feeling the love, and more importantly, why this dramatic change is happening right before our eyes.
Barcelona, Spain: Water Pistols and Housing Fury

In June 2025, large demonstrations erupted in Barcelona where thousands of residents marched through central neighborhoods chanting “Your holidays, my misery,” with some protesters using water pistols and smoke devices to dramatize their message. This wasn’t just a one-off event. The city of just 1.6 million residents welcomed over 26 million tourists in 2024, with more than 15.6 million staying overnight – that’s over 10 times the local population.
The frustration runs deeper than crowded streets. In June 2024, Mayor Jaume Collboni announced plans to end all short-term rentals in Barcelona by 2028, aiming to reduce the impact on the housing market of landlords renting properties at inflated rates intended for tourists. Many locals report they simply cannot afford to live in the neighborhoods where they grew up anymore. With 12 million visitors recorded in the previous year, many locals have seen property rents escalate dramatically, forcing long-term residents out of their neighborhoods. The protests have become so frequent that even sitting at an outdoor café can mean encountering demonstrators demanding that tourists explore beyond traditional hotspots or, frankly, just leave altogether.
Venice, Italy: Entry Fees and Vanishing Venetians

Reports indicate that in 2024, an average of 80,000 visitors arrived each day, pushing Venice’s fragile infrastructure to its limits. Here’s the thing: when a city has only around 50,000 residents remaining in its historic center but hosts millions upon millions of annual visitors, something has to give. Around 250,000 people live in Venice, yet the Italian city accommodates 20 million tourists per year, and in 2024, Venice introduced a €5 fee for visitors who would like to access the city center between 8:30 am and 4 pm during peak travel season.
Local residents have grown increasingly vocal about feeling displaced in their own city. The imbalance between tourists and locals has provoked organized demonstrations, including marches and symbolic “funeral” processions meant to mourn the erosion of authentic Venetian life, with protesters vocally rejecting comparisons of Venice to amusement parks. Walking through Venice’s narrow alleyways today often feels more like navigating a human traffic jam than experiencing Italian culture. The city has become a cautionary tale of what happens when tourism completely overwhelms a destination’s capacity to sustain both visitors and residents.
Amsterdam, Netherlands: The “Stay Away” Campaign

Amsterdam took an unusually direct approach to its overtourism problem. In 2023, tourism officials in Amsterdam specifically targeted young male Brits as “nuisance tourists” who are not welcome in the Dutch capital, with an initiative announced in March 2023 telling them to “stay away” if they had plans to “go wild” in Amsterdam. This wasn’t subtle diplomacy; it was a clear message that certain types of visitors simply weren’t wanted anymore.
The financial burden on visitors has increased dramatically as well. Amsterdam has the highest tourist tax of any European city, charging 12.5% of the nightly rate for accommodation at hotels, campsites, and serviced apartments, meaning four-star hotels in the expensive Dutch capital with a base price of up to $216 per night translate to $27 of additional tourist tax. Despite these measures, the city still faces overwhelming numbers. Amsterdam was still expected to host up to 23 million annual overnight visitors by 2025, not counting another 24 to 25 million day visits. The message is clear: Amsterdam wants fewer, more respectful visitors who contribute meaningfully to the local economy rather than hordes seeking vice and wild partying.
Santorini, Greece: Cruise Ship Chaos and Water Wars

The iconic whitewashed buildings and stunning sunsets of Santorini have made it a bucket-list destination, but locals are paying a steep price. In 2024, reports emerged of up to 18,000 cruise passengers overwhelming the island daily, straining resources for its 15,000 residents. Think about that ratio for a moment. On any given day, tourists can outnumber residents by more than 1,000 percent, creating an impossible situation for infrastructure and daily life.
Santorini attracted over 2 million visitors in 2024, and residents have staged protests to “send cruise ships home,” while the Greek government has introduced €20-per-cruise-passenger fees, cruise docking limits, and sustainable tourism plans. Water scarcity has become a critical issue. Santorini banned construction amid water shortage fears, while water scarcity reduced wine production by 50% on the island. When tourists are literally using up the water needed to produce the island’s famous wine, locals understandably feel the situation has spiraled out of control. The Greek islands simply cannot sustain the massive influx they’re experiencing without serious environmental and social consequences.
Bali, Indonesia: Paradise Under Pressure

Bali represents a particularly heartbreaking case of overtourism because it directly threatens the spiritual and cultural identity that makes the island so appealing in the first place. In 2024, Bali saw approximately 6 million international visitors, sparking heavy backlash, with locals and grassroots activists protesting the disappearance of sacred paddy fields, illegal construction of resorts, and untreated plastic pollution on beaches. The island’s once-pristine beaches and rice terraces are vanishing under the weight of uncontrolled development.
The government has responded with a $10 visitor levy, expanded eco-tourism initiatives, and bans on single-use plastics and tourist motorbike rentals. However, many feel these measures came too late. Traditional practices like the subak irrigation system, which has supported rice paddies for centuries, are now under strain as water is diverted to tourist areas, risking the loss of cultural identity itself. Honestly, when ancient agricultural systems that define a culture for centuries start crumbling because of tourism, you know the situation has crossed a critical threshold. The tension between economic benefit and cultural preservation has never been more evident.
What This Means for Travelers

The era of unlimited, consequence-free tourism is ending. “Travelers may make more of an effort to steer clear of viral hotspots that have become synonymous with heated protests in recent months, instead choosing locations where they can avoid the crowds and the stigma of contributing to the ‘overtourism’ problem,” and avoiding cities that become overwhelmed with tourists during the peak holiday season could be the new secret weapon for vacation planners. These five destinations serve as powerful examples of what happens when tourism growth outpaces a community’s ability to manage it sustainably.
Protests against tourists have increased in frequency and size as residents, who got a snippet of their cities without tourists during the 2020 pandemic, have seen tourism return to, or even exceed, pre-pandemic levels, and residents typically choose protests instead of other forms of lobbying because they generate public awareness. The frustration is real, and it’s not going away. If you’re planning a trip to any of these destinations, expect higher fees, stricter rules, and potentially even hostile encounters with locals who feel their homes have been turned into theme parks.
So what do you think? Should travelers reconsider visiting these overwhelmed destinations, or is it on local governments to manage tourism better? The conversation is just beginning, and the decisions we make now will shape the future of travel for generations to come.
<p>The post Avoid These 5 Destinations Where Tourists Are No Longer Feeling Welcome first appeared on Travelbinger.</p>