A MAJOR holiday destination in Spain is set to begin charging tourists to see some of its most popular sites.
The news comes after a series of anti-tourism protests across the country in recent months, with more planned this summer.
According to the Mirror, Tenerife will begin applying the extra fees to tourists from January 1 next year.
The report says that the Canary Island’s city council confirmed the date on Friday, after holding a meeting on the issue in the wake of the 60,000-strong demonstration last weekend.
READ MORE: EXCLUSIVE: Whatโs REALLY behind the anti-tourism protests? Locals give their verdict

The price of the levy, described as a form of ‘eco-tax’, has not yet been decided, but will apply to the island’s most protected sites.
These will include the Mount Teide volcano, multiple rural parks and historic pueblos such as Masca.
It comes after a British expat insisted the anti-tourism protests in Spain are not against individuals but rather the โexcessiveโ nature of the industry itself.
Brian Harrison has lived on Tenerife for more than 20 years and joined last weekโs 60,000-strong demonstration.
The movement is calling for stricter controls on visitor numbers, an eco-tax and regulations on holiday apartments.

Speaking to Good Morning Britain, Brian said: โItโs not a beef with the people coming here, itโs the sheer amounts of people.
โWhen I arrived to the island in 1991, there were maybe two million tourists per year, now this number has gone up to almost six million.
โFor an island with limited space it is unsustainable, that is the issue, not the people.โ
He added: โFirstly, the graffiti is not as widesrpead as some UK media has claimed, itโs not everywhere, you have to go look for it.
โTourists are always welcome here, there will be no hostility to any tourists, but action has to be taken.
โThe government has had three decades to resolve this issue, and itโs been getting worse every yearโฆ

โThis is a last resort, really, to get the government to take noticeโฆ they have to take action to limit tourism and to make tourism sustainableโฆ itโs causing a lot of damage to the island and to the lives of the residents.โ
When pressed on how essential tourism is for the economy, he said: โThereโs no economic model that proves that limiting tourism and increasing the quality of tourism has a negative impact โ on the contrary, a lot of destinations apply a tourist tax and thereโs no negative impact at all.โ
When asked what protesters wanted, he explained: โTo stop the construction of tourist developments, especially in protected areasโฆ limit the holiday letting which is uncontrolled, causing a huge housing crisisโฆ and applying a tourist tax to create a revenue income to restore damaged parts of the island.โ
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