Juan Ansotegui on his property in the restored hamlet of Villalibado, in Spain’s northwest region of Castilla y León.

Juan Ansotegui on his property in the restored hamlet of Villalibado, in Spain’s northwest region of Castilla y León.

 Photographer: Ana Maria Arevalo Gosen/Bloomberg

Spain Wants to Save Rural Areas — and It’s Finding Creative Ways to Do It

The country is selling villages and offering subsidies to live in sparsely-populated towns to lure the wealthy back to the countryside.

Driving through Castilla y León in the northwest of Spain can create the impression of being alone in the world. The landscape is a continuous scroll of wheat fields, dry grasslands and expanses of yellow sunflowers punctuated by the occasional village; often no more than several run-down stone houses surrounding a church. With public transportation out of reach in these areas, and the distances between towns too great to walk, the only option is to travel by car.

Sparsely populated regions like these are so common that they’ve earned their own nickname — “España Vacía,” or “Empty Spain.” While the country’s rural areas began thinning out in the mid-20th century, when factory jobs drew workers to cities, depopulation has accelerated in recent years, and particularly in the northwest. A lack of jobs and cultural offerings, combined with poor infrastructure and housing stock, have helped fuel the exodus. Spain’s rural areas saw a 4.4% population decline between 2014 and 2023, according to a government report, even as the country’s overall population grew by 2.6%.

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