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Our beautiful seaside town is ruined by swarms of tourists – they party all night and never stop

Published on April 18, 2025 at 08:28 AM

RESIDENTS of a popular seaside resort say their town is ruined by swarms of anti-social tourists who blare loud music and party all night.

Locals have told how their lives are being made hell by the booming number of short term lets through companies like .

Three seaside hotels in Blackpool, UK.
Locals say their beautiful town is being ruined by swarms of tourists
Blackpool Tower and beach with many people.
Blackpool is a popular seaside resorts which attracts thousands of visitors a year
Portrait of Sandra and John Spriggs, Blackpool B&B owners.
B&B owners Sandra Spriggs and husband John have owned the Bianca Guesthouse for two decades

People living in , Lancs, say their lives are being blighted by anti-social behaviour.

They raised their concerns as tens of thousands of are set to flood Britain's resorts and tourist hot spots for the Easter Bank Holiday weekend.

In , the short-term let sector is unregulated, except in where there’s a 90-day per year cap on letting out properties.

Blackpool City Council says it’s received just one complaint about short-term lets since 2019 – but the council doesn’t know how many are in the area.

A total of 16 planning enforcement notices have been issued in the same period.

Residents of the, known for its traditional B&Bs, tell a different story.

Saima Arif, 41, has operated three in Blackpool’s for eight years.

She says the proliferation of and other short-term lets, where owners are not present, have brought the character of the street down – with rooms being used for parties until the early hours of the morning and even prostitution.

She said: “The ones now, there’s nobody there. If somebody’s booked a double room, they know the code.

“If they meet friends with a girl, they use that code, go in, use the room, and go out.

“It’s like one person’s booked the room, a couple who’s out for the night and give the code to another couple.

“They use the room and just go out after an hour.”;

She added: “The people who ran these places for 20-odd years did it right.

“As soon as they left, it’s like everybody started making their own rules. I’m just thinking ‘am I the daft one?’”;

B&B owners Sandra Spriggs, 52, and husband John, 69, have owned the Bianca Guesthouse on Blackpool’s Palatine Road for 20 years.

The couple says they have heard loud stag and hen parties inside unattended AirBNBs.

Sandra said: “My friend lives door to an AirBNB. It’s bloody noisy, especially in the – she actually goes to her daughter’s for the weekend so she hasn’t got to put up with the noise.”;

You can’t go down and knock on the door, you don’t know what you’re going to be faced with

Marie Fisher

It’s not just B&B owners who are concerned.

Marie Fisher, 62, has lived in her flat overlooking Blackpool’s south promenade for 20 years.

The block, made up mostly of elderly people, was quiet for years. Now, she lives above an AirBNB.

Marie, who works at Blackpool tourist attraction Madame Tussauds, wants to see short-term lets like AirBNBs banned from residential building blocks.

She said: “You can’t go down and knock on the door, you don’t know what you’re going to be faced with, to be honest with you.

“It’s just frustrating. You try and through it and hope they’re only here for one night and going to go.

“Over the space of a week, you could have no-one, or you could have three lots of people.

“I think the worst thing was when we had blaring out until the early hours, two or three, blasting out at that time. It was so loud.

“It’s stressful, no two ways about it, especially when it starts in the beginning of the night and you think ‘oh, here we go again’.”;

Tourist organisation StayBlackpool’s Ian White, 64, says short-term lets from companies likeBooking.comhave been on his radar since 2014.

He’s heard from families who have been forced to leave their own and sleep overnight in a camper van just to escape the disruption of short-term lets.

Despite this, Ian says the town is currently experiencing an oversupply of beds as it struggles to compete with foreign package holiday deals.

Because of this, many guesthouses are now turning to house people from out of the area and prisoners on early release, which can give more consistent income.

The 64-year-old said: “They bring in a certain amount of antisocial behaviour and other issues.

It’s stressful, no two ways about it, especially when it starts in the beginning of the night

Marie Fisher

“Some traditional holiday accommodation have started to lose , where regular guests won’t come back.”;

Ian wants short-term let accommodation to be subject to the same rules as guesthouses in an effort to tackle the oversupply and help bring the guesthouses back to normal operations.

He added: “Blackpool is looking quite vulnerable.”;

Of 15 local in and , including Blackpool, , , Westminster, and the , none knew how many AirBNBs were in their area, according to a Freedom of Information Act request.

Only Manchester provided a figure, 98 in 2022, but it said this was ‘informally recorded’ in 2022 and that the true figure was ‘likely to be significantly higher’.

Westminster Council also said it knew about properties when a complaint had been made.

I think the worst thing was when we had rap music blaring out until the early hours

Marie Fisher

Residents across the country been making hundreds of complaints about noise, rubbish, parking, and other issues with short-term let properties.

Since 2019, a total of 12,891 complaints about short-term lets were received by the 15 councils which answered a Freedom of Information Act request – the bulk of which were in the, which received 11,459.

This was followed by Glasgow, at 463, and Brighton at 264. Manchester was the next highest, at 225, and was at 161.

Some councils, such as Manchester, issue informal warnings if a complaint is received, but most do not.

AirBNB, Blackpool City Council, and the Ministry of Housing have been contacted for comment.

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