The Government of Andalusia has taken the first step to challenge the new 2026-2030 State Housing Plan, considering that the text drafted by the central Executive infringes upon regional competencies and restricts the capacity of communities to define their own housing policies. The Andalusian government maintains that the plan imposes a uniform national model, limits the decision-making power of autonomous communities, and conditions program funding based on criteria unilaterally set by the State.
This decision has been formalized through a prior request to the central Government, seeking a negotiation channel before a potential appeal to the Constitutional Court. The Junta emphasizes that its action is not a political gesture or a total rejection of the plan, but an initiative to correct aspects it deems incompatible with the current distribution of powers.
The main criticism from the Andalusian Executive targets the plan's structure, which it perceives as overly rigid. The Junta believes the State has designed a housing policy with 18 specific programs offering little room for adaptation to regional needs, relegating autonomous communities to the role of mere implementers of policies defined in Madrid, despite them directly managing housing competencies.
The Andalusian Government argues that this regulation limits the regional capacity to plan programs for access to protected housing, affordable rent, or aid for vulnerable groups. The Junta asserts that Andalusia's demographic, territorial, and urbanistic reality requires its own tools and decision-making power, which it feels are reduced by the state plan's design.
Despite the conflict, the Andalusian Executive assures that the challenge will not halt the plan or lead to the renunciation of allocated funds. Andalusia is set to receive over 718 million euros under the state program and intends to proceed with planned actions once the discrepancies are resolved. The Junta's strategy focuses on achieving a text revision through negotiation with the central Government. The prior request seeks modification or repeal of articles deemed detrimental to Andalusia's financial and competential autonomy. Only if an agreement is not reached will the option of appealing to the Constitutional Court be considered. This dispute marks another chapter in the competential conflicts between the Junta and the central Executive, at a time when housing access is a major social concern and a key point of political confrontation.
Another point of contention is the financing model. Andalusia rejects the co-financing proposal from the Ministry of Housing, which sets a 60% contribution from the State and 40% from autonomous communities. The regional Executive considers this distribution imposed without prior negotiation or sufficient technical justification, representing a disproportionate financial burden for the community.
The Junta argues that its contribution to the new plan is 6.5 times greater than in the previous program, while the state's contribution has increased only marginally. Therefore, it calls for a more flexible financing model tailored to the actual needs of each territory.
Among the questioned aspects is also the obligation to establish a permanent protection regime for certain dwellings. The Andalusian Government believes the duration of this protection falls under the competence of autonomous communities and recalls judicial rulings recognizing each region's capacity to regulate this matter.
Furthermore, the Junta rejects the planned oversight mechanisms for institutional communication of programs funded by state resources. According to the Andalusian Executive's interpretation, the plan introduces prior controls that condition the dissemination of regional actions, potentially leading to restrictions incompatible with the ordinary exercise of their own competencies.
The Andalusian Government also criticizes the Ministry's lack of dialogue during the plan's development, asserting that it was designed without effective co-governance, despite autonomous communities being expected to bear a significant part of the funding and management of the planned programs.




