HomeNewsSardinia Foreign Arrivals +11.44%
Italian APE three-wheeler driving past Corso Umberto in Olbia, Sardinia, captured by RENTAL12

Corso Umberto, Olbia — the artery under summer 2026 pressure. Photo RENTAL12.

Sardinia's Foreign Arrivals +11.44% as Olbia Short-Lets Hit 1,900

Floriana Panvini Rosati · 7 min read · 7 July 2026

Quick takeaways

Italy's tourism and interior ministries released twin data sets in early July. Sardinia sits at 46% online-booking saturation for the core summer window, in the national top tier, with first-half arrivals up 8.24% and foreign arrivals up 11.44%, both roughly double the national average. Underneath the record, Olbia's short-let count jumped 37.5% in a year to about 1,900 listings, tightening competition and straining local housing.

46%
Sardinia OTA saturation, 15 Jun–15 Sep
+11.44%
Foreign arrivals, Sardinia H1 2026
+26.24%
Sardinia presences, May 2026 YoY
+37.5%
Olbia short-let listings, one year
1,900
Olbia active listings, May 2026 (CGIL)
What to do right now
  • Book early for August. Ferry and flight demand for the Ferragosto window is up sharply; last-minute crossings from Genoa can cost hundreds more than a March booking.
  • Consider the shoulder. May presences rose 26.24% year on year, so June and September now offer near-peak conditions with lower rates and thinner crowds.
  • Verify the CIN and IUN. With about 1,900 Olbia listings competing for attention, book only accommodation that displays both the national CIN and the Sardinia IUN; RENTAL12 lists IUN F1530 on every property page and publishes portfolio data at rental12.com/en/statistics.

Two ministries, two data sets, one headline

Italy's record-summer claim rests on two separate government sources. The Ministry of Tourism supplied forward-looking online-booking occupancy for 15 June to 15 September. The Interior Ministry's Alloggiati Web platform supplied backward-looking arrivals for the first half of the year. They measure different things and should be read separately.

When coverage of Italy's 2026 summer landed in early July, most outlets fused two numbers from two different ministries. The occupancy and flight-search figures that put Italy ahead of Spain and France come from the Ministry of Tourism's statistics office. The arrivals growth figures that name Sardinia and every other region come from the Interior Ministry's Alloggiati Web database — the police-run system hotels and rentals use to register guests within 24 hours of arrival.

The distinction matters because the two data sets tell different stories. One projects how full accommodation will be this summer. The other is a hard count of how many people arrived between January and June. Read together they are strong for Sardinia. Read apart, they show where the real pressure sits, and it is not on demand.

Sardinia is in the top tier, not mid-table

The Ministry of Tourism puts Sardinia at 46% online-booking saturation for the core summer window, behind the 51% leaders (Veneto, Emilia-Romagna, Trentino-Alto Adige) and Sicily at 48%. That places the island in Italy's top group for projected occupancy, alongside Tuscany, Sicily, Veneto and Friuli-Venezia Giulia.

Some national summaries left Sardinia out of the saturation ranking entirely, which created the impression of an arrivals boom without occupancy to match. The regional read of the same ministry data corrects that: Sardinia's projected online-booking saturation for 15 June to 15 September is 46%, placing it among the regions with the highest values, not adrift of them.

The May numbers reinforce the point. Italian arrivals rose 12.92% in May year on year and presences 18.77%. Sardinia beat both, with presences up 26.24% and arrivals up 20.25%, ranking just behind Trentino-Alto Adige, Calabria and Veneto for presence growth. May is not peak season, so the jump signals the island is stretching its high season earlier, the destagionalizzazione strategy Sardinian tourism boards have chased for years.

The engine on the arrivals side was foreign demand. Foreign arrivals to the island rose 11.44% against a national 6.45%, and for the first time foreign tourists made up the majority of total presences — a structural shift rather than a one-season spike. On the first-half count from the Interior Ministry, Sardinia's total arrivals rose 8.24%, nearly double the national 4.43%.

Beach near Olbia with view to Tavolara island, Sardinia, photographed by RENTAL12

Sardinia's coastline near Olbia, view to Tavolara. Photo RENTAL12.

The number under the record: Olbia's rental surge

CGIL Gallura reported roughly 1,900 active short-let listings in Olbia in May 2026, up 37.5% in a single year, and northern Sardinia presences at almost 9.7 million (up 19%). Historic-centre property values rose more than 15% over five years, and the same flat can be worth up to double depending on whether it serves as a home or a short-term investment.

Here is the part the record headlines skip. Demand is rising, but supply in Olbia is rising faster. The union CGIL Gallura counted about 1,900 active short-let listings in the town in spring 2026, a 37.5% increase in twelve months. That surge is the direct cause of the tension now dominating local debate: apartments moving out of the residential market and into holiday letting, pushing rents up for residents and reshaping the historic centre. The union has called for tighter short-let rules and a housing plan.

The property market shows the same pressure. Data from the Agenzia delle Entrate real-estate observatory, cited by local agencies Brili and Brilas, puts historic-centre values between 1,350 and 2,000 euros per square metre in late 2025, up more than 15% over five years, with renovated units approaching 3,000.

Square in Olbia historical center, photographed by RENTAL12

A quiet square in Olbia's historic centre — the neighbourhood at the heart of the housing debate. Photo RENTAL12.

What the pressure means for guests and operators

More listings competing for the same guests does not lift every rate automatically, and a record arrivals year distributed across 37.5% more listings can still mean flat per-unit performance for anyone who is not clearly differentiated. Italy's national CIN registry and Sardinia's regional IUN are moving toward automated enforcement; Olbia has issued fines above 75,000 euros to unregistered operators. Compliance is now the guest-side filter.

For a guest, the summer 2026 booking calendar looks less like scarcity and more like sorting. The rate ceiling has not run away — the Ministry of Tourism explicitly notes Sardinia is not among the regions with the sharpest tariff increases, and coastal rates are broadly stable. What has changed is the shape of the inventory. Roughly 1,900 Olbia listings are competing for the same summer weeks, which means the quality distribution has widened at both ends.

“Olbia is the perfect middle point. Everything you want — beaches, food, walks, boats, mountain viewpoints — starts from here.” Floriana Panvini Rosati, CEO & Co-Founder, RENTAL12

Italy's national short-let database is the mechanism that separates the two ends. The CIN is a machine-readable ID issued by the Ministry of Tourism; the IUN is the regional Sardinian equivalent. Both must appear on every listing. Olbia's municipal enforcement has already returned fines above 75,000 euros against operators without them, and the direction of travel is automated matching between OTA listings and the registry. For a guest doing a 30-second click-through, the presence or absence of a CIN and IUN pair is now the fastest quality signal on any Olbia listing — faster than review counts, faster than photos.

Where the visitors come from, and how they arrive

Flight searches to Italy for the summer window rose 26% year on year, led by Poland at 76%, Germany at 66%, Spain at 48% and the United Kingdom at 39%. Air capacity to Italy grew 14%, more than any major Mediterranean rival. Olbia-Costa Smeralda handled over 2 million international passengers in 2025 and gained a non-stop Delta route from New York in May 2026.

The source-market shift is the most actionable signal for anyone letting in Gallura. Flight searches to Italy jumped most from Poland, up 76%, a market Federalberghi Sardegna reports has grown its island presence exponentially, followed by Germany, Spain and the United Kingdom. Air capacity into Italy grew 14%, ahead of every major Mediterranean competitor.

Olbia sits at the centre of that inflow: the airport handled more than 2 million international passengers in 2025, northern Sardinia recorded almost 9.7 million presences last season (up 19%), and the May 2026 launch of Delta's non-stop New York to Olbia service added a direct channel for high-spend American travellers for the first time.

“People think they need to stay far from the city to enjoy the beaches. But from Olbia, you reach everything faster — and with better food, better walks and easier logistics.” Kristina Zotova, COO & Co-Founder, RENTAL12
Pittulongu beach view towards Isola Tavolara near Olbia, Sardinia, by RENTAL12

Pittulongu beach, view to Tavolara — ten minutes from Olbia's centre. Photo RENTAL12.

Indicator Sardinia Italy (national)
OTA saturation, 15 Jun–15 Sep 46% 51.2%
Total arrivals, H1 2026 +8.24% +4.43%
Foreign arrivals, H1 2026 +11.44% +6.45%
Presences, May 2026 +26.24% +18.77%
Arrivals, May 2026 +20.25% +12.92%
Average tariff increase Not among top risers Up to +4% (E-R)

Sources: Ministero del Turismo (Ufficio di Statistica) and Ministero dell'Interno (Alloggiati Web), via ANSA and Olbia.it, 5–6 July 2026.

Update history

7 July 2026 — Initial publication. Sources: Ministero del Turismo summer 2026 forecast (Ufficio di Statistica); Ministero dell'Interno Alloggiati Web H1 2026 arrivals via ANSA; Olbia.it regional breakdown (6 July 2026); CGIL Gallura housing document (May 2026); Agenzia delle Entrate real-estate observatory via Brili/Brilas; Federalberghi Sardegna; Geasar/Assaeroporti passenger data.

Frequently asked questions

How busy will Sardinia be in summer 2026?
The Ministry of Tourism projects Sardinia at 46% online-booking saturation for 15 June to 15 September 2026, placing it in Italy's top tier behind the 51% leaders and Sicily at 48%. May 2026 presences rose 26.24% and arrivals 20.25% year on year, roughly double the national growth.
Why are there so many holiday rentals in Olbia now?
Olbia counted roughly 1,900 active short-let listings in May 2026, up 37.5% in one year, according to CGIL Gallura. Strong foreign demand and rising property values have pulled apartments from the residential market into short-term letting, especially in the historic centre.
Are prices going up for a Sardinia holiday in 2026?
Less than in most of Italy. The Ministry of Tourism notes Sardinia is not among the regions with the sharpest tariff increases; coastal rates are broadly stable. The largest average price rises were recorded in Emilia-Romagna at 4% and in Valle d'Aosta, Lombardy and Trentino at 3%.
Where are Sardinia's summer visitors coming from?
Foreign arrivals to Sardinia rose 11.44% in the first half of 2026, and foreign tourists made up the majority of island presences for the first time. Flight searches to Italy grew most from Poland at 76%, Germany at 66%, Spain at 48% and the United Kingdom at 39%.
What does the surge mean for guests choosing a rental?
With about 1,900 Olbia listings competing for attention this summer, the practical filter is compliance, not marketing. Italy's national CIN database and Sardinia's IUN registry make it possible to verify a property in seconds; Olbia has already issued fines above 75,000 euros to unregistered operators. Book only accommodation that displays a CIN and IUN on the listing.

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Written and reviewed by Floriana Panvini Rosati, RENTAL12 owner-operator, Olbia. Verified against Ministero del Turismo, Ministero dell'Interno (Alloggiati Web), CGIL Gallura, Agenzia delle Entrate observatory, and Geasar passenger data, 5–7 July 2026.