Bookings in a few of Mallorca's most popular summer season vacation resorts have plunged by as much as 20 percent, say hoteliers on the Balearic Island, suggesting holidaymakers are voting with their feet following anti-tourism marches.

The hoteliers association that represents the resorts of Alcudia and Can Picafort say their key markets have actually slowed in recent months.
The news comes following major anti-tourism demonstrations across mainland Spain and its islands this year - with another huge protest march in the pipeline for Mallorca's capital next weekend.
Last week, thousands of defiant anti-tourism protesters vowed to bring the streets of Palma to a dead stop on June 15th, with representatives of around 60 groups stating they're planning to march.
The Alcudia and Can Picafort hoteliers association today said reservations had actually dropped across key markets, including Germany, its number one market, reporting a 15% to 20% depression on last year.
Pablo Riera-Marsa, president of the hotelier's Association, stated: 'We are seeing how the German market, traditionally our Number 1 market, is the one that has slowed down the most.'
However, the Majorca Daily Bulletin reports that the group is optimistic that late reservations would still see figures increase, saying tourists were edging their bets on bargain last-gasp deals.
He described: 'We are discovering that this season, last-minute bookings are once again becoming more popular, with travelers waiting for special deals and promotions before making their purchase choices.'
Backlash? Hoteliers in the resorts of Alcudia and Can Picafort on Mallorca have reported a depression of as much as 20 per cent in hotel bookings year-on-year. Spain has seen anti-tourism marches throughout the mainland and popular islands this year
And another protest is in the pipeline, with Mallorca's capital, Palma, the area for another big demonstration on June 15th, with 60 organisations set to march (Pictured: protests on Mallorca on May 25th)

The hoteliers association maintained that numbers are merely going back to normal levels following a 'champagne effect', when people began travelling again following the end of the pandemic.
The presentation in Palma on June 15th will be led by project group 'Menys Turisme, Mes Vida' (Less tourist, more life), which declares that the everyday life of locals has actually become 'excruciating' thanks to foreign holidaymakers.
They have actually accused both the Balearic Islands' federal government of ignoring the pleas for drastic modifications in their current tourist model.
The platform is asking the island's homeowners to require to the streets to require a modification in the financial design and what they refer to as 'touristification.'
This will be the third significant protest of its kind but the activists say they are getting no place regardless of calls to clampdown on tourists.
The demonstration in Palma will be held at the same time with similar marches in Ibiza, Barcelona, Donosti and other significant Spanish cities.
'We mean the right to a dignified life and to demand an end to touristification', stated Jaume Pujol, representative for Menys Turisme, Més Vida.
The group today likewise criticised the regional government, implicating them of promoting policies that have actually aggravated the mass tourist crisis.
The June 15th presentation will be led by campaign group 'Menys Turisme, Mes Vida' (Less tourism, more life), which claims that the daily life of residents has actually ended up being 'unbearable' thanks to foreign holidaymakers. Pictured: Campaigners announcing the protest
'Mallorca is not for sale' reads a protest banner held by a woman in a march kept in April versus housing prices and the effect of tourism on the locals of the Mallorca
They also alerted that, with the start of the traveler season, 'unbearable situations' are currently being duplicated on the island, including road closures due to tourist events and genera; saturation of public spaces and markets.

Menys Turisme, Mes Vida likewise argued that their island is 'not for sale' which 'it is urgent to put limits' on a tourism design that they consider increasingly harmful.
It comes a month after tens of thousands of furious Spaniards took to the streets throughout the country to demand a solution to the cost of living crisis they say has actually been intensified by tourist.
The presentations on April fifth occurred throughout major Spanish towns and cities consisting of Madrid, Barcelona, Malaga and Palma.
According to organizers, 30,000 individuals took to the streets of Malaga - a seaside town in the south of Spain - as they demanded services to the housing crisis, with banners checking out: 'Houses for individuals of Málaga. Hotels for tourists, inexpensive leas.'
But police reported that around 5,000 demonstrators participated in the Malaga march.
Residents were photographed holding banners with the motto: 'Houses for individuals of Málaga. Hotels for travelers'.
Some also hung posters from their balconies and windows with messages stating: 'Housing is a right, not a business'.
The demonstration will be led by project group 'Menys Turisme, Mes Vida' (Less tourist, more life), which claims that the everyday life of residents has actually become 'unbearable' thanks to foreign holidaymakers. Pictured: Campaigners today revealing the demonstration next month
Brits turn their back on Tenerife as bookings plummet in the middle of huge anti traveler protests
Meanwhile in Madrid, around 15,000 individuals collected in the capital's neighbourhood of Atocha and marched towards Plaza de Espana shouting mottos like: 'Landlords are burglars' and 'Madrid will be the burial place of leasings'.
Angry occupants pointed to circumstances of international hedge funds buying up residential or commercial properties, frequently with the aim of renting them to foreign travelers.
The question has ended up being so politically charged that Barcelona's city federal government vowed in 2015 to phase out all its 10,000 licenses for short-term leasings, a number of them promoted on platforms like Airbnb, by 2028.
Marchers in Madrid last month shouted 'Get Airbnb out of our areas' and held up indications against short-term leasings.
'No more leaving our neighborhoods, our homes, or perhaps our cities every five or 7 years,' said Valeria Racu, representative for the Madrid renters' union, in a statement at the start of the presentation.
'We're contacting the half-million homes whose contracts end in 2025 to stay at home and resist,' she included.
Last month, British holidaymakers were left cowering in hotels as protesters stormed the streets of the Canary Islands.
Residents waring over-tourism introduced presentations across Tenerife, Fuerteventura, Ela Hierro, La Palma, La Gomera, and Lanzarote.