Prostitution in Mallorca: the Council strengthens social aid by 30%

May 3, 2026 | Actualidad, Current affairs, Featured, Interview, Portada, Post, Revista Lloseta, Thursday Daily Bulletin, Tradition

The Consell de Mallorca has launched a new call for grants aimed at non-profit organizations working with people in prostitution contexts in the rural areas of Mallorca, with a total budget of €130,000. This funding line represents a 30% increase compared to the previous year, strengthening institutional commitment to social intervention in this field.

The initiative seeks to improve living conditions for individuals in or at risk of prostitution by promoting empowerment and supporting pathways toward autonomy and social inclusion. The grants will fund projects focused on both prevention and comprehensive care, including psychosocial support services, access to educational, employment, and healthcare resources, as well as awareness-raising initiatives targeting the wider community.

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Prostitution in Mallorca: the Council strengthens social aid by 30%

In addition, the program includes actions aimed at professionals from various sectors such as social services, healthcare, and law enforcement, with the goal of enhancing understanding of the structural causes of prostitution and improving institutional responses. This comprehensive approach aims to strengthen coordination among stakeholders and increase the effectiveness of interventions.

The call builds on the framework introduced in 2025, consolidating a direct support model for organizations working on the ground. At the same time, the Consell de Mallorca has promoted institutional and technical coordination spaces to develop a shared diagnosis and create, for the first time, a structured overview of prostitution on the island, addressing the current lack of systematized data.

The Minister of the Presidency, Toni Fuster, emphasized the need to make this reality more visible, reinforce resources for frontline organizations, and promote coordination mechanisms that enable more effective and targeted institutional action.