Spain's housing market remains one of the strongest performers in Europe heading into the second half of 2026, with double-digit price growth in several regions and demand still outrunning a chronically short supply pipeline. At the same time, a controversial proposal to tax non-EU foreign buyers at up to 100% of a property's value continues to hang over the market, creating real uncertainty even though it has not become law.

Price and Market Trends

Spanish house prices rose 14.3% year-over-year in the first quarter of 2026, with a 3.2% quarter-on-quarter increase, according to market data compiled by CaixaBank Research and other industry trackers. Full-year 2026 price growth is projected at around 9.3%, more than double the broader European average of 4.3%. Nationally, average property prices reached about €2,673 per square meter as of February 2026, up roughly 17.7% year-over-year.

The fundamental driver remains a severe supply-demand imbalance. Spain is estimated to be short by around 800,000 housing units, and that gap shows little sign of closing: analysts expect roughly 150,000 new construction permits in 2026, while household formation is running close to 180,000 per year. Mortgage rates remain relatively favorable, which is keeping buyer demand strong even as prices climb.

Regionally, the most tourism-exposed and economically dynamic markets are leading the charge — the Balearic Islands, Málaga, Santa Cruz de Tenerife, Valencia, Alicante, and Madrid all posted double-digit price growth in both 2024 and 2025, a trend that has carried into 2026. The luxury segment has been especially resilient: prime properties are expected to appreciate 3-6% this year, with super-prime assets rising 6-10%, positioning Spain among Europe's top three markets for prime real estate revaluation.

On the rental side, pressure continues to build. Idealista reported a 56% decline in rental housing supply since the pandemic, with cities like Barcelona hit particularly hard — a squeeze that continues to push rents higher even as home sale prices climb in parallel.

Notable Recent News

A proposed 100% tax on non-EU buyers remains the market's biggest wildcard. According to reporting from Tekce and My Lawyer in Spain, the Spanish government has advanced a draft proposal that would impose a tax equal to 100% of a property's purchase price on non-EU, non-resident buyers acquiring existing (resale) homes — effectively doubling their total tax cost when combined with Spain's existing Transfer Tax. The measure would exempt EU and EEA citizens and would not apply to new-build properties, but it would directly affect British, American, Canadian, Chinese, Gulf, and Latin American buyers. As of this month, the proposal remains under legislative discussion rather than enacted law.

Legal experts are skeptical the measure survives in its current form. Baker McKenzie, cited in coverage of the proposal, called it unlikely to withstand legal scrutiny, warning that it raises "substantial legal and constitutional concerns" and would likely face immediate challenges in both Spanish and European courts if it were ever passed. That assessment has tempered some of the initial shock among international buyers, though the proposal continues to generate uncertainty in the non-EU segment of the market.

Prime coastal and urban markets keep outperforming. Multiple 2026 market reports, including analysis from Dils Lucas Fox and CaixaBank Research, point to sustained double-digit annual gains concentrated in Spain's most in-demand tourist and economic corridors, reinforcing that the current cycle is being driven by genuine end-user and lifestyle demand rather than speculative flipping.

Outlook

Spain's real estate market looks set to keep outperforming the rest of Europe through the balance of 2026, propped up by a structural housing shortage that construction activity isn't close to resolving. The biggest source of near-term uncertainty isn't economic — it's political: whether the proposed non-EU buyer tax advances, stalls, or gets watered down in negotiations will materially shape foreign investment flows into Spanish resale property over the coming months. For now, with the measure still unenacted, buyers report business largely continuing as usual, but the topic is one every international buyer and their advisor is watching closely.


Track Spain real estate daily: For up-to-date listings, price trends, and market data on the Spain housing market, visit https://spainhousingmarket.com/.