Market Analysis

Spain and Iberia in 2026: Europe's Top Investment Market Navigates a Housing Paradox

By Elena Ruiz Navarro
June 25, 2026
9 min read
Spain and Iberia in 2026: Europe's Top Investment Market Navigates a Housing Paradox

Introduction

Spain has quietly displaced London, Paris, and Frankfurt to become Europe's single largest destination for real estate investment capital in 2026 — a position few would have predicted five years ago. The country recorded €18.45 billion in real estate investment in 2025, a 31% increase year-on-year and the highest figure since 2018, on the back of 752,000 property transactions, 12.8% annual price growth, and 42 consecutive quarters of appreciation that have made the Spanish market one of the most persistently bullish in the developed world. Yet this performance coexists with a deepening housing affordability crisis — a rental supply collapse of 61% over five years, a structural deficit of 800,000 units, and a government rent control programme that is inadvertently accelerating the very shortage it was designed to address. Across the Peninsula, Portugal is posting equally striking numbers: national residential prices up 17.5% year-on-year in Q4 2025, with Lisbon ranked among the top five global cities for prime residential capital growth. For sophisticated investors, the Iberian story in 2026 is not about whether to enter, but where to position within a market that offers both genuine opportunity and policy-driven tail risk.

Spain by the Numbers: Europe's Top Investment Market in 2026

  • Transaction Volume and Price Trajectory:
    Spain processed 752,000 property transactions in 2025 — a 5% increase over the 716,000 recorded in 2024 — with the national average price rising 17.7% year-on-year to €2,673 per square metre across all property types. Foreign buyers accounted for approximately 140,000 transactions, representing 20% of all Spanish property sales, with the average foreign buyer paying €2,417 per square metre — a 7.6% premium over the prior year figure. Spanish residential prices have now appreciated in 42 consecutive quarters, a streak that encompasses multiple interest rate cycles, political changes, and pandemic disruptions — a degree of secular resilience that places the Spanish market in the same peer group as Singapore and Sydney for sustained price growth durability.
  • Spain as Europe's Top Investment Destination:
    CBRE confirmed that Spain surpassed the United Kingdom, Germany, and France in 2025 to become Europe's leading real estate investment market by volume, a milestone driven by a combination of yield compression in core Northern European markets, Spain's sustained economic growth (GDP expanding at 2.8% in 2025 versus the Eurozone average of 1.1%), and improving financing conditions as the ECB cut rates through 2025. The living sector led investment at €5.4 billion (29% of the total), driven by build-to-rent, student housing, and coliving platforms. The logistics sector recorded 2.7 million square metres of take-up in 2025 — an all-time high — as e-commerce and nearshoring trends converged with Spain's Atlantic coastal position. For 2026, CBRE and BBVA project a further 5–10% increase in investment volumes to €19–21 billion.
  • The Golden Visa Closure and Its Investment Implications:
    Spain formally ended its golden visa programme for real estate purchases on April 3, 2025, with the Council of Ministers' implementing decree citing housing affordability and compliance with the European Commission's concerns about investment migration risk as the rationale. Investors who qualified before the closure can renew on 5-year terms (extended from 2 years). The closure has not materially dampened foreign buyer demand — the 20% foreign transaction share in 2025 was recorded after the programme ended — but it has redirected investor attention toward the Digital Nomad Visa (income-threshold residency available to non-EU remote workers), the Non-Lucrative Visa, and the Entrepreneur Residency pathway. Portugal has similarly restricted its golden visa from coastal and urban residential real estate, channelling investor capital toward fund investments and interior regions.

Where to Invest: Málaga, the Balearics, and Portugal

  • Málaga and the Andalusian Tech Boom:
    Andalusia recorded the highest regional price growth in Spain at approximately 20% year-on-year in late 2025, driven almost entirely by Málaga province — now Spain's third-largest tech hub, home to Málaga Tech Park and offices of Microsoft, Vodafone, Accenture, and over 600 technology companies. Málaga city's average price reached €4,047 per square metre by December 2025, with premium neighbourhoods on the Golden Mile and in the Marbella corridor trading at €5,000–€12,000 per square metre for new build. Málaga now accounts for one-third of all Spanish luxury property sales above €3 million — a figure that surpasses both Madrid and Barcelona — and its combination of 325 days of sunshine, direct flights from 200 European airports, and growing employment base has positioned it as the primary relocation destination for European technology and financial professionals. The 2026 growth forecast for Málaga sits at 5–9% in the conservative scenario, with hot spots reaching 10–12%.
  • Balearic Islands and Coastal Luxury:
    The Balearic Islands — Mallorca, Ibiza, Menorca, and Formentera — represent Spain's most supply-constrained luxury market, with building restrictions, island ecology protections, and foreign buyer concentration creating conditions for consistent above-market appreciation. The Balearics list 6,359 luxury properties in active inventory, with Son Vida in Palma de Mallorca reaching €8,641 per square metre versus the Palma city average of €5,086 per square metre. Ibiza's top neighbourhoods — Roca Llisa, Can Furnet, and Es Cubells — trade at €5,000–€15,000 per square metre for new premium villas, with gross rental yields of 4–6% on a 52-week basis and occupancy rates above 85% during the 16-week peak season. Formentera remains the most restricted market on the peninsula, with new construction effectively prohibited, meaning price discovery is entirely driven by resale transactions in an inventory of fewer than 1,500 residential properties.
  • Portugal: Lisbon, Porto, and the Interior Opportunity:
    Portugal's residential market posted 17.5% national year-on-year price growth in Q4 2025, with Lisbon's median price reaching €6,124 per square metre and Porto at €4,064 per square metre. Knight Frank ranks Lisbon among the top five global cities for prime residential capital growth, with a 4–5.9% appreciation forecast for 2026. Foreign buyers in Greater Lisbon pay a 49% premium over the national average; in Porto the premium is 35.6%. The Portuguese market has repositioned itself since the golden visa restrictions of 2023 — cap investment and interior region projects remain eligible — toward a structural undersupply story driven by record tourism (17.4 million visitors in 2024), net migration, and a near-complete halt to new residential construction in prime urban zones. The Alentejo and Algarve offer investment opportunities at 30–40% below Lisbon prices with rural retreats, solar-powered estate conversions, and agritourism projects qualifying for EU Green Deal subsidies.

The Housing Crisis: Policy Risk and Structural Opportunity

  • The Housing Crisis as a Structural Indicator:
    Spain's housing affordability crisis — a rental supply collapse of 61% over five years while prices rose 40%, a structural deficit of 800,000 units, and the requirement to build 200,000 new homes annually for 15 years to meet demand — paradoxically strengthens the investment case for existing stock owners and weakens it for new development plays dependent on planning approval. Barcelona alone lost 90% of its long-term rental supply in five years, forcing rents to levels that make high-yield short-term rental strategies viable even at premium acquisition prices. The government's €7 billion housing plan, announced in April 2026, triples public housing investment but is projected to add only 40,000 units over four years — a fraction of the structural gap. Investors positioned in existing residential assets benefit from this chronic undersupply through sustained rental growth and capital appreciation, while developers face a planning environment where approvals in constrained markets can take 3–5 years.
  • Rent Control and Its Unintended Consequences:
    Spain's Housing Law, which introduced rent controls in "stressed zones" designated by autonomous communities, has produced a textbook case of supply destruction. Pamplona lost 39% of its long-term rental supply in Q1 2026 alone after designation as a stressed zone. Barcelona, Madrid, and Catalonia's broader rental markets have seen landlords accelerate exits to the unregulated short-term market, owner-occupation, or outright sale — further compressing the long-term rental stock available to residents. For international investors, this policy environment creates a bifurcated opportunity: luxury and premium residential — largely exempt from rent control thresholds — remains freely marketable, while mid-market residential in controlled zones carries policy risk that must be stress-tested against regulatory expansion. The short-term rental market remains lucrative in coastal and tourism zones but faces its own licensing restrictions in Barcelona and Valencia.

Commercial Real Estate and Financing Conditions

  • Commercial Real Estate: Office, Logistics, and Data Centres:
    Spain's office market reached €40.65 billion in 2026 — projected at a 4.21% CAGR to €49.94 billion by 2031 — but faces a significant renovation challenge: 76% of existing office stock is estimated to face obsolescence without retrofit to meet energy performance and ESG requirements. Grade A offices in Madrid's Castellana corridor and Barcelona's 22@ district are absorbing new tech and financial tenants at rents of €30–€40 per square metre per month with below-5% vacancy, while secondary stock is being repurposed for residential, hospitality, and mixed-use. The logistics sector is Spain's highest-growth commercial asset class, driven by e-commerce penetration and nearshoring: 2.7 million square metres of take-up in 2025 was the highest ever recorded, with prime logistics rents rising 12% year-on-year in Madrid and Barcelona. Data centres are an emerging category, with Madrid ranking among Europe's top four colocation hubs, attracting hyperscaler investment from Google, Microsoft, and Amazon through 2027.
  • Financing Conditions: EURIBOR Trajectory and Mortgage Access:
    EURIBOR, the reference rate for the majority of Spanish mortgages, stood at approximately 2.2–2.30% in June 2026, compared with a peak of 4.2% in late 2023 — a 200-basis-point reduction that has meaningfully expanded purchasing power for leveraged buyers. Average Spanish mortgage rates in 2026 sit at 2.87% (variable) and 2.5–3.2% (fixed), down from 3.25% in late 2024. Non-resident financing remains accessible at 60–70% LTV with rates of 2.9–3.6% from major Spanish and international banks, though some lenders tightened non-resident fixed-rate terms in January 2026 for mortgages above €500,000. Portuguese financing is available on comparable terms with Euribor-linked products. The rate environment supports demand sustainably without requiring further ECB easing: even at current rates, affordability in secondary Spanish cities — Seville, Valencia, Bilbao, Zaragoza — remains materially better than Western European comparators.

Investment Strategy: Positioning for 2026 and Beyond

  • Preferred Investment Positions for 2026:
    The highest-conviction positions in Iberia for 2026 are: (1) Málaga province luxury residential — Costa del Sol, La Zagaleta, Puerto Banús, and the Marbella Golden Mile — where technology sector employment, supply constraint, and flight-to-sun demand are sustaining 10–20% price growth in the prime segment; (2) Madrid Grade A office and logistics — strong tenant demand, record take-up, and a repricing narrative that offers entry at attractive yields relative to UK and German equivalents; (3) Lisbon and Porto residential — Lisbon's top-5 global capital growth ranking and Porto's 35.6% foreign buyer premium represent structural demand driven by migration, tourism, and lifestyle capital that the supply pipeline cannot serve; and (4) Balearic Islands existing luxury inventory — supply-constrained by island ecology protections, yielding 4–6% gross on rental and appreciating at 7–12% annually in the top-tier sub-market.
  • Risks to Monitor:
    The most material risks to the Iberian investment thesis in 2026 are: political risk around rental regulation expansion — with Spain's coalition government under pressure to extend stressed-zone designations and cap premium rents; planning risk in urban prime markets where approvals can take 3–5 years and demolition rights are increasingly contested; the possibility that rent control expansion accelerates landlord exit and compresses yields in mid-market positions; and currency risk for non-eurozone investors, mitigated but not eliminated by the ECB's managed rate trajectory. Portugal's political landscape is more stable following the March 2024 election, and Lisbon and Porto are less exposed to rent control overreach than Madrid and Barcelona. The structural undersupply across Iberia means that near-term price corrections require a demand shock of a magnitude not visible in the current data — making the risk-adjusted case for existing prime stock holding materially stronger than the policy headline risk suggests.
Author
Elena Ruiz Navarro
Elena Ruiz NavarroDirector of Iberian Research, Knight Frank

Elena Ruiz Navarro is Director of Iberian Research at Knight Frank, based in Madrid. She has spent 13 years advising institutional investors, sovereign wealth funds, and family offices on Spanish and Portuguese real estate, with particular expertise in the luxury coastal markets of Andalusia, the Balearic Islands, and Lisbon. She contributes regularly to the Urban Land Institute and serves on the advisory panel of the Spanish Property Federation (APCE).