The decade of impossible rentals in Spain

Since 2016, rental prices in Spain have risen 92%, nearly four times faster than salaries, which grew only 24%. This has pushed the cost of a medium-sized apartment above 40% of the average gross salary, making housing access an increasingly tough challenge for many, especially young people and immigrants.

Miguel Murillo, a 27-year-old Madrid engineer, returned to the capital six months ago and faced a ruthless housing market. Though he had rented a room in Barcelona through contacts, he now pays 610 euros monthly from his over 2,000-euro salary, preventing savings for buying. "Prices rise faster than my savings," he summarizes.

Data backs his story: according to portals like Fotocasa, advertised rentals have increased 92% since 2016, versus 24% for salaries. Housing law deems affordable spending no more than 30% of net income on housing, including utilities. In 2016, an 80-square-meter apartment began exceeding that threshold; last year, it hit 40%.

Experts like Paloma Taltavull, professor at the University of Alicante, blame high rents and low wages. "The housing accessibility problem is not just high rents, but low salaries," she explains. Demand grows from new households and immigration in an expanding economy, accelerating prices.

In Spain's ten largest cities, Valencia, Alicante, and Murcia doubled prices; Malaga rose 96%. Barcelona, with price controls, saw a smaller increase but remains the most expensive. General CPI rose only 26.4%. Fotocasa says 46% rent out of necessity, 30% end up in rooms, 35% can't cover deposits, and 58% struggle with monthly payments.

Jose Garcia Montalvo from Pompeu Fabra University notes portal prices are reactive, while INE shows more moderate rises. Common causes in cities like Amsterdam or London include international mobility and tourist flats. Javier Gil from CSIC highlights investment drawn by profitability.

Carme Arcarazo from Sindicat de Llogateres criticizes housing as a scarce investment good. Helena Beunza from Asval calls for incentives for individual owners. Ignacio Ezquiaga advocates more construction and temporary measures like update caps. Taltavull, a market defender, concedes temporary controls may be needed for this "serious market failure".

Juan Angel Barajas, a 28-year-old Mexican student in Barcelona, pays 450 euros for a temporary room: "It's like buying time." The crisis raises emancipation age and spurs informal settlements.

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