Second-hand housing prices rise 20.5% in Spain in 2025

Demand has driven a 20.5% rise in second-hand housing prices in 2025, the highest increase in two decades. Cities like León, Ciudad Real, and Guadalajara lead the surges, according to Fotocasa's report. The average price hit 2,879 euros per square meter in December.

Spain's housing market faces growing pressure from population increases, largely due to immigration, and the rise in single-person households, which have doubled in a decade. According to María Matos, Fotocasa's director of studies, over 200,000 new households form each year, but only about 100,000 new homes are built. Combined with a strained rental market and attractive mortgage conditions from low interest rates, sales are nearing 700,000 transactions, the best year since 2007.

Fotocasa's report 'La vivienda de segunda mano en 2025' shows demand quadrupling supply, pushing the average price to 2,879 euros per square meter, above 2,000 euros for three consecutive years. Twenty-one of the 52 provinces exceed that figure. Matos states: «Post-pandemic, a structural shift persists in residential preferences: more space, better location, and higher amenities. This is compounded by strong demographic momentum: population growth from immigration and the rapid expansion of single-person households».

The sharpest rises occur in provincial capitals and secondary municipalities. Excluding Santa Cruz de Tenerife (30.3%), León sees 24.6%, Ciudad Real 20.4%, and Guadalajara 19.5%. Regionally, Murcia leads with 29.6% (1,924 euros/m²), followed by Comunidad Valenciana (24.4%) and Asturias (24.0%). In Madrid, prices rose 17.7%, with peripheral neighborhoods like Los Cármenes (31.4%) and Entrevías (25.5%) experiencing strong increases. In Barcelona, the average is 5,346 euros/m², with rises in areas like El Turó de la Peira (38.4%).

This demand shift to historically affordable areas highlights access challenges to housing, though these zones now face rising tensions.

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A large crowd of protesters marching through the streets of Madrid holding signs for housing rights.
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Thousands protest in Madrid for the right to housing

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Tens of thousands of protesters marched through Madrid on Sunday to demand rent regulation and denounce abuses by landlords and speculators.

INE data reveal an average 22.9 percent rise in Spanish rents from 2015 to 2024, with increases above 30 percent in three provincial capitals.

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A survey by GAD 3 and Valdecarros Madrid shows that 18 percent of those planning to acquire housing in coming years will not use it as their primary residence. Seventy-five percent of Madrid residents intend to change homes within five years.

Prices for residential properties in Germany are rising and nearing the summer 2022 peak. Gero Bergmann, president of the Association of German Pfandbrief Banks (vdp), expects further increases due to a growing housing shortage. In the fourth quarter of 2025, prices rose 4.2 percent nationwide year-over-year.

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Seville's Feria de Abril 2026 opens on Monday as its most expensive edition yet, with drink and food prices 8-10% higher than last year. The city council has spent a record 4.5 million euros, while private caseta consumptions exceed 22 euros for a ham plate and 17 euros for a rebujito jug. Business owners blame rising product costs, staff shortages, and labor expenses.

Hong Kong's Land Registry reported 8,692 transactions across all property sectors last month, up 12.3% from March. Residential sales reached 7,368 units, the highest in two years. Total sales value rose sharply.

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A house at Banmästargården 48 in Hjärup has been resold for 4.2 million kronor, a sharp rise from its 2020 purchase. The new owners are Anette Margareta Greco and Anders Michael Svensson. The property, built in 1984, has a living area of 124 square meters.

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