Spain's consumer prices sit a little under 10% below the EU average — but rents are climbing and home prices rose 12.9% in a year. Here's the honest math, with official data where it exists and estimates clearly labelled where it doesn't.
Last verified: 8 July 2026 · €1 = $1.14| Measure | Value | Source |
|---|---|---|
| Inflation, May 2026 (YoY) | +3.2% (core 3.0%; food +2.2%) | INE, official |
| Inflation, 2025 average | ~2.7% | Computed from INE monthly data |
| Price level vs EU average | A little under 10% below (food ~5% below) | Eurostat, 2024 |
| Exchange rate | €1 ≈ $1.14 | ECB reference rate, late Jun 2026 |
No formal Spain-vs-US price index is published by Eurostat (its comparison covers Europe only), so resist the "X% cheaper than America" headlines — the honest comparison is line by line, below.
Spain's statistics institute publishes a rent index, not a €/m² level — official data says rents rose 3.5% in 2024 overall and 8.8% on new contracts. The €/m² figures everyone quotes are portal data (idealista, May–Jun 2026), flagged accordingly:
| Area | Rent (portal data) | 85 m² apartment | ≈ USD |
|---|---|---|---|
| Spain (national) | €15.1/m²/mo | ~€1,280/mo | $1,460 |
| Valencia | €16.7/m²/mo | ~€1,420/mo | $1,620 |
| Palma | €19.1/m²/mo | ~€1,620/mo | $1,850 |
| Barcelona | €23.0/m²/mo | ~€1,955/mo | $2,230 |
| Madrid | €23.7/m²/mo | ~€2,015/mo | $2,300 |
Portal asking prices run above what sitting tenants pay; existing contracts signed after May 2023 can only be updated by the IRAV cap — 2.48% at May 2026. More in Housing.
| Item (couple) | Monthly | ≈ USD | Data quality |
|---|---|---|---|
| Electricity | ~€50–80 | $57–91 | CNMC household panel says €56/mo; consumer groups put regulated-tariff bills nearer €81 — treat as a range |
| Fibre internet | ~€30–40 | $34–46 | Operator pricing, indicative |
| Water | ~€20–40 | $23–46 | Municipal, varies; indicative |
| Groceries (retired couple) | ~€450–550 | $513–627 | Indicative — no official basket; INE food inflation +2.2% YoY is the only official anchor |
| Private health insurance (couple, 60s) | ~€300–350 | $342–399 | Insurer pricing, age-rated, indicative |
Planning ranges for a couple renting a ~85 m² two-bed — built from the line items above. Rents are portal data; the non-rent basket covers utilities, groceries, transport and leisure. These are estimates, not statistics:
| Tier | Rent | Non-rent basket | Total | ≈ USD |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Madrid / Barcelona | ~€1,950–2,000 | ~€1,400 | ≈ €3,350–3,450/mo | $3,800–3,950 |
| Valencia / Málaga | ~€1,300–1,450 | ~€1,400 | ≈ €2,700–2,900/mo | $3,100–3,300 |
| Smaller city / inland (Murcia, A Coruña) | ~€800–1,000 | ~€1,350 | ≈ €2,150–2,450/mo | $2,450–2,800 |
Totals exclude private health insurance — add ~€300–350/month for a couple in their 60s (indicative). Note the fit with the non-lucrative visa's €3,000/month couple minimum (main applicant + spouse, 2026): outside Madrid and Barcelona, the visa threshold roughly is a realistic budget.
The same €2,800/month, spent three ways — with the trade-offs spelled out.
Deposits, setup fees, furniture, driving school — the one-off costs nobody budgets for.
A line-by-line comparison against typical US metro costs, updated with each INE release.