Madrid costs 2.4× what Alicante does per square metre. Galicia gets a third less sun — and no 40°C summers. Here are the numbers behind the postcards, with the data quality labelled.
Last verified: 8 July 2026 · €1 = $1.14Sale prices below are idealista portal asking prices (Jun 2026 unless noted) — useful for comparison, but not official statistics. Where the property registrars (Registradores, Q1 2026) publish a figure, we say so. Rents are portal data too: Spain's statistics institute publishes only a rent index, never a €/m² level.
| Area | Sale price (portal) | Rent (portal) | Rough character |
|---|---|---|---|
| Murcia (city/region) | Notably cheaper than the coast (city figure not captured — check current portal data) | Region rents +5.4% YoY | ~470k; Corvera airport, Alicante ~1h; Spain's sunniest pick, hot summers |
| Alicante / Costa Blanca | €2,811/m² (May 2026) | Rents +8.3% YoY | ~340k; busy airport; the longest-established northern-European retiree infrastructure in Spain |
| Galicia (A Coruña / Vigo) | A Coruña €3,157/m² (May 2026) | Region rents +4.4% YoY | A Coruña ~245k, Vigo ~290k; three regional airports; the "anti-heat" option |
| Valencia (city) | €3,694/m² | €16.7/m²/mo | Spain's 3rd city (~825k); major airport and public hospital network; fastest capital-city rent growth in 2024 (+5.9%, INE) |
| Málaga / Costa del Sol | €4,250/m² city (province €3,339 — Registradores Q1 2026) | Rents +5.6% YoY | ~590k; southern Spain's largest airport hub; strong coastal private-hospital sector |
| Palma (Balearics) | €5,169/m² | €19.1/m²/mo | ~430k; major seasonal airport; Balearics are Spain's 2nd-priciest region (€4,173/m², Registradores) |
| Barcelona | €5,399/m² | €23.0/m²/mo | ~1.66M; intercontinental hub; note Cataluña's rent caps and 10–13% purchase tax |
| Madrid | €6,694/m² | €23.7/m²/mo | ~3.3M; the widest direct US/CA route map; top-ranked public hospitals; 6% purchase tax — the lowest mainland rate |
Populations are approximate. Registradores' regional context: Madrid region €4,407/m², Balearics €4,173, Cataluña €2,852 (Q1 2026, official-adjacent registry data).
From AEMET (the state meteorology agency) climatological normals, 1981–2010 — not brochure copy.
| Area | Sun hours/yr | Annual mean | January | Summer peak |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Murcia | 2,967 — the sunniest here | 18.6°C | 10.6°C | 27.6°C (Aug) — hot summers |
| Alicante | 2,953 | 18.2°C | 11.6°C | 26.1°C (Aug) |
| Málaga | 2,905 | 18.5°C | 12.1°C — Spain's mildest January here | 26.0°C (Aug) |
| Palma | 2,779 | 18.2°C | 11.9°C | 26.2°C (Aug) |
| Valencia | 2,696 | 18.3°C | 11.8°C | 26.1°C (Aug) |
| Galicia (A Coruña) | ~2,010 (summed monthly normals) | 14.8°C | Mild | No extreme heat; ~1,014 mm rain/yr |
| Barcelona | Not published in the AEMET normals table | 16.1°C | 9.2°C | 24.4°C (Aug) |
| Madrid | Not published in the AEMET normals table | 15.0°C — continental | 6.3°C | 25.6°C (Jul); cold winters by Spanish standards |
Murcia pairs the most sun with markedly cheaper property than the coast. Alicante at €2,811/m² is roughly 58% cheaper than Madrid — with decades of retiree infrastructure already in place.
Best hospitals, best flights home (Madrid has the widest direct US/CA route map). You pay for it: €5,400–6,700/m² to buy, €23+/m²/mo to rent in Madrid and Barcelona. Valencia splits the difference.
14.8°C mean, real rain, no 40°C weeks. Property around €3,157/m² in A Coruña. If your reference point is the Pacific Northwest or the Maritimes, this is the honest match.
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