Real estate

What do high-frequency data tell us about rents in Spain?

This article analyses the recent dynamics in Spain’s rental market based on internal CaixaBank data on direct debit payments for residential rents. According to our indicators, annual rent price increases are moderate when there is no change of tenant or landlord, generally lying below 3% and close to inflation, and consistent with regulatory caps. In contrast, the pressure on the price of new rental contracts has increased, closing 2025 with growth in excess of 10% year-on-year. Despite this, the median cost burden remains stable at around 30%, although there is still significant inequality between age groups and greater pressure in large cities.

Real estate

What does the growing dispersion of prices tell us about the housing market?

In the current expansionary cycle of the Spanish real estate market, there is a marked increase in the dispersion of house prices across the country, unlike in the real estate boom prior to 2008. Since 2015, tourist municipalities and large cities have led the growth in prices. In contrast, rural areas and small towns have experienced more moderate price increases. This behaviour reinforces the view that, in this cycle, price formation is responding to the specific supply and demand dynamics of each area. In major cities, the strong price pressures in the centres are spreading to increasingly municipalities in the metropolitan areas.