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17,203 results for:

Luxury Properties for sale in Algarve

  • Apartment in Portimão, Distrito de Faro
    Apartment in Portimão, Distrito de Faro
    JP¥ 123,061,000
    319 m² 2 3
    Presented by Tons Real Estate
  • Apartment in Lagos, Distrito de Faro
    Apartment in Lagos, Distrito de Faro
    JP¥ 114,993,000
    143 m² 2 2
    Presented by Villas Key - Mediacao Imobiliaria, Lda
  • Land in Almancil, Loulé
    Land in Almancil, Loulé
    JP¥ 366,309,000
    530 m²
    Presented by Fine Country Algarve
  • Land in Loulé, Distrito de Faro
    Land in Loulé, Distrito de Faro
    JP¥ 92,736,300
    144,120 m²
    Presented by Mr HOUSE
  • Semidetached House in Loulé, Distrito de Faro
    Semidetached House in Loulé, Distrito de Faro
    JP¥ 176,199,000
    250 m²
    Presented by Nest Homes Portugal
  • Apartment in Olhão, Distrito de Faro
    Apartment in Olhão, Distrito de Faro
    JP¥ 114,993,000
    205 m² 3 3
    Presented by Rentabilizar - Mediacao Imobiliaria Unipessoal, Lda
  • Land in Loulé, Distrito de Faro
    Land in Loulé, Distrito de Faro
    JP¥ 278,209,000
    4,530 m²
    Presented by REDE REAL Loule / Vilamoura / Faro
  • Land in Olhão, Distrito de Faro
    Land in Olhão, Distrito de Faro
    JP¥ 111,284,000
    617 m²
    Presented by Barra Prime Mediacao Imobiliaria, Lda
  • Land in Loulé, Distrito de Faro
    Land in Loulé, Distrito de Faro
    JP¥ 366,309,000
    805 m²
    Presented by Dora Guerreiro - Sociedade Imobiliaria Lda.
  • Land in Loulé, Distrito de Faro
    Land in Loulé, Distrito de Faro
    JP¥ 421,950,000
    960 m²
    Presented by Dora Guerreiro - Sociedade Imobiliaria Lda.
  • Land in Loulé, Distrito de Faro
    Land in Loulé, Distrito de Faro
    JP¥ 366,309,000
    890 m²
    Presented by Dora Guerreiro - Sociedade Imobiliaria Lda.
  • Land in Almancil, Loulé
    Land in Almancil, Loulé
    JP¥ 278,209,000
    4,530 m²
    Presented by VAP Real Estate
  • Land in Lagos, Distrito de Faro
    Land in Lagos, Distrito de Faro
    JP¥ 741,891,000
    84,280 m²
    Presented by Predimed Susana Valente
  • Land in Olhão, Distrito de Faro
    Land in Olhão, Distrito de Faro
    JP¥ 482,229,000
    24,765 m²
    Presented by Imobipêra
  • Land in Loulé, Distrito de Faro
    Land in Loulé, Distrito de Faro
    JP¥ 100,155,000
    2,028 m²
    Presented by UNU Atitude

luxury guide

The Algarve luxury real estate market is one of the most consistent performers in Southern Europe. 14,155 properties are listed today, spanning the full length of Portugal's southern coast from the cliffs of Sagres to the salt marshes near Castro Marim. The reasons buyers keep coming are straightforward: more than 300 sunny days a year, Faro International Airport with direct connections across Europe and North America, and a legal framework that has historically been welcoming to foreign ownership. Lagos, Vilamoura, Tavira and the resort communities of the Golden Triangle form the backbone of the luxury market, each with a distinct identity and price point.

Luxury property prices in the Algarve

Prices in the Algarve luxury segment start at JP¥24,467,500 and reach JP¥4,404,150,000 at the top end of the market. The average sits at JP¥110,145,051, across floor areas ranging from 1 to 380000 sqm, with a typical size of 371 sqm. What drives price more than anything else? Atlantic frontage, direct golf course access and position within a private gated resort. The Algarve still undercuts comparable destinations: Marbella, the Côte d'Azur and Tuscany all command higher averages for equivalent specifications. But the gap is narrowing. International demand from the UK, Germany and the United States has been absorbing available stock consistently, and environmental legislation keeps new supply tightly constrained.

Most sought-after areas in the Algarve

The Golden Triangle anchors the top of the market. Quinta do Lago, Vale do Lobo and Vila Sol are private resort communities with golf, beach clubs and round-the-clock security that have attracted Northern European buyers for over forty years. They are the most expensive addresses in the Algarve, and the demand justifies it. To the west, Lagos draws a younger and more architecturally adventurous buyer: dramatic sea cliffs, unspoiled beaches and a medieval old town that has kept its character. Portimão and Praia da Rocha perform well for short-term rental yield. And Tavira, to the east, is the quiet counterweight to all of it: whitewashed streets, a river running alongside the Ria Formosa Natural Park, and property values that still leave room for appreciation. Ma the window there is closing.

Frequently Asked Questions

Why invest in Algarve luxury real estate right now?

Supply is structurally limited by Portuguese environmental law, which restricts new coastal development. At an average of JP¥110,145,051, the Algarve still prices below Marbella and the French Riviera for comparable properties, but the spread has been shrinking year on year. The combination of constrained supply and sustained international demand makes a compelling case for capital appreciation.

What is daily life like in the Algarve outside the summer season?

The off-season Algarve is a different place, and most residents prefer it. Tavira and Lagos slow down to their natural pace, the golf courses open up, and the Atlantic seafood restaurants serve their best work to a local crowd. The international resident community in the Golden Triangle area is well established, with private healthcare, international schools and a cost of living that runs considerably below Western European averages.

What makes the Algarve genuinely different from other European luxury coastal markets?

The Atlantic coast geology is the starting point: the sandstone cliffs between Albufeira and Lagos have no equivalent on any Mediterranean shoreline. Beyond the landscape, the Algarve holds a rare balance between resort infrastructure at international standards and towns like Tavira or Silves that have resisted homogenisation. It is not the Costa del Sol, and it is not Provence. The market reflects that distinctiveness in ways that are increasingly hard to find elsewhere in Southern Europe.