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Luxury homes for sale in the autonomous community of Balearic Islands

luxury guide

The Balearic Islands house market is one of the most active in the Mediterranean, with 1,995 properties currently listed across Mallorca, Ibiza, Menorca and Formentera. Houses are what buyers actually want here: private gardens, garages, space to live year-round without sharing walls with neighbours. That distinction matters. Apartments work for investors chasing short-term rental income, but a house on the Balearics is a different kind of purchase, a long-term commitment to island life. German and Scandinavian buyers focus heavily on Mallorca's northwest coast, while British and American buyers tend to favour Ibiza and the quieter reaches of Menorca. Pollença, Deià, Sant Joan de Labritja and Ciutadella keep appearing at the top of every serious buyer's shortlist.

How much does a house cost in the Balearic Islands

House prices in the Balearics range from €400,000 for rural inland properties to €9,750,000,000 for the finest seafront homes with large plots. The average sits at €7,410,674. Floor areas run between 55 and 731230 sqm, averaging 724 sqm, with bedroom counts from 1 to 30. Two things move the price more than anything else: sea views and a private pool. A house with both will command a significant premium over an equivalent inland property. And there is another factor worth understanding: Balearic building regulations have become increasingly strict, which means houses with scope for extension or with buildable land attached are genuinely scarce. The supply is not coming back. That is why buyers who hesitate tend to regret it.

Where to buy a house in the Balearic Islands

In Mallorca, the villages between Deià and Valldemossa attract buyers who want stone houses built into the hillside, with terraces overlooking olive groves and the sea beyond. Pollença old town offers characterful townhouses on medieval streets, with interior patios and traditional Mallorcan architecture. Further east, Artà and the surrounding countryside suit buyers who want large plots and privacy without the premium of the northwest coast. Ibiza divides clearly for this property type. San Carlos de Peralta remains the address for countryside houses with generous land and old character. Sant Antoni de Portmany has seen significant renovation activity, with buyers converting traditional fincas into contemporary homes. Menorca is the island for those who want authentic architecture, the famous sash windows, white limestone courtyards, and proportions that modern construction simply cannot reproduce, at prices that still make sense compared to Mallorca and Ibiza. Formentera has the smallest selection and the highest price per square metre in the entire archipelago.