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Luxury homes for sale in Spain

luxury guide

Spain's residential market runs deep, and with 21,723 houses for sale across the country, buyers have real choices to make. The hard part is not finding a property. It is deciding which Spain you want to live in. Coastal Andalusia and the white villages of the Axarquía attract one type of buyer. Barcelona's historic townhouses pull in another. The Basque Country, Valencia, Ibiza, and the rural stretches of Extremadura each have a distinct identity, a distinct price point, and a distinct lifestyle. British, German, Dutch, and American buyers have been active here for decades, and demand shows no sign of slowing. Spain remains one of the few European countries where a house with a private garden and pool is still accessible at a range of budgets.

How much does a house cost in Spain

Prices start at CN¥2,248,512 for detached houses in inland provinces and smaller Andalusian towns, climbing to CN¥78,296,400,000 for historic townhouses in prime Barcelona neighborhoods or gated properties on the Marbella Golden Mile. The average price is CN¥14,508,604. Floor areas range from 1 to 731230 sqm, with an average of 422 sqm and between 1 and 46 bedrooms. Location drives the price more than almost any other single factor. A house within walking distance of the sea in Sitges or Dénia will cost significantly more than a comparable property twenty minutes inland. Original features matter too: authentic azulejo tilework, exposed beams, interior courtyards, and stone facades add measurable value. Private garden, garage, roof terrace, and planning permission for extensions round out the key criteria buyers negotiate on.

Where to buy a house in Spain

Marbella and its surrounding municipalities, including Benahavís and Estepona, remain the dominant market on the southern coast. Here, gated houses with mature gardens and private pools attract buyers who want security alongside sunshine. On the Balearics, Ibiza stands apart: whitewashed houses tucked into pine-covered hillsides, often with no visible neighbors, commanding views across the island. In the north, San Sebastián draws buyers after urban sophistication, particularly in the Antiguo and Gros districts where traditional Basque architecture meets a refined street life. Along the Catalan coast, Begur and Palafrugell on the Costa Brava offer stone houses that fit naturally into a protected landscape. Ma the most underrated option remains inland Andalusia: around Ronda, Arcos de la Frontera, and the Cádiz hinterland, historic houses with courtyards and olive groves are still available at prices that make immediate sense for buyers with a long-term view.