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Luxury villas for sale in the autonomous community of Balearic Islands

luxury guide

The Balearic Islands villa market runs on its own logic. While prices in other Mediterranean destinations shift with the seasons, Mallorca, Ibiza, Menorca, and Formentera hold firm. Sellers know they have something rare: freestanding villas with private pools, mature gardens, and sea access in places where new building permits are nearly impossible to obtain. 1,558 villas are currently listed across the archipelago, drawing buyers from Germany, Switzerland, the United States, and Scandinavia. The profile is consistent: people who have already decided on a villa, and are now choosing the island.

How much does a villa cost in the Balearic Islands

Prices start at €420,000 for inland properties in Mallorca or quieter parts of Menorca, and climb to €42,500,000 for front-line sea villas in Ibiza or restored fincas in the hills above Deià. The average sits at €4,490,650. Floor areas range from 1 to 47231 sqm, with a typical size of 482 sqm and bedroom counts between 1 and 23. Sea view is the single biggest price driver: a villa overlooking the water in Santa Ponsa commands twice the price of a comparable property two kilometers inland. Infinity pools, Mediterranean gardens, covered terraces, and guest annexes push values further. Ibiza is in a category of its own. Design villas with direct beach access there reach figures no other island in the western Mediterranean can match.

Where to buy a villa in the Balearic Islands

Mallorca holds the largest share of the market and the widest range. The Serra de Tramuntana, a UNESCO World Heritage landscape, is the territory for stone-built villas surrounded by olive groves, particularly around Deià, Valldemossa, and Sóller. The southwest coast between Andratx and Port d'Andratx is the most expensive stretch, consistently the first choice for international buyers. The eastern side of the island, around Artà and Cala Ratjada, offers strong value and less congestion. Ibiza concentrates prestige demand in Can Rimbau and the hills of Sant Josep de sa Talaia, where sunset views justify premium prices. Menorca appeals to buyers who prioritize quiet: traditional whitewashed villas near Ciutadella and Es Mercadal, often with agricultural land attached. And then there is Formentera. Tiny, restricted, almost no new supply. It is the most exclusive market in the archipelago, and prices reflect exactly that.