Independent and accurate property prices in Spain

Download the Kyero.com Spanish House Price Index

Download the latest Spanish House Price Index
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The Kyero.com Spanish House Price Index is free to download.

It's updated and published quarterly to evaluate the advertised prices of 100,000 Spanish properties.


Kyero.com Spanish House Price Index
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January 7th, 2008

Kyero.com 2007 Spanish Property Summary - 300KB pdfClick the image to view a concise 3 page summary of the last year in the Spanish property market.

The national average property price is now €246,000. Which areas offer lower prices and which top the scale?

Who wins as the most popular province and coastline?

Find the hottest locations in Spain and the hottest properties. What's happening to inland properties? What about island living?

Where in Spain did property increase in value the most? Where did it decrease, and by how much?

The Kyero.com 2007 Spanish Property Summary answers all this and more in three pages (300KB pdf document)



Notes on Ministry of Housing data

  • Original data is freely available to download from the web site of the Ministerio de Vivienda. No changes have been made to the source information other than for clarity of presentation and translation into English.
  • New construction is defined as properties less than 2 years old. These figures *might* include property purchased off plan and 'flipped' or resold in the same period and while the property is still technically 'new'
  • Resales are defined as any property older than two years - again, this may not strictly correlate to a property having been sold a number of times
  • Except where specifically mentioned, all figures exclude sales of subsidised or social housing.
  • Sales of urban and rural land are excluded.
  • Sales to 'foreigners' are categorised as resident, non-resident and 'other'. For the sake of clarity, only figures for foreign residents in Spain are presented here as they account for the vast majority of cases.
  • Actual prices are likely to be unreliable due to the fact that some of the sales price passes from buyer to seller 'under the table'. This amount is never notarised and therefore cannot feature in the MVIV figures.
  • As the Spanish government increases their efforts to stamp-out these 'black money' practices, house prices might 'appear' to be increasing when, in fact, a proportion of that increase must be attributed to a larger propeortion of the actual sales value being notarised.