Madrid rents rose 17.9% in the year to April 2026 on Idealista data, the sharpest annual increase among Spanish provincial capitals, with the index putting the city at 21.30 euro per square metre per month. 1 It is the freshest read on the trajectory since the rental price-freeze prórroga (extension) fell in Congress, defeated by a Partido Popular (PP), Vox and Junts majority . Spain's 7-billion-euro housing plan, approved on 22 April, was supply-side only , so the defeat of the freeze left no legislative cap on the climb. The figure quantifies the consequence of that legislative arc: a building plan that adds homes slowly and no demand-side brake on rents in the interim.

Madrid rents climb 17.9% in a year
Madrid rents rose 17.9% in the year to April on Idealista data, the freshest read on the trajectory since the rent-freeze extension was defeated in Congress on 28 April.
Madrid rents rose 17.9% in a year, the month Congress killed the rent freeze that could have capped them.
Deep Analysis
Madrid is the Spanish capital and one of Europe's most popular cities for tourists, nomads and long-term residents. According to Idealista (Spain's largest property portal), rents in Madrid rose 17.9% in the year to April 2026, reaching 21.30 euro per square metre per month. A typical 60 square metre flat in a central area now costs around 1,278 euro per month. The Spanish parliament voted on 28 April 2026 to reject a law that would have frozen rents at their current levels for two more years. The parties that defeated that law were Partido Popular (centre-right), Vox (hard-right) and Junts (Catalan independentists). Without that freeze, there is no national legal limit on how much landlords can raise rents. Spain's government has approved a large housing construction plan, but new buildings take years to complete and will not reduce rents in the short term.