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Nomads & Communities
14JUN

Madrid rents climb 17.9% in a year

2 min read
11:49UTC

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.

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Key takeaway

Madrid rents rose 17.9% in a year, the month Congress killed the rent freeze that could have capped them.

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.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

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.

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