Housing crisis
Spain housing crisis: 40,000 euros only enough for home deposit in five provincial capitalsA study shows that prospective buyers needed far larger financial reserves in most parts of the country, while rising rents and stagnant wages continue to make saving increasingly difficult
Añádenos en Google A couple look at property listings. (Aida Web)Virginia López Esplá
16/06/2026 Actualizado a las 13:37h.A savings pot of 40,000 euros is no longer enough to cover the upfront costs of buying a home in the majority of major ... Spanish cities, according to a new study that highlights the growing barriers facing prospective buyers.
The study, carried out by property portal pisos.com, found that 40,000 euros in savings would be enough to cover the 30 per cent typically required to purchase an average 90-square-metre home in only five provincial capitals: Jaén, Zamora, Cáceres, Ciudad Real and Ávila. In all other provincial capitals, buyers would need more than 40,000 euros to meet the upfront costs associated with a purchase.
The findings come as property prices continue to rise across the country. According to notary data, the average price of a new-build home in Spain stands at 2,934 euros per square metre, while second-hand properties average 2,174 euros per square metre. A typical 90-square-metre flat would therefore cost around 264,060 euros if newly built and 195,660 euros on the resale market.
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By contrast, buyers with 30,000 euros in savings would not be able to cover the required upfront costs in any provincial capital.
Few job opportunities
Ferran Font, director of research at pisos.com, said the most striking aspect of the findings was that affordable locations tended to be those with fewer employment opportunities.
“What's really revealing isn't how many capitals are left out, but which ones are included. Savings go furthest precisely where jobs are scarce and economic activity is weakest, and fall short where employment opportunities are concentrated,” he said.
Font added that the deposit remains the biggest obstacle for first-time buyers, particularly younger people renting homes while trying to save.
“Asking a young person who lives in rented accommodation to save 50,000 euros is, in practice, asking the impossible. Rent takes up a large share of their income and leaves very little left over. Without family support or an inheritance, the numbers simply don't add up, no matter how much they tighten their belts.”
He also warned that without a substantial financial cushion, negotiating mortgage terms with banks becomes extremely difficult.