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RENTING

When’s the best time of the year to start renting in Spain?

Certain times of the year are better than others to find a rental property, and what can be considered the 'best' time depends on whether you're a prospective tenant or landlord and whether you're looking for affordability or options.

When's the best time of the year to start renting in Spain?
September is generally considered a good time to start renting, but it isn't always that straightforward, Photo: HiveBoxx/Unsplash

With rents in Spain soaring in recent years and affordable rental properties in high demand, finding a place to live can seem like a struggle.

This is especially true if you live in one of Spain’s major cities like Madrid, Barcelona or Valencia, where demand is high, supply low, and prices rising.

Knowing when in the year is the best time to rent could help you find a place. But is there a ‘best’ time of year? And what about landlords wanting to rent out their properties?

READ ALSO: The best websites to find student housing in Spain

Although it’s difficult to say there’s a definite ‘best’ time of year to rent, when in the year you should start renting does depend on a few factors. Where in Spain you’re looking, of course, matters because in big cities there will be a surge in availability at certain times of year, whereas in smaller towns there will be less on offer but likely apartments sitting empty year round.

You also need to consider what ‘best’ really means. Does it mean best in terms of availability and opportunity, or in terms of finding the cheapest rents?

September renting season

In Spain as around the world, September seems to be considered ‘best’ time of the year to start renting in terms of availability. It’s the end of summer, and the beginning of a new academic and work year. In terms of the rental market, September in Spain is, like in many countries, the beginning of a new cycle. 

Students tend to try to find a flat in time for the new academic year, which is usually sometime towards the end of September. As such, many begin their search in August or early-September in order to avoid last minute panics and rushes as everyone tries to do the same thing.

Experts say this demand grows even more during the second fortnight of the month as people begin to panic a bit and step up their search.

Generally speaking, rental price data shows that the demand for rental accommodation grows annually during the fourth quarter of the year – that is, in October, November and December. For this reason, it is advisable to try and secure your contract by September and not to do so in that final stretch of the year, when higher demand leads to paying up to €35 more per month on average, according to data cited by El Español.

For example, in Catalonia, the average rental price in 2022 was €779.84 per month, but price records show there was a significant upturn in the fourth quarter of the year, to an average of €815, according to data from the Institut Català del Sòl (Incasòl). Of course, in July 2024 prices will be significantly more than that, but this end of year price squeeze trend is clear.

READ ALSO: ‘The Hunger Games’: Two million university students in Spain fight to find a room

While busiest of course means more competition, it can also mean more opportunity. Due to the fact many people are house hunting in September, it also means it’s the time of year when swathes of one-year leases are up. This is especially true in student areas, as well as properties that cater to seasonal or yearly contracted English teachers and language assistants, and areas close to hospitals and health centres.

So, in terms of renters, getting your apartment by early September seems a smart thing to do in order to avoid the mad rush of students searching for a place to live. You’ll need to be dedicated in your search, but it’s also when there’s likely to be the most apartments freeing up, and doing anything before September seems less likely anyway.

Keep in mind that this is Spain we’re talking about, and during the summer months (in August especially) nobody is really doing much of anything and you may struggle to get potential landlords to even answer the phone, even if their property is advertised online.

Early in the year

However, in terms of finding the most affordable rents, there’s an argument that it’s from January onwards.

Many landlords who didn’t manage to rent their properties during the year tend to adjust prices downwards in January. Some also take advantage of this period to renovate their properties, making them more attractive.

This means that from January until the arrival of spring, say March/April, if you’re lucky you can find cheaper offers, but keep in mind there will probably be less properties on the market overall.

What about renting your property?

If you’re a landlord, however, waiting for the September (or better, January) rush seems a sensible thing to do if you’re trying to earn a little more income. Data from the Google Trends tool cited by rental website Rentuos, for example, shows the highest level of traffic for the keyword “rent flat Barcelona” is concentrated between the end of August and the end of September.

If you’re a landlord, capitalising on this period, or perhaps even waiting a little longer until demand is even higher and supply significantly lower, could be the way to go.

It’s also true that many landlords will try to take advantage of this and renew their contracts every year during the rush periods. In that sense, the ‘best’ time of year to rent seems to be September for both renters and landlords. 

READ ALSO: Has Spain’s Housing Law completely failed to control rents?

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PROPERTY

REVEALED: Spain’s plan to also clamp down on monthly accommodation

Several Spanish cities have recently declared war on tourist apartments advertised on Airbnb. However, the government now aims to also crack down on temporary rentals, a move set to affect digital nomads and new arrivals.

REVEALED: Spain's plan to also clamp down on monthly accommodation

In recent months, many places in Spain have tried to curb the number of tourist apartments as a means of lessening their impact on prices in Spain’s long-term rental market for locals and residents. 

Some cities have rolled out a moratorium on issuing new licences, others are making it more difficult to get them and, in Barcelona’s case, there’ve even a new plan to get rid of all Airbnb flats in the next five years.

READ ALSO: Barcelona to get rid of all tourist rental flats ‘by 2028’

Nevertheless, Spanish authorities aren’t stopping there, as the nationals government is also looking at how it can clamp down on monthly or temporary rentals too.

These are essentially rentals that are longer than one month, but under one year. 

Recently, Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez announced the government will approve measures “to tackle one of the main problems of our society”, referring to the rise in housing prices.

The crackdown on tourist apartments is part of this, but now the Ministries of Housing and Social Affairs are going to try to prevent what was previously an Airbnb rental from now being camouflaged as monthly or mid-term housing. 

It has also previously been reported that landlords have opted to rent out their properties on a temporary basis to circumvent rent caps introduced by the government on long-term leases.

READ MORE: The loophole landlords in Spain are using to bypass the 3% rent cap

In essence, the middle ground in which temporary accommodation finds itself, the high remuneration it provides landlords and the lack of regulation it is subject to have led the government to deem its role in Spain’s current housing crisis as crucial enough to act upon.

According to national radio station Cadena SER, the government’s plan is to put a stop to temporary rentals, which are also managed through platforms such as Airbnb to try and get around some of the restrictions imposed on them.

READ ALSO: Spain considers banning tourist lets in residential buildings

This means that anyone who wants to temporarily rent their apartment will have to explain why.

For example, if you’re renting to a student or researcher, the government now wants the tenants to have to show the research contract or course booking to show they only last a few months.

There is also a plan in place to get people to register their property on a Ministry of Housing platform so that only those homes that meet licence requirements and justifications can operate in the market.

Currently, many of these homes do not comply with municipal regulations.

READ ALSO: Valencia police pile pressure on tourist flats with more stiff fines 

In the same thread, but as a slightly different plan, junior coalition partners Sumar, as well as other left-wing parties including Esquerra Republicana (ERC), EH Bildu, Podemos and BNG have registered a new bill in parliament to limit seasonal and room rentals to six months and no more.

The primary reason given for the bill is that in the last year there has been a 56 percent increase in seasonal contracts, to the detriment of rental contracts for primary residences. For this reason, they urge Isabel Rodríguez’s Ministry of Housing to understand “housing as a right and not as a market good”.

According to the political parties behind the proposal, this will require a reform of the Urban Leases Law in order to prevent prices from being raised continuously.

Like above, the draft establishes that there must be a justified cause for renting out accommodation temporarily and proof of planned duration.

If this is not justified, “it will be presumed that said contract is for habitual residence,” the draft bill says, stating that it will be the landlord who has to verify whether these circumstances are true and request proof from the tenant.

READ ALSO – UPDATE: Which cities in Spain have new restrictions on tourist rentals?

If more than six months have passed or more than two consecutive contracts have been issued, it will be understood to be a rental contract for a habitual residence and for the long-term. 

It also states that with these temporary contracts, the lessee may withdraw from the lease contract, once at least one month has passed giving 10 days’ notice before leaving.

These two plans are sure to affect a lot of people including digital nomads, those who have newly moved to Spain and want to try out different cities and people who want to rent out their apartments because they want to temporarily spend time back in their home country or go travelling, for example.

And they don’t only affect foreigners, in fact, every summer Spaniards rent or rent out temporary accommodation for the month of August as people escape the cities for the coast or the mountains.

To appease those who are worried about the temporary accommodation clampdown, Rodríguez said: “It is important to guarantee that those who need temporary accommodation can have it, but that it is not used to limit the supply of housing for habitual residence. Let’s try to combat fraud by all means”.

Whether these new draft proposals will pass or ever come into force is a different matter, as there currently seems to be numerous kinks that must be ironed out before any law is enforced on a local or national level.

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