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News
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They have sold me a house with squatters; what can I do?
5th December 2025 -
Congress overturns Sumar’s bill to ban investment funds from buying homes.
27th November 2025 -
What is the most economical heating for an apartment, and why?
21st November 2025 -
Living in Almoradí: best areas, cost of living and main advantages
20th November 2025 -
The PP seeks to amend the Penal Code in the Senate to legalize cutting off utilities in squatted houses.
19th November 2025 -
Feijóo criticizes Sánchez’s housing policy: “He will turn a Spain of homeowners into a Spain of precarious citizens.”
19th November 2025 -
How does the rent increase with the CPI work in 2025?
17th November 2025 -
Feijóo criticizes Sánchez's housing policy:
13th November 2025 -
How to detect fake documentation from a potential tenant
12th November 2025 -
BBVA anticipates that housing prices will rise another 7% in 2026.
11th November 2025
Hernández Reche: "We are heading towards another housing bubble, although it is different from the one in 2008."
23rd October 2025
Housing continues to be one of Spaniards’ main concerns, with rising prices, limited supply, and fears of a new bubble. Economist and doctor in economic psychology Vicenç Hernández Reche warns that Spain is heading towards another housing bubble, although different from that of 2008: demand is structural and financing more cautious, but limited supply keeps sustained pressure on prices.
For 2025, he forecasts a 4–6% increase in prices and around 750,000 property sales, although with signs of slowdown by the end of the year. In 2026, prices will continue to rise more moderately, with a market strained by a lack of new housing and rising rents. Among the risks are possible ECB rate hikes, high construction costs, and administrative delays.
The expert identifies structural problems: a supply deficit (only 80,000–100,000 new homes versus a demand of 200,000), lack of affordable housing, excessive urban bureaucracy, and poor energy rehabilitation (over 50% of housing stock is over 40 years old). He proposes speeding up permits, encouraging affordable rentals, and promoting renovation.
He criticizes the Housing Law and rent control, calling them a “failure” for reducing supply and increasing legal uncertainty. Finally, he emphasizes that artificial intelligence will transform the sector through automated valuations, predictive analysis, and fully digital processes, ushering in a new era of professionalism and sustainability in Spain’s housing market.