The most expensive house price in the Valencian Community and the one that increases the most in all of Spain is in the Marina Alta The most expensive house price in the Valencian Community and the one that increases the most in all of Spain is in the Marina Alta
LaMarinaAlta.com
Search

The most expensive house price in the Valencian Community and the one that increases the most in all of Spain is in the Marina Alta

06 2024 April - 08: 00

The news about housing prices in the Marina Alta does not give a respite. The region is in the spotlight of real estate portals and official studies and not precisely because of the facilities for accessing housing.

This time, the focus is on a specific municipality, where has recorded the most expensive price of housing in the entire Valencian Community last March 2024. Benissa It reached 3.752 euros per square meter, although it was slightly less than in February, when it reached €3.809/m2, according to the latest sales price report from the apartments.com platform.

On the other hand, two other coastal towns in the region They lead the largest price increase in all of Spain in 2023. The data on the assessed value of free housing in municipalities with more than 25.000 inhabitants published by the Ministry of Transport and Sustainable Mobility reveal that Calp and Dénia They are two of the Spanish towns where housing prices have increased the most.

The town of Peñón would be in first place, with a 22,3% of interannual variation in the appraised value of the home. The price reached 2.276,60 euros per square meter, while in 2022 it was 1861,50 euros/m2.

Third place in the ranking of municipalities with the greatest increase in housing values ​​goes to Dénia, which is below San Roque, in Cádiz. The cost there was 2021,60 euros/m2 in 2023. In 2022 the price stood at 1707,90 euros, so the increase from one year to the next has been 18,4%.

Comments
  1. Martha says:

    Eine traurige Bilanz das diese Entwicklung noch vertreten wird. Kein Wunder wenn man hier nur das GELD sprechen lässt und nicht die sozialen Aspekte berücksichtigt.
    Wohnraum wird LUXUS das wird immer mehr sichtbar, leider
    Die Zukunft verheißt nichts Gutes

  2. observer says:

    We have to take into account that we are in a European Union with free movement of people and capital, so that Jávea is already accessible and familiar to three hundred million Europeans, plus non-EU citizens such as Russians, Estonians, Lithuanians, Moroccans and British. A large part of these foreigners has a much greater purchasing power than what Spain has today and we should also add the boom in teleworking, the aging of the European population that provides more retirees, the war in Ukraine, which causes neighboring countries bring the money to safer areas, and to top it all off, the golden Visa, which grants a residence permit in Spain when non-EU citizens buy a property worth more than €500.000, which is little money for millions of people. What would not be understood is that things were not as they are with this cocktail of factors.
    Future? There is only a future if our educational/professional level allows us to increase purchasing power, but it seems that there is no public or private concern about the majority school failure in the region, which condemns low-skilled jobs that will never allow access to housing in property. Someone said that today's youth belongs to only two social classes: Those who have parents who will donate or inherit housing and assets, and those who do not have parents, who are and will be outcasts without a solution. Hard but real.

  3. Bad data says:

    Well, that fact gives you a lot to think about. It is not a fact to be proud of. The future doesn't look good in my opinion.

  4. Fortuna says:

    And we should be proud of "this"????


5.430
1.669