Madrid · Housing

Finding a flat
in Madrid

The Madrid rental market is one of the tightest in Europe. Demand far exceeds supply, especially in central neighbourhoods. This guide tells you what to expect, which areas suit your lifestyle, and how to secure a flat as a foreigner — even without a Spanish payslip.

✓ Updated Q1 2025 — prices reflect current market

Neighbourhoods — find yours

Madrid's neighbourhoods have very distinct characters. Price, lifestyle, commute and expat density vary enormously from one to the next. Click on any area to explore it.

Retiro Park CASTELLANA GRAN VÍA SALAMANCA CHAMBERÍ CENTRO MALASAÑA LAVAPIÉS LA LATINA CARABANCHEL POZUELO HORTALEZA RETIRO MONTECARMELO SANCHINARRO LAS TABLAS
🗺️
Click on any neighbourhood
to explore it
Salamanca
Premium · Upscale
€1.800
1 bed / mo
€2.600
2 bed / mo
€3.800+
3 bed / mo
Madrid's most prestigious residential district. Luxury boutiques on Serrano, excellent schools, embassies and international businesses. The choice of executives, diplomats and senior expats.
Top international schools nearby
Very safe, well-maintained streets
Excellent restaurants and cafés
Strong expat community
Most expensive district in Madrid
Very traditional — less nightlife
Chamberí
Upper-mid · Residential
€1.400
1 bed / mo
€2.000
2 bed / mo
€2.800
3 bed / mo
The sweet spot for families and professionals. Beautiful 19th-century architecture, excellent metro connections, great local markets and schools. Less touristy than Centro but still central.
Best balance of quality and price
Almagro & Trafalgar sub-zones are very sought after
Excellent public and international schools
Local, authentic neighbourhood feel
High demand — flats go quickly
Centro
Lively · Tourist
€1.200
1 bed / mo
€1.700
2 bed / mo
€2.400
3 bed / mo
The historic heart of Madrid. Sol, Opera, Gran Vía. Incredible location but very touristic — noise, Airbnbs, and transient population. Better for singles or couples than families with children.
Unbeatable central location
Everything walkable
Vibrant nightlife and culture
Tourist noise at all hours
Many flats are short-term rentals
Not ideal for families
Malasaña & Chueca
Creative · LGBTQ+ friendly
€1.100
1 bed / mo
€1.550
2 bed / mo
€2.100
3 bed / mo
Madrid's creative, hipster heartland. Vintage shops, independent cafés, street art and the best brunch scene in the city. Chueca is the LGBTQ+ centre. Popular with young professionals, designers and media types.
Best café and brunch culture
Very walkable and social
Diverse, open-minded community
Loud on weekend nights
Flats often older and smaller
Retiro & Jerónimos
Premium · Serene
€1.600
1 bed / mo
€2.200
2 bed / mo
€3.200
3 bed / mo
Elegant and quiet, bordering the famous Retiro Park. Ideal for professionals and couples who want green space and calm without losing centrality. The Prado and Reina Sofía are walking distance.
Direct access to Retiro Park (350 acres)
Quiet, residential streets
Excellent museums nearby
Less nightlife and local bars
Premium prices
Lavapiés
Multicultural · Emerging
€900
1 bed / mo
€1.250
2 bed / mo
€1.700
3 bed / mo
Madrid's most multicultural neighbourhood — Indian restaurants, Moroccan bakeries, street art and a strong arts scene. Gentrifying fast. Authentic, affordable and very central, but requires more street awareness at night.
Most affordable central option
Incredible food diversity
Thriving arts and theatre scene
Requires more safety awareness at night
Less suited for families with children
La Latina
Traditional · Tapas culture
€1.000
1 bed / mo
€1.400
2 bed / mo
€1.900
3 bed / mo
The home of Madrid's tapas culture — La Cava Baja is the best street for pintxos in the city. Medieval streets, local atmosphere, popular with young Spaniards. Busy on weekends but quieter during the week.
Best tapas scene in Madrid
Authentic local atmosphere
Reasonable prices for location
Very loud on Sundays (El Rastro market)
Limited parking
Pozuelo de Alarcón
Families · Suburban
€1.200
2 bed / mo
€1.700
3 bed / mo
€2.500+
4 bed house
The most popular choice for families with young children. More space, gardens, quieter streets and excellent international schools (American School of Madrid, Runkle). 20 minutes to the financial district by metro or car.
Best international schools in Madrid area
Houses and larger flats available
Very safe, family-oriented community
Large expat community (US, UK, international)
Car needed for daily life
Less walkable city life
Hortaleza
Families · Established
€900-1.100
1 bed / mo
€1.200-1.500
2 bed / mo
€1.600-2.000
3 bed / mo
Established residential district in northeast Madrid. Mix of older and newer buildings, good metro connections and a settled family community. Less trendy than Montecarmelo but more affordable.
Good metro connections (lines 4 and 7)
More affordable than Montecarmelo
Established schools and services
Older building stock in parts
Less modern feel than Sanchinarro
Montecarmelo
Families · Expat hub
€1.000-1.300
1 bed / mo
€1.400-1.800
2 bed / mo
€1.900-2.400
3 bed / mo
One of the most popular choices for expat families in Madrid. Modern urbanisations with gardens and community pools, directly adjacent to the British Council School. Strong British and German expat community. Quiet, safe and very family-oriented.
British Council School — walking distance
Modern buildings with gardens and pools
Very strong expat family community (UK, DE)
Safe, quiet and green environment
Car needed for most errands
45+ minutes to city centre by metro
Sanchinarro
Families · Modern
€1.000-1.200
1 bed / mo
€1.350-1.700
2 bed / mo
€1.800-2.200
3 bed / mo
Planned modern neighbourhood with wide avenues, large supermarkets and good leisure facilities. Hospital La Paz nearby. Popular with families with young children. More commercial and lively than Montecarmelo, slightly more affordable.
Hospital La Paz — one of Madrid's best public hospitals
Large commercial area (Islazul, Ikea nearby)
Modern buildings, good parking
Growing expat community
Less green space than Montecarmelo
Car-dependent lifestyle
Las Tablas
Corporate · Families
€950-1.200
1 bed / mo
€1.300-1.650
2 bed / mo
€1.750-2.100
3 bed / mo
Madrid's technology corridor neighbourhood. Home to major offices of IBM, Microsoft, Indra and other tech companies. SEK International School is located here. Ideal for professionals working in northern Madrid who want to minimise commute and raise a family.
SEK International School — on site
Walking distance to major tech company offices
Most affordable of the northern expat zones
Good transport: metro line 10, M-40 access
Very corporate feel — limited local character
Far from central Madrid social life
Carabanchel
Affordable · Emerging
€700
1 bed / mo
€950
2 bed / mo
€1.300
3 bed / mo
Madrid's most affordable residential district. Working-class and immigrant neighbourhood with a strong local identity. Improving fast, with new cafés, murals and a growing young community. Good metro connections.
Most affordable option in Madrid
Good metro connections to centre
Authentic Madrid community feel
Less infrastructure for expats
Some areas require more awareness at night
Norte de Madrid
Corporate · Families
€1.300-1.700
2 bed avg.
€1.750-2.200
3 bed avg.
The northern corridor is one of Madrid's most popular expat zones for families. It covers three distinct neighbourhoods — click each one individually for detail.
Montecarmelo — British Council School, quiet, green, UK/DE expat hub
Sanchinarro — modern, commercial, Hospital La Paz nearby
Las Tablas — tech corridor, SEK International School, best value
All three require a car for daily life
40-50 min from central Madrid by metro
Premium (€2.000+/2bed)
Upper-mid (€1.500-2.000)
Mid (€1.200-1.500)
Affordable (under €1.200)

Rental prices — Q1 2025

Madrid's rental market has seen consistent annual increases of 8-12% since 2022. The figures below reflect current market rates. Expect to pay a premium for recently renovated flats and penthouse terraces.

Neighbourhood 1 bedroom 2 bedrooms 3 bedrooms Level
Salamanca€1.700-2.000€2.400-3.000€3.500+Premium
Retiro€1.500-1.800€2.100-2.600€3.000+Premium
Chamberí€1.300-1.600€1.800-2.200€2.500-3.000Upper-mid
Malasaña / Chueca€1.000-1.300€1.400-1.800€1.900-2.400Mid
Centro€1.100-1.400€1.500-2.000€2.000-2.600Mid
La Latina€900-1.200€1.200-1.600€1.700-2.100Mid
Lavapiés€800-1.000€1.100-1.400€1.500-1.900Affordable
Hortaleza€900-1.100€1.200-1.500€1.600-2.000Affordable
Montecarmelo€1.000-1.300€1.400-1.800€1.900-2.400Affordable
Sanchinarro€1.000-1.200€1.350-1.700€1.800-2.200Affordable
Las Tablas€950-1.200€1.300-1.650€1.750-2.100Affordable
Carabanchel€650-850€850-1.100€1.100-1.400Budget
Pozuelo de Alarcón€1.000-1.400€1.600-2.200€2.200-3.500Upper-mid
ℹ What's included in the rent

In Spain, rental prices typically exclude utilities (electricity, water, gas, internet). Budget an additional €150-250/month for a standard flat. Community fees (comunidad) are sometimes included — always check.

How to rent a flat in Madrid

The Madrid rental process is faster than many European cities but requires preparation. Most good flats receive multiple applications within 24-48 hours of listing. Speed and readiness of documentation are critical.

1
Define your search (before looking)
Set your budget (rent + €200 utilities), decide your neighbourhood and non-negotiables (lift, terrace, furnished/unfurnished, parking). Being clear saves time and reduces the emotional rollercoaster of Madrid's fast market.
Before searching
2
Prepare your documentation pack
Have these ready before you start viewing: passport, NIE (if you have it), last 3 payslips or employment contract, last 3 months bank statements, reference letter from previous landlord (helpful but not always required). Having everything ready to send by email dramatically improves your chances.
Critical step
3
Search and view
Use Idealista, Fotocasa and Spotahome (see portals section below). Set up email alerts for your search criteria. Visit in person when possible — photos are almost always more flattering than reality. Check natural light, noise levels and mobile signal inside the flat.
1-3 weeks typically
4
Make your offer and negotiate
If you want the flat, express interest immediately. Negotiation is possible but limited in a tight market — landlords rarely drop more than 5%. You can negotiate on: price, included furniture, minor repairs before move-in, or the start date.
5
Sign the contract and pay deposits
Review the contract carefully (see contract section below). You will pay: 1 month fianza (legal deposit, held by the regional government), typically 1-2 months additional guarantee, and the first month's rent — all upfront at signing.
Budget 3-4 months rent upfront
6
Set up utilities and register
Transfer electricity, water and gas to your name, set up internet (Vodafone, Movistar, MásMóvil), and crucially: register at the flat's address with the town hall (empadronamiento). This is essential for healthcare, school enrolment and many bureaucratic processes.
Don't skip empadronamiento

Renting as a foreigner — the real challenges

Being a foreigner in Madrid's rental market is genuinely difficult. Landlords are risk-averse and Spanish law heavily protects tenants, which makes owners cautious. Here is how to overcome the main obstacles.

⚠ The main problem

Most landlords require a Spanish nómina (payslip) showing 3x the monthly rent. If you are new to Spain, have a foreign contract, or are self-employed, this is a real barrier. The strategies below work around it.

📄
Offer a company guarantee
If your employer is relocating you, ask HR for a company guarantee letter (aval empresarial). This tells the landlord the company backs your rent. It is the single most effective tool for corporate expats.
💳
Offer more months upfront
Offering 3-6 months rent upfront instead of the standard 1 month often unlocks flats that would otherwise require a Spanish salary. This reduces the landlord's perceived risk significantly.
🏦
Use bank statements instead
Show 6 months of foreign bank statements demonstrating sufficient, regular income. Have them translated or use an official English-language statement. Combined with a strong employment contract, this usually works.
🤝
Use a relocation agency
Relocation firms (Engel & Völkers, Knight Frank Relocation, local specialists) have direct relationships with landlords and guarantee the rental on your behalf. Costs 1-2 months rent but saves weeks of stress.
🏢
Use expat-friendly platforms
Spotahome, Homefinder and Flatio specialise in international tenants and accept foreign contracts and documentation. More expensive per month but much lower friction.
🏨
Arrive first, search in person
If possible, book a serviced apartment or Airbnb for your first 2-4 weeks. Searching in person, being available to visit immediately and handing over documents face-to-face dramatically improves your conversion rate.

The rental contract — what to know

Spanish rental law (Ley de Arrendamientos Urbanos, LAU) heavily protects tenants. Once you sign, you have significant rights. Understanding the basics protects you from unfair landlords.

✦ Key legal protections

Minimum duration: 5 years for private landlords (7 for companies). Even if the contract says 1 year, Spanish law automatically extends it annually up to 5 years unless you choose to leave. Rent increases are capped at the annual CPI index. Landlord access: the landlord cannot enter without prior notice and your agreement.

ClauseWhat it meansWatch out for
FianzaLegal deposit (1 month). Deposited with the Comunidad de Madrid. Must be returned within 30 days of leaving.Get written confirmation of deposit registration
Garantía adicionalExtra security (typically 1-2 months). Held by landlord. Should be returned on exit if no damage.Document flat condition at move-in with photos
DuraciónContract term. Even 1-year contracts extend to 5 years by law.Check if there's a 6-month early exit clause
Actualización de rentaRent increases tied to INE CPI index by law.Any clause allowing unlimited increases is illegal
SuministrosWho pays utilities. Usually tenant, but always confirm.Get the existing supply contracts transferred to your name
Obras y reparacionesSmall repairs (under €150): tenant. Large repairs: landlord by law.Landlords sometimes try to pass major repairs to tenants
IHonorarios agenciaSince 2023, agency fees are paid by the landlord, NOT the tenant.Any agency charging you fees is acting illegally
✓ Practical tip

Always photograph every room, appliance and piece of furniture on move-in day and send the photos to the landlord by email. This creates a timestamped record that protects your deposit on exit.

Utilities — costs & setup

Setting up utilities in Spain requires patience. Each supply has its own contract and provider. Budget 4-6 weeks for everything to be fully in your name, and keep copies of all contracts.

⚡ Electricity
€60-120/mo
Main providers: Endesa, Iberdrola, Naturgy, Holaluz. Compare rates on Comparaiso.es. Takes 1-5 days to transfer. CUPS number needed (on the existing contract or electricity meter).
💧 Water
€20-35/mo
Provider: Canal de Isabel II (public monopoly in Madrid). Transfer online at canalisabelii.es. Requires NIE and flat address. 3-7 days to process.
🔥 Gas
€30-70/mo
Providers: Naturgy, Endesa, Repsol. Not all flats have gas (many use electric heating). If your flat has gas central heating, budget more in winter. Transfer similar to electricity.
📶 Internet
€35-60/mo
Best options: Vodafone (most reliable), Movistar (best fibre), MásMóvil (cheapest). Fibre optic available in most of Madrid. Installation takes 3-10 days. Compare at bandaancha.eu.
🏢 Comunidad
€50-150/mo
Monthly building maintenance fee. Usually paid by the landlord, but always confirm in the contract. Covers lift, cleaning, building insurance. Higher in buildings with pool or doorman.
🗑️ Basura (rubbish)
€50-150/yr
Annual municipal waste tax. Usually paid by the landlord but sometimes passed to the tenant. Charged by the Ayuntamiento de Madrid. Typically included in the annual IBI tax paid by the owner.
ℹ Total monthly budget for utilities

For a standard 2-bedroom flat: expect €150-250/month for all utilities combined (electricity + water + gas + internet). This is separate from rent. A typical monthly housing cost (rent + utilities) for a 2-bed in Chamberí would be €2.000-2.450/month all-in.

Housing checklist

Track your progress finding and setting up your flat in Madrid.

Completed0 of 12
Define budget (rent + utilities + deposit)
Budget 3-4 months rent for the initial deposit payment
Prepare documentation pack
Passport, NIE, payslips, bank statements, employment contract
Get company guarantee letter (if employer is relocating you)
Ask HR — this is the most powerful document you can have
Set up alerts on Idealista and Fotocasa
Good flats go in 24-48h — alerts are essential
Book temporary accommodation for first 2-4 weeks
Gives you time to search in person without pressure
View flats and check: light, noise, mobile signal, heating
Visit at different times of day if possible
Review contract carefully before signing
Check duration, deposit terms, who pays utilities and repairs
Photograph every room on move-in day and email to landlord
Timestamped evidence protects your deposit on exit
Register empadronamiento at the town hall
Essential for healthcare, schools and bureaucracy — do this first week
Transfer electricity and gas contracts to your name
Canal de Isabel II for water, your chosen provider for electricity/gas
Set up internet (allow 3-10 days for installation)
Vodafone or Movistar recommended for reliability
Set up direct debits for rent and utilities
Late payment of rent in Spain can affect your credit record
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