As prices continue to rise in Spain’s most popular coastal hotspots and cities, more overseas buyers are discovering the advantages of looking just beyond the most sought-after locations.
You don’t have to live on the seafront or in one of Spain’s best-known towns to enjoy great restaurants, healthcare, transport links and a lively year-round atmosphere. For many overseas buyers, choosing a nearby suburb or inland town means more space, better value and a lifestyle that’s easier to enjoy every day.
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Contents
Why more buyers are choosing property beyond the hotspots
Spain’s coastal suburbs and city edges are getting more attention because they solve a common buyer problem: you want the Spain you know and love, but you also want convenience. That means a hospital within reach, a train station you will actually use, a year-round café, a decent supermarket and an airport that does not require a military-style dawn departure.
Recent price data suggests this is no longer a sleepy corner of the market. Tinsa’s May 2026 IMIE report recorded a 16.8% annual rise for Spanish metropolitan areas, while its general index rose 15.4% year on year. Tinsa also notes that metropolitan areas and capital cities reached 2007 nominal highs, although inflation-adjusted values remain below boom-era levels.
That does not mean every suburb is racing ahead. Spain is a country of micro-markets. A well-connected town just outside Valencia, Málaga, Alicante, Madrid or Barcelona may behave very differently to a village with one bus a day and a medical centre open two mornings a week. The lesson is not “buy anywhere away from the coast or city centre”. It is “look for places where people want to live all year round”.
Who should consider looking beyond the hotspots?
Looking just beyond the busiest coastal resorts and city centres can work well if your preferred location has become too expensive but you still want to stay close to the action. It can suit retirees who want healthcare nearby, remote workers who rely on good broadband and families who need schools, sports clubs and transport.
It can also suit regular visitors. If you plan to use your home several times a year, being 20 minutes from a railway station and 40 minutes from an airport may beat being in a postcard village where the last bus leaves before lunch.
You don’t have to rule out your favourite part of Spain just because the most sought-after locations are beyond your budget. Looking a little further inland or just outside the busiest towns can often mean more choice, more space and better value, while keeping beaches, airports and everyday amenities within easy reach.
The trade-off is atmosphere. A home just beyond the most sought-after areas may not give you sea views, old-town balconies or the holiday feeling you had on your first trip to Spain. What it may give you is a lift, parking, a pharmacy, a gym and neighbours who live there all year. That can matter more than romance by month three.
Where to look

Spain has plenty of city-edge and commuter-town options, but two areas come up again and again with Your Overseas Home readers: the Costa del Sol and the Costa Blanca.
On the Costa del Sol, look beyond the most expensive seafront addresses and compare places such as Mijas, Benalmádena, Fuengirola and Estepona’s outer areas. These can give you access to shops, restaurants, healthcare, established international communities and Málaga airport without focusing only on central or frontline locations.
On the Costa Blanca, consider Alicante city’s surrounding neighbourhoods, Torrevieja, Orihuela Costa, Ciudad Quesada, Guardamar del Segura and Gran Alacant. These areas can work well if you want beach access, everyday services and good airport connections while keeping more flexibility on budget.
The same rule applies wherever you buy: visit in winter, check the journey to the airport, test local transport and walk to the supermarket, pharmacy and nearest café. If the area works on an ordinary Tuesday in February, it is much more likely to work as a long-term home.
What to check before buying outside the centre
Start with transport. Check how long it takes to reach the beach, the airport, supermarkets and healthcare, as well as whether there are reliable bus or rail connections. If you’ll be relying on a car, think about parking, commuting and how easy the journey feels outside the holiday season.
Next, check healthcare. For retirement or long stays, map the nearest health centre, private clinic, hospital and pharmacy. Visit the area on a normal weekday, not just during a viewing trip, and see how easy it feels to run errands without making every outing a car journey.
Then look at schools and services. Even if you do not need a school, local families help support shops, cafés, bus routes and sports facilities. That is a good sign for long-term usability and resale.
Rental demand needs careful thought. City-edge homes may appeal to workers, students, visiting relatives and medium-term tenants, but rules vary by municipality and building. Do not assume you can use the property as a holiday let. Check licensing, community rules and local restrictions with an independent lawyer before relying on rental income.
Finally, compare the property itself. Suburban homes often give you more square metres for your money, but watch for older blocks without lifts, poor insulation, noisy roads, limited parking and communities with unpaid fees. A cheaper purchase can become expensive if the building needs major works.
How suburbs compare with coastal resorts
Coastal resorts are often easier to love at first sight. You can smell the sea, walk to lunch and imagine friends visiting. But some resort areas can feel quiet outside peak season, and homes close to the front may attract a premium.
A suburb is a different purchase. You are buying convenience, not just sunshine. The best ones have supermarkets, parks, schools, clinics, cafés and public transport used by locals every day. They may not impress your friends on Instagram, but they can make life simpler.
That said, suburbs are not automatically better value. If a town has a fast rail link, good schools and a short airport journey, local buyers will want it too. You are not the only person doing the sums. Compare price per square metre, monthly community fees, council tax, travel costs and likely maintenance before deciding that “outside the city” means “cheap”.
How to budget when prices are moving
When markets move quickly, your budget needs a buffer. Set your true maximum before you view, then work backwards to include buying costs like purchase tax, notary fees, land registry costs, legal fees, surveys, currency movement, furniture and any renovation.
In faster-moving areas, have your paperwork ready before you travel. That includes proof of funds, mortgage agreement in principle if needed, NIE planning and an independent lawyer lined up. You do not need to rush, but you do need to be ready when the right home appears.
Book a Spain buying consultation to talk through your shortlist, budget and next steps, download the Spain Buying Guide before your viewing trip and speak to Smart Currency Exchange before agreeing a euro price.
Summary
Looking just beyond coastal hotspots and city centres can be a smart move if central and coastal homes now stretch your budget. Focus on transport, healthcare, schools, resale and year-round life, not just the asking price. The right location can give you a home that’s practical to live in as well as enjoyable to visit.
Frequently asked questions
FAQs
It can be, but not always. Well-connected suburbs and commuter towns are becoming more popular, so compare prices carefully and look at what you get for your money, including transport links, local services and property size.
They can be an excellent option if you want easy access to healthcare, shops, restaurants and public transport while avoiding the higher prices of city centres or some coastal hotspots. Visit at different times of the year to make sure the area suits your lifestyle.
Look beyond the property itself. Check transport connections, healthcare, supermarkets, community fees, parking, broadband and any plans for future development. If you hope to rent out the property, make sure you understand the local licensing rules before you buy.







