MUNDO Research Team · Vetted by Costa del Sol property professionals
Published April 2025 · Updated February 2026 · 6 min read
Everyone says Spain is cheaper than the UK. Almost nobody gives you actual numbers. So here they are — a line-by-line comparison for a couple living on the Costa del Sol versus a comparable UK coastal town, using February 2026 data from Numbeo, Idealista, ONS, and Ofgem.
The short answer: the Costa del Sol is about 15-20% cheaper overall. But the gap is narrower than most people expect, and a few hidden costs can close it further.
The Monthly Budget: Costa del Sol
| Category | Monthly (EUR) | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Rent (2-bed apartment) | €1,400 | Estepona/Fuengirola mid-range. Marbella: €2,000-3,000. Málaga city: €1,000-1,200 |
| Groceries | €480 | Mercadona weekly shop for two. Bread €1.66, milk €1.09, eggs €2.62, chicken €7.33/kg |
| Utilities | €200 | Electricity, water, internet. Summer AC can push electricity alone to €150-250 |
| Healthcare (private insurance) | €200 | Mandatory for visa. Sanitas from €89/person. Rises sharply with age |
| Transport (one car) | €250 | Fuel, insurance (€428/year avg), ITV, road tax. Petrol: €1.44/litre |
| Dining out | €400 | 2-3x per week. Menu del día: €10-14. Dinner for two: €40-50. Coffee: €1.20-1.50 |
| IBI + Basura (property taxes) | €75 | IBI: €400-800/year for 2-bed. New basura tax: €165-200/year |
| Community fees | €175 | Standard urbanisation with pool and gardens. Luxury complexes: €350-1,000+ |
| Total | €3,180 | ~£2,765 at current rates |
The Monthly Budget: UK (Brighton)
| Category | Monthly (GBP) | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Rent (2-bed flat) | £1,400 | Brighton average. Bournemouth: ~£1,257 |
| Groceries | £500 | Mix of Tesco and Sainsbury's. ONS data: £64-74/week |
| Utilities (energy + water + broadband) | £240 | Ofgem cap Q1 2026: £1,758/year. Water: £603/year |
| Healthcare | £0 | NHS free at point of use |
| Transport (one car) | £300 | Fuel, insurance (£551-726/year avg), MOT, road tax (£190/year) |
| Dining out | £500 | 2-3x per week. Coffee: £3.00-3.50. Dinner for two: £60-80. Pint: £5.50-7.00 |
| Council tax | £185 | Band D Brighton: ~£2,150-2,300/year |
| Service charge | £150 | Typical leasehold flat |
| Total | £3,275 |
Where You Save
| Category | Spain (GBP equiv.) | UK (GBP) | Saving |
|---|---|---|---|
| Dining out | £348 | £500 | -30% |
| Property taxes | £65 | £185 | -65% |
| Transport | £217 | £300 | -28% |
| Utilities | £174 | £240 | -28% |
| Groceries | £417 | £500 | -17% |
The biggest savings are in dining out and property taxes. A coffee is €1.20 instead of £3.30. A three-course menú del día with a drink is €12 — try getting that in Brighton for under £18. Council tax versus IBI isn't even close.
Where You Don't Save
Healthcare is the great equaliser. The NHS costs you nothing at point of use. In Spain, private health insurance is mandatory for your visa, and you'll pay €100-200+ per person per month. For a couple in their 50s, that's €200-300/month — roughly £175-260 — that you simply don't have in the UK budget.
Rent savings are modest at around 13%. And grocery savings, while real, are only about 17% — Mercadona is cheap, but it's not that much cheaper than Lidl in the UK.
The Hidden Costs Nobody Mentions
Flights Home
You will go back to the UK. Probably 4-6 times a year. Budget £80-200 per return trip depending on the season and how far in advance you book. Ryanair from Málaga starts at £15 one-way in winter, but Christmas and August will cost you £150+ each way.
Annual budget: £500 - £1,200
Gestoría Fees
A gestoría handles Spanish bureaucracy — your tax returns, NIE renewals, car registration, and the dozen other things that require someone who speaks fluent Spanish and knows which form goes where. Nearly essential for non-Spanish speakers.
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- Annual tax return: €150 - €300
- NIE application help: €100 - €250
- Non-resident tax return (Modelo 210): €81 per person
- Ongoing monthly if needed: €120+/month
Annual budget: €300 - €600
Car Registration / Import
Post-Brexit, importing a UK car is complex. If you're not exempt from customs duty and VAT, you're looking at €2,000 - €5,000 depending on the car's value (10% customs duty + 21% IVA + 4.75-14.75% registration tax based on CO2 emissions). If you qualify for the residency exemption (owned the car 6+ months before moving, registered within 30 days), total fees are around €500-800.
Many expats find it cheaper to sell the UK car and buy locally.
First-Year Setup Costs
NIE/TIE paperwork, gestoría assistance, document translations, bank account setup — budget €2,000 - €5,000 for the first year of administrative costs, excluding the car.
The Tax Question
This is where it gets complicated — and where many people make expensive assumptions.
Spain's personal allowance is €5,550 (versus £12,570 in the UK). Spain starts taxing at 19% from the first euro above that. A UK retiree on £25,000 pays roughly 7% effective tax in the UK but could face 15-20% in Spain.
Some specifics that matter:
- UK State Pension: Taxed only in Spain (not the UK) under the double taxation treaty. Subject to Spain's progressive rates.
- Private pensions: Same — taxed in Spain only.
- Civil service / government pensions: Taxed in the UK only. Teachers, NHS workers, police, and military keep their pension taxed at UK rates — a significant advantage.
- Beckham Law (remote workers): Flat 24% rate on income up to €600,000 for 6 years. Must not have been resident in Spain in the previous 5 years. Massive benefit for remote workers earning £40K+ from a UK employer.
- Andalusia bonus: 100% wealth tax relief (effectively €0) if net wealth is under €3M. And a 99% reduction on inheritance tax for direct family. Both are extremely favourable compared to most other Spanish regions.
The Currency Factor
The current rate is £1 = €1.15 (February 2026). Forecasts suggest relative stability around 1.13-1.15 through 2026.
But here's what a 10-cent swing does to your monthly budget of €3,180:
| Exchange Rate | Monthly Cost (GBP) |
|---|---|
| £1 = €1.20 (strong pound) | £2,650 |
| £1 = €1.15 (current) | £2,765 |
| £1 = €1.10 (weak pound) | £2,891 |
| £1 = €1.05 (very weak) | £3,029 |
That's a swing of nearly £400 per month — or £4,500 per year — between a strong and weak pound. Use a currency specialist (Wise, CurrencyFair) instead of high-street banks, consider forward contracts to lock in rates, and keep a 3-month buffer in euros.
Related Reading
The Bottom Line
The Costa del Sol is cheaper than the UK. But not dramatically so. The real savings come from dining out, lower property taxes, and cheaper transport. The NHS is a genuine cost advantage that you lose. Currency fluctuations can wipe out the entire saving in a bad year.
What the numbers don't capture: 320 days of sunshine, outdoor living that reduces heating costs to near zero outside winter, free beach access, and a pace of life that most UK coastal towns can't match. For many people, those are worth more than the 15-20% budget saving.
Data from Numbeo, Idealista, ONS, Ofgem, XE.com, Mercadona, Sanitas, and GOV.UK. February 2026. Exchange rate: £1 = €1.15.