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Properties Under €200,000 in Spain and Portugal: Where to Look

Properties Under €200,000 in Spain and Portugal: Where to Look

Find cheap property in Spain and Portugal under €200,000. Budget-friendly areas, what your money buys, rental yields, and hidden costs for UK buyers in 2026.

Last updated: February 2026

M

MUNDO Research Team · Vetted by Costa del Sol property professionals

Published February 2026 · Updated February 2026 · 18 min read

The €200,000 Budget: What Is Realistic in 2026?

A budget of €200,000 still opens doors across Spain and Portugal — but not everywhere, and not for every property type. The Costa del Sol, Lisbon, Barcelona, and the Algarve's golden triangle have moved firmly beyond this price point for anything larger than a studio or modest one-bed apartment. Yet dozens of attractive coastal and inland areas across the Iberian Peninsula offer genuine value: two-bedroom apartments with sea views, renovated townhouses in whitewashed villages, and even detached country houses with land.

For UK buyers, the post-Brexit landscape has not changed the fundamental economics. Sterling buys roughly €1.17-€1.19 in early 2026, meaning a £170,000 budget converts to approximately €200,000. Factor in purchase costs of 10-13% on top (taxes, notary, registry, legal fees), and your actual spending power on the property itself is closer to €175,000-€180,000. This guide accounts for that reality.

Key principle: At the sub-€200,000 level, your biggest decision is not "Spain or Portugal" — it is "coast or inland." Coastal properties command a 30-60% premium over equivalent inland homes, but they also offer stronger rental demand and more liquid resale markets.

Spain: The Best Areas Under €200,000

Torrevieja and Orihuela Costa (Alicante Province)

Torrevieja remains the single best-value coastal destination in Spain for UK buyers on a budget. The area has a massive British expat community, direct flights from multiple UK airports to Alicante (30 minutes away), and a well-established infrastructure of English-speaking services — from solicitors to supermarkets.

What €200,000 buys you in Torrevieja and Orihuela Costa:

  • €80,000-€120,000: 2-bed apartment in a complex with communal pool, 5-15 minutes from the beach. Many renovated to a good standard. Community fees €40-€80/month
  • €120,000-€160,000: 3-bed apartment or 2-bed ground-floor bungalow with garden. Better locations, closer to beaches and amenities
  • €160,000-€200,000: 2-3 bed townhouse with private solarium, or a well-positioned 2-bed with sea views. Some detached villas with small plots in Orihuela Costa

Rental yield potential: 5-7% gross for short-term holiday lets, 4-5% for long-term rentals. The area attracts budget-conscious holidaymakers from the UK, Scandinavia, and Northern Europe year-round thanks to its mild winters (15-18°C average in January).

Almería Province: Roquetas de Mar, Mojácar, and Vera

Almería is Spain's least-discovered coastal province among UK buyers, which is precisely why it offers such good value. The coastline is dramatic — the Cabo de Gata natural park has some of the most unspoilt beaches in the Mediterranean — and property prices are 30-40% below the Costa del Sol or Costa Blanca.

  • Roquetas de Mar: €90,000-€150,000 gets a 2-3 bed apartment near the beach. A family-friendly resort town with good infrastructure but less international tourism than the Costa del Sol
  • Mojácar: €120,000-€190,000 for a 2-bed apartment or townhouse. Mojácar Pueblo (the hilltop village) has character and charm; Mojácar Playa (the beach strip) has convenience and rental demand
  • Vera Playa: €100,000-€170,000 for a 2-3 bed apartment. Known for its long sandy beach and naturist area. Growing in popularity with Northern European buyers

The main drawback: Almería airport has limited international connections. Most UK buyers fly into Alicante (2 hours north) or Malaga (2.5 hours west). The A-7 motorway runs along the coast, but the drive adds time and complexity to access.

Murcia: Mar Menor and La Manga

The Region of Murcia, squeezed between Alicante and Almería, offers some of the lowest property prices on Spain's Mediterranean coast. The Mar Menor (Europe's largest saltwater lagoon) provides calm, warm waters ideal for families and water sports.

  • €70,000-€130,000: 2-bed apartment in San Pedro del Pinatar, Santiago de la Ribera, or Los Alcázares. Many with communal pool access and walking distance to the Mar Menor
  • €130,000-€200,000: 3-bed apartment, townhouse, or even a small detached villa with pool in the golf resort areas (La Torre, Hacienda del Álamo). Some frontline La Manga strip apartments in this range

Murcia has its own international airport (Corvera/Juan de la Cierva), with Ryanair and easyJet connections to several UK airports. Rental yields are moderate (4-6% gross) but improving as the area gains recognition.

Watch out: The Mar Menor has experienced environmental problems — algal blooms caused by agricultural runoff led to fish die-offs in 2019-2021. The regional government has invested heavily in remediation since 2022, and conditions have improved significantly, but research the current ecological status before buying a property whose value depends on lagoon-front appeal.

Huelva Province: Spain's Hidden Coast

Huelva occupies the stretch of Atlantic coastline between the Algarve and Seville, and it is remarkably affordable. The beaches here rival anything on the Costa de la Luz — wide, sandy, and uncrowded — but Huelva lacks the international airport, resort infrastructure, and marketing that drive prices up elsewhere.

  • Isla Cristina and Isla Canela: €100,000-€180,000 for a 2-3 bed apartment near the beach. Small-scale tourism, excellent seafood, Portuguese border 20 minutes away
  • Punta Umbría: €90,000-€160,000 for a 2-bed apartment. A genuine Spanish beach town — almost entirely domestic tourism, minimal expat presence
  • Ayamonte: €80,000-€150,000. Border town overlooking the Guadiana River and Portugal. Ferry to Vila Real de Santo António (Algarve) takes 10 minutes

Access: Faro airport (Portugal) is 45-60 minutes from Isla Cristina. Seville airport is 90 minutes. No direct flights from the UK to Huelva itself.

Castellón Province: Costa del Azahar

North of Valencia, Castellón offers long stretches of orange-grove-backed coastline with prices well below Valencia city or the Costa Blanca. Peñíscola — a spectacular fortified town on a rocky headland — is the headline attraction, but the entire coast offers value.

  • Peñíscola: €100,000-€180,000 for a 2-3 bed apartment. Strong domestic holiday rental demand (Peñíscola is one of Spain's most popular summer destinations for Spanish families)
  • Oropesa del Mar: €80,000-€150,000. A smaller resort town with a good beach and a marina
  • Benicàssim: €110,000-€190,000. Known for its music festival (FIB) and genteel, old-money Spanish feel

Access: Valencia airport (1 hour south) or Reus airport (2 hours north). Not convenient for a quick weekend trip from the UK, which limits short-term rental potential to Spanish domestic tourists.

Inland Andalusia: Granada, Córdoba, and the White Villages

If you are willing to trade beach access for culture, history, and extraordinary value, inland Andalusia delivers more property per euro than anywhere else in Western Europe.

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  • Granada city: €120,000-€200,000 for a 2-3 bed apartment in the Albaicín, Realejo, or Centro districts. A UNESCO World Heritage city with the Alhambra, a university, ski resort (Sierra Nevada 30 minutes), and beaches 45 minutes away
  • White villages (Pueblos Blancos): €50,000-€150,000 for a 2-4 bed village house in towns like Ronda, Antequera, Alhama de Granada, Priego de Córdoba, or Vélez-Málaga. Some need renovation; others are turnkey
  • Córdoba: €80,000-€170,000 for a central apartment. Another UNESCO city — the Mezquita, patios festival, and year-round cultural tourism

Inland Andalusia excels for retirees and remote workers who want space, culture, and authenticity rather than beach-resort convenience. Rental yields are lower (3-5% gross) unless your property is in a major tourist city with Airbnb demand.

Portugal: The Best Areas Under €200,000

Silver Coast (Costa de Prata): Peniche, Caldas da Rainha, Óbidos

The Silver Coast runs north of Lisbon along the Atlantic, offering dramatic surf beaches, medieval towns, and property prices that are a fraction of the Algarve or Lisbon. It has become increasingly popular with UK buyers who want coastal living without the Algarve price tag.

  • Peniche: €120,000-€190,000 for a 2-bed apartment near the coast. Peniche is a world-class surf destination (Supertubos hosts the WSL Championship Tour). Strong rental demand from surfers and beach tourists
  • Caldas da Rainha: €80,000-€150,000 for a 2-3 bed apartment or townhouse. A market town with thermal baths, 15 minutes from the coast. Good value base for exploring the region
  • Óbidos: €100,000-€180,000 for a renovated apartment or small house. A fairy-tale walled town — extremely photogenic and popular with tourists, which supports rental income
  • São Martinho do Porto: €100,000-€170,000 for a 2-bed apartment. A sheltered bay shaped like a scallop shell — perfect for families with children. Calm water, sandy beach

Access: Lisbon airport is 60-90 minutes south. The A8 motorway provides good road connections. The Silver Coast has a growing expat community but remains predominantly Portuguese, which many buyers prefer.

Central Alentejo: Évora, Estremoz, Elvas

The Alentejo is Portugal's Tuscany — rolling cork oak landscapes, whitewashed villages, world-class wine, and a pace of life that makes the Algarve look frantic. Property prices are remarkably low, though this reflects limited rental demand and a less liquid resale market.

  • Évora: €100,000-€180,000 for a 2-3 bed apartment or townhouse in the UNESCO-listed city centre. Strong Airbnb demand from cultural tourists
  • Rural quintas: €80,000-€200,000 for smallholdings and farmhouses with land. Some need significant renovation (budget €30,000-€80,000 on top). Others have been sensitively restored
  • Estremoz, Elvas, Monsaraz: €60,000-€150,000 for village houses with character. Extremely affordable but remote — suited to retirees or remote workers, not holiday rental investors

Inland Algarve: Silves, São Brás de Alportel, Monchique

The coastal Algarve has priced out most sub-€200,000 buyers for anything beyond a studio apartment. But move 15-20 kilometres inland and prices drop by 30-50%, while you retain easy access to the beaches.

  • Silves: €130,000-€195,000 for a 2-3 bed villa or townhouse. A beautiful Moorish town on the Arade River, 20 minutes from the coast. Has its own castle, cathedral, and a growing international community
  • São Brás de Alportel: €120,000-€190,000. The "garden of the Algarve" — lush, hilly, and popular with retirees. 20 minutes to Faro, 30 minutes to the coast
  • Monchique: €80,000-€170,000. Mountain town with thermal springs and eucalyptus forests. Cooler in summer than the coast (a genuine advantage). More remote but offers space and tranquillity

Northern Portugal: Porto, Braga, Viana do Castelo

Northern Portugal offers UK buyers a completely different experience from the Algarve — green landscapes, cooler weather, rich cuisine, and significantly lower prices. Porto itself has become expensive in the centre, but the wider region remains affordable.

  • Porto suburbs (Gaia, Matosinhos, Maia): €130,000-€200,000 for a 2-bed apartment with metro access to the city centre. Porto's tourism boom supports strong short-term rental demand
  • Braga: €100,000-€170,000 for a 2-3 bed apartment. Portugal's third city — university town, young population, excellent food scene. 30 minutes from Porto by train
  • Viana do Castelo: €90,000-€160,000 for a 2-3 bed apartment. Coastal city with stunning beaches, the Santa Luzia basilica, and minimal foreign tourism (for now)

Access: Porto airport has excellent UK connections (Ryanair, easyJet, BA, TAP). Braga and Viana are within 45-75 minutes of the airport.

Price Comparison Table: What €200,000 Buys in Each Area

LocationCountryTypical Property for €200,000Distance to BeachGross Rental Yield
TorreviejaSpain3-bed townhouse with solarium and communal pool5-10 min5-7%
Roquetas de MarSpain3-bed apartment, beachfront complex2-5 min4-6%
MojácarSpain2-bed apartment with sea views5-15 min4-6%
Mar Menor (Los Alcázares)Spain3-bed villa with private pool in golf resort10-15 min4-6%
Isla Cristina (Huelva)Spain3-bed apartment, near beach5-10 min3-5%
Peñíscola (Castellón)Spain2-3 bed apartment in old town or beachfront1-5 min4-6%
Granada citySpain3-bed apartment in historic centre45 min4-6%
Inland Andalusia villageSpain4-bed village house, renovated, with terrace30-60 min2-4%
Peniche (Silver Coast)Portugal2-bed apartment near surf beaches5-10 min5-7%
Caldas da RainhaPortugal3-bed townhouse, renovated15 min3-5%
Silves (Inland Algarve)Portugal3-bed villa with garden, edge of town20 min4-6%
Évora (Alentejo)Portugal3-bed apartment in UNESCO centre90 min4-5%
Braga (Northern Portugal)Portugal3-bed apartment, city centre30 min4-6%

Hidden Costs That Eat Into Your Budget

UK buyers focusing on the headline price often underestimate the additional costs of purchasing in Spain or Portugal. At the sub-€200,000 level, these costs represent a larger proportion of your total investment, so they matter more.

Spain: Purchase Costs (10-13% of Property Price)

CostTypical Amount
Transfer tax (ITP) — varies by region6-10% (7% in Andalusia, 10% in Valencia/Catalonia)
Notary fees€600-€1,200
Land Registry fees€400-€800
Legal fees (independent solicitor)€1,500-€3,000 (1-1.5% of price)
NIE application€100-€200 (or €300-€500 via agent/gestor)
Mortgage arrangement fee (if applicable)0.5-1% of mortgage amount
Valuation fee (if mortgaged)€300-€500

On a €180,000 property in Andalusia, expect to pay approximately €18,000-€22,000 in total purchase costs, bringing your all-in cost to €198,000-€202,000.

Portugal: Purchase Costs (8-11% of Property Price)

CostTypical Amount
IMT (property transfer tax) — sliding scale2-6% depending on price and property type
Stamp duty (Imposto de Selo)0.8%
Notary and registry fees€500-€1,000
Legal fees€1,500-€3,000
NIF application€100-€200 (or €200-€400 via fiscal representative)

Portugal's IMT sliding scale means that cheaper properties pay a lower percentage — a €150,000 primary residence pays approximately 2.3% IMT, while €200,000 pays approximately 3.7%. This progressivity works in favour of budget buyers.

Ongoing Annual Costs (Both Countries)

  • Property tax (IBI in Spain / IMI in Portugal): €300-€1,200/year depending on property value and municipality
  • Community fees (apartments/urbanisations): €600-€3,000/year
  • Home insurance: €200-€500/year
  • Non-resident income tax (deemed income on days not rented): €150-€500/year
  • Utilities (electricity, water, gas, internet): €100-€200/month when occupied
  • Property management (if renting): 15-25% of rental income

Use the MUNDO property calculator to estimate your total purchase and ongoing costs for any budget level.

Renovation: Opportunity and Trap

At the sub-€200,000 level, many buyers consider purchasing a cheaper property and renovating it. This can deliver excellent results — or it can turn into a financial sinkhole.

When Renovation Makes Sense

  • Cosmetic updates only: new kitchen, bathroom refresh, painting, new flooring. Budget €10,000-€25,000. Adds genuine value and is relatively low-risk
  • Structurally sound buildings in good locations: a dated 2-bed apartment in a prime location for €120,000 + €30,000 renovation may be worth €180,000-€200,000 when finished
  • Known quantities: properties where a surveyor has confirmed no structural issues, damp, or illegal modifications

When Renovation Is Risky

  • Structural work needed: roof replacement, damp treatment, underpinning, rewiring. Costs escalate rapidly and unpredictably. A "€30,000 renovation" can become €60,000-€80,000
  • Rural properties without services: connecting electricity, water, and sewerage to a remote finca can cost €10,000-€30,000 before any building work begins
  • Properties with planning irregularities: extensions without permission, changes of use, or construction on rustic land. Regularisation is expensive, slow, and sometimes impossible
  • Managing remotely: overseeing builders from the UK is difficult. Without regular site visits, quality suffers and timelines slip
Budget rule: Always add 20-30% contingency to any renovation estimate. If your builder quotes €25,000, budget €30,000-€32,500. This is not pessimism — it is experience.

Transport Links Back to the UK

For a second home or holiday property, getting there easily and cheaply matters. Budget airlines have transformed access to Iberia, but not all areas are equally well-served.

AirportServesUK Routes (2026)Flight Time
AlicanteTorrevieja, Orihuela Costa, Mar Menor, Almería (north)20+ UK airports (Ryanair, easyJet, BA, Jet2)2h 15m
Murcia (Corvera)Mar Menor, La Manga, Cartagena6-8 UK airports (Ryanair, easyJet)2h 20m
AlmeríaMojácar, Vera, Roquetas de Mar3-4 UK airports (limited schedules)2h 30m
FaroAlgarve, Huelva (Spain)15+ UK airports2h 45m
LisbonSilver Coast, Alentejo, central Portugal10+ UK airports2h 30m
PortoNorthern Portugal, Braga, Viana8-10 UK airports2h 15m
MalagaCosta del Sol, Granada (via A-92), Almería (west)25+ UK airports2h 30m
ValenciaCastellón, Peñíscola8-10 UK airports2h 15m
SevilleInland Andalusia, Huelva5-6 UK airports2h 40m

Check flight frequency, not just availability. An area with daily year-round flights from your local UK airport is far more practical than one with twice-weekly seasonal connections that require a 90-minute drive from a distant airport.

Common Budget-Buyer Mistakes

  1. Buying the cheapest property you can find. There is usually a reason a property is dramatically cheaper than its neighbours — structural problems, legal issues, terrible location, or a community with crippling debts. Cheap is not the same as good value
  2. Ignoring community fees and annual costs. A €100,000 apartment with €300/month community fees costs more to own than a €150,000 apartment with €60/month fees. Over 10 years, the "cheap" apartment costs €36,000 more in fees alone
  3. Skipping the independent lawyer. At the budget end of the market, some buyers try to save €1,500-€2,000 on legal fees by using the seller's lawyer or no lawyer at all. This is the most expensive false economy in property — problems that a lawyer would catch can cost tens of thousands to fix
  4. Underestimating renovation costs. "It just needs a lick of paint" is the most dangerous phrase in property. Get a professional survey before buying any property you plan to renovate
  5. Buying in an area with no rental market. If your plan includes rental income, verify that there is genuine demand. A beautiful village house in the middle of nowhere may cost €80,000 but generate zero rental income
  6. Ignoring currency risk. A 10% swing in GBP/EUR (which has happened multiple times in the past decade) changes your £170,000 from €200,000 to €180,000 overnight. Use a forward contract through a currency specialist to lock in your rate
  7. Falling in love on holiday. A location that delights you in August may feel desolate in February. Visit in winter before committing. Check whether shops, restaurants, and medical facilities are open year-round

Mortgage Requirements for Lower-Value Properties

Obtaining a Spanish or Portuguese mortgage for a sub-€200,000 property as a non-resident UK buyer is possible but has specific considerations:

  • Minimum loan amount: Most Iberian banks set a floor of €50,000-€80,000. Some will not lend below €100,000 to non-residents, making mortgages on very cheap properties impractical
  • Loan-to-value (LTV): Typically 60-70% for non-residents (down from 80% for residents). On a €180,000 property, expect to put down €54,000-€72,000 cash
  • Income requirements: Monthly mortgage payments must not exceed 30-35% of your demonstrable net income. Most banks require two years of tax returns and three months of bank statements
  • Age limits: Most Spanish and Portuguese banks cap the mortgage term so that the loan is repaid by age 70-75. A 60-year-old may only qualify for a 10-15 year term, resulting in higher monthly payments
  • Arrangement fees: 0.5-1.5% of the loan amount, plus €300-€500 for the valuation
  • Life insurance: Many Spanish banks require you to take out life insurance through their partner (often at inflated premiums). You can legally switch to an independent provider after completion, but be aware of this cost

For properties under €120,000, many UK buyers find it simpler to purchase with cash (using savings, UK equity release, or a UK remortgage) rather than navigating the Spanish or Portuguese mortgage process.

Future Appreciation: Where Will Prices Go?

Nobody can predict property markets with certainty, but several trends favour the budget areas listed in this guide:

  • Remote work migration: UK professionals working remotely are seeking affordable coastal and city bases in southern Europe. Areas with fast internet, good lifestyle amenities, and lower living costs benefit disproportionately
  • Retirement demographics: The UK's baby boomer generation (born 1946-1964) is entering retirement with significant housing equity. Many will downsize in the UK and buy in Iberia — the affordable areas will absorb much of this demand
  • Infrastructure investment: Spain's high-speed rail network continues to expand, improving access to previously remote areas. Portugal's Silver Coast is benefiting from road improvements and growing domestic tourism investment
  • Price discovery: As the well-known areas (Costa del Sol, Algarve coast, Barcelona, Lisbon) become increasingly expensive, buyers and agents actively seek and promote alternatives. Today's hidden gem is tomorrow's established market — which drives appreciation

The areas most likely to see above-average appreciation are those combining affordability with improving transport links and growing international interest: Almería, the Silver Coast, Murcia, and inland Algarve.

Lifestyle Quality Comparison

Value is not just about property prices — it is about the life you can afford to live. Monthly living costs for a couple in the budget areas of Spain and Portugal are significantly lower than the UK or the premium resort areas:

ExpenseBudget Spain (Torrevieja, Almería, Murcia)Budget Portugal (Silver Coast, Alentejo)Costa del Sol (Marbella)
Weekly grocery shop (2 people)€50-€70€40-€60€70-€100
Meal out (2 courses, 2 people)€20-€35€18-€30€40-€80
Beer / wine (bar)€1.50-€2.50 / €2-€4€1.50-€2.50 / €2-€4€3-€5 / €4-€8
Electricity (monthly, avg.)€60-€100€50-€90€80-€150
Private health insurance€60-€120/month€50-€100/month€80-€150/month
Monthly total (excl. property costs)€1,000-€1,500€900-€1,400€1,500-€2,500

In practical terms, a couple with a paid-for property in budget Spain or Portugal can live comfortably on a combined income of €1,500-€2,000/month — achievable with UK state pensions alone for many retired couples.

Next Steps for Budget Buyers

  1. Define your priorities: Beach access? Culture? Rental income? Year-round living? Each answer narrows the field differently
  2. Research airport connections from your UK base — this will eliminate some areas and highlight others
  3. Visit in low season (November-February) to see areas at their quietest and most honest
  4. Budget for total costs, not just the headline price. Use the MUNDO calculator for accurate estimates
  5. Engage an independent lawyer before signing anything — this is non-negotiable regardless of your budget
  6. Explore your mortgage options early — UK and Iberian brokers can pre-qualify you so you know your exact budget before you start viewing

For a comprehensive overview of the buying process, read our complete guide to buying property in Spain. If you are considering the Portuguese market, our Portugal buying guide covers the process step by step. Browse affordable areas on the UK buyers hub or explore specific towns like Torremolinos and Fuengirola on our location pages.

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Disclaimer

This guide is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal, tax, or financial advice. Property laws and tax regulations change frequently — always consult a qualified Spanish lawyer and tax advisor before making any property purchase decisions. Data sourced from Spanish Land Registry, Idealista, and MUNDO partner network. Last verified: March 2026.

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