The Spanish housing market is building momentum again after its deep correction between 2008 and 2013, which erased part of the excesses created over the early 2000s. In 2021, transaction volumes hit their highest level for twelve years. House prices have been growing at an average of 5% per year over the past six years. Housing activity is now benefiting from multiple sources of support: the post-Covid economic recovery, higher levels of household savings, growth in employment, low borrowing rates.
Rising housing prices are driven by limits on housing supply, which are likely to persist, given rising construction costs as a result of higher materials expenses. A tightening of lending conditions would be less problematic than in 2008: household indebtedness and debt service have fallen significantly over recent years. However, these price increases are contributing to the rise in inequality in the country. The “right to housing law” bill, currently in discussion at the parliament, seeks to regulate various areas of the real estate market (better access to housing, regulation of evictions, increase in social housing supply, rent controls), but this will only partly address the problem of a shortfall in building.
A notable recovery in 2021
Real estate market activity in Spain recovered spectacularly in 2021, after collapsing in 2020 due to the lockdown measures introduced to tackle the Covid-19 epidemic. Nearly 670,000 real estate transactions took place last year, a level not seen since 20071 (see chart 1).
According to INE, housing prices rose by 3.7% in 2021, continuing the strong pace of the last six years (average yearly increase of 4.9% between 2015 and 2020). Although housing prices are still 10% below their peak in summer 2007, price growth is accelerating. Figures from Tinsa show that this trend continued in the first quarter of 2022, with a 6.8% year-on-year increase in March. This indicator is well correlated with the INE quarterly index.
However, these figures hide significant differences between regions. In the Madrid area and tourist and/or densely populated regions (Balearic Islands, Melilla, Ceuta), real estate prices have recorded rapid growth since 2015; indeed prices in some regions are now higher than they were in 2007/2008.
Conversely, in rural and more sparsely populated regions (Extremadura, Castile and León, Navarre, Aragon), prices are fluctuating at least 20% below their levels of fifteen years ago. This said, the number of real estate transactions in most of these areas has also started to rise, suggesting that price increases could be more rapid this year.
Multiple source of support
The Spanish housing market has benefited from many sources of support, notably on the demand side. First, over the course of 2019 and 2020, Spanish households increased their savings considerably; Eurostat figures suggest an increase of nearly EUR70 billion. This increase was particularly strong in 2020 (EUR46.2 billion) as consumption plummeted due to periods of lockdown and the closure of many stores. Surplus savings have mainly been held in sight deposits, which means that households can now withdraw a greater sum than before as they look to finance a house purchase.
The improvement in the labour market is another significant source of indirect support to property purchases: the unemployment rate has dropped below the 13% mark this year, a level that had not been seen since 2008.
By improving household solvency, this helps increase both the demand for credit and the chances of being granted a loan. The prospect of an increase in interest rates this year has also probably encouraged individuals to invest in real estate now. Mortgage rates remain historically low (2.52% on average, across all loan terms, in February according to INE), but are likely to start rising in 2022, as high inflation persists and European monetary policy becomes less accommodating.
There are also structural factors affecting both supply and demand in the housing market. On the demand side, these include in particular the increase in the number of households in the country, which is itself linked to growth in the population (although this is slowing) and the rising number of family separations and single-parent households2.
Strong demand is meeting increasingly limited supply. The number of building permits granted has plunged since 2007 (see chart 2). Although this collapse was initially a reaction to the bursting of the speculative real estate bubble, there has been no real recovery since, even though we have observed a modest pick-up since 2015. Without going as far as to talk of a housing shortage, there is nevertheless a growing imbalance between supply and demand, which has tended to increase year after year.
Under these conditions it is likely that housing price increases will continue, for this year at least, particularly as the construction sector is facing rising materials costs as a result of global economic conditions, which could feed through into higher sales prices and/or restrict the supply of new houses.