Costa Blanca new build property prices rose 18.3% year-on-year in Q1 2026, with off-plan developments selling out faster than at any point since 2006. Demand from British, Scandinavian and Dutch buyers is outpacing new supply, making early-stage off-plan reservations increasingly valuable.
The Costa Blanca property market delivered one of its strongest quarterly performances on record in Q1 2026, with new build prices rising 18.3% year-on-year according to the latest data from Spain's College of Registrars. For international buyers watching from the sidelines, the numbers carry a clear message: the window for buying into new developments at pre-launch pricing is narrowing quickly.
The surge isn't a bubble. It's the product of a sustained supply squeeze colliding with record international demand — particularly from northern European buyers seeking lifestyle properties, rental investments, and retirement homes. Understanding what's driving this growth, and where the real opportunities lie, is essential for anyone considering a purchase in 2026.
This article breaks down the Q1 2026 data, examines which areas and property types are seeing the sharpest appreciation, and explains why off-plan buyers are still positioned to capitalise on below-market entry pricing despite the headline surge.
What the Q1 2026 Data Actually Shows
The 18.3% year-on-year price increase for Q1 2026 is a blended figure covering the entire Costa Blanca corridor — from Denia in the north through Alicante and Elche to Torrevieja and Orihuela Costa in the south. Within that headline, new build outperformed resale significantly.
New build transactions on the Costa Blanca rose 22% in volume year-on-year, while average new build sale prices climbed from €2,180/m² in Q1 2025 to €2,580/m² in Q1 2026. Resale prices rose too, but at a more modest 11–14% — reinforcing that new build is the driver of the overall surge.
Key sub-markets by appreciation rate in Q1 2026:
The data makes clear that appreciation is broad-based rather than concentrated in one micro-market — which matters for buyers assessing risk.
Why Prices Are Rising So Sharply
Three structural forces are driving the Q1 2026 surge, and none of them are going away in the near term.
1. Supply cannot keep pace with demand
Despite a record pipeline of new build permits issued in 2024–25, construction timelines mean most of those units won't complete until 2027–28. In Q1 2026 the Costa Blanca delivered approximately 4,200 new build completions — against estimated demand for over 8,000 units from international buyers alone. The backlog is structural, not cyclical.
Planning bottlenecks in the Valencian Community have also slowed approvals in premium coastal zones, particularly in Javea, Altea, and parts of Orihuela Costa where environmental protections constrain buildable land. Scarcity of developable plots in sought-after locations is now a hard floor under prices.
2. International buyer demand hit a post-2008 record
Foreign buyers accounted for 31.4% of all residential transactions in the Alicante province in Q1 2026 — the highest share since records began. British buyers remain the largest single nationality group despite Brexit-related residency changes, driven by the strength of sterling against the euro and a structural lifestyle shift post-pandemic. Scandinavian buyers (Swedish, Norwegian, Danish, Finnish) are the fastest-growing segment, up 38% year-on-year in transaction volume.
Dutch, Belgian, and German buyers are also active, particularly in the north Costa Blanca premium segment. The demand base is genuinely diverse, which provides price resilience that a buyer base concentrated in one nationality would not.
3. Infrastructure investment is repricing the region
The AVE high-speed rail extension to Murcia (operational late 2025), expanded routes at Alicante–Elche Airport (now serving 62 direct destinations in northern Europe), and the ongoing development of Alicante's marina district are systematically improving the region's accessibility and lifestyle proposition. Infrastructure improvements have historically triggered sharp repricing in Spanish coastal real estate — and that dynamic is playing out again now.
The Off-Plan Advantage in a Rising Market
When headline prices are rising at 18%+ annually, the off-plan purchase model becomes significantly more compelling — but it requires understanding how the discount mechanism works.
How off-plan pricing works in practice
When a developer launches a new development, they price units at a level that makes the project financially viable based on build cost and profit margin at the time of launch — typically 18 to 36 months before completion. They set prices below anticipated future market value to sell quickly and secure the financing their bank requires.
In a market rising at 18% annually, a unit reserved off-plan today at €320,000 with a 24-month build timeline could realistically be worth €375,000–€395,000 by completion — a paper gain of €55,000–€75,000 before the buyer has even completed. This built-in appreciation is the core off-plan investment case, and it's particularly powerful in Q1 2026 conditions.
Typical payment structure on Costa Blanca new builds
Most off-plan developments require:
The staged payment structure means buyers can secure a property with a fraction of the total purchase price, letting capital appreciation accrue before the full purchase price is paid. This creates genuine leverage in a rising market.
The completion risk caveat
Off-plan always carries completion risk — the risk that the developer runs into financial difficulties before delivering. The mitigation is simple: only buy from established developers with a verifiable track record of Costa Blanca completions, and ensure stage payments are backed by a bank guarantee (aval bancario) — a legal requirement in Spain under Law 38/1999. Reputable developers provide these as standard.
Which Areas Still Offer Value in 2026
Despite the headline surge, significant value differentials remain across the Costa Blanca. Buyers who understand the micro-market dynamics can still access properties at meaningfully below the premium zone pricing.
Best value for rental yield investors: Torrevieja & Orihuela Costa South
Average new build prices in Torrevieja remain below €2,100/m², making it the most affordable new build market on the Costa Blanca. Gross rental yields here run at 6.5–8.2% — among the highest in the province — driven by year-round Scandinavian demand and proximity to the N-332 coastal road. For buyers prioritising income return over capital appreciation, this is the strongest sub-market.
Best value for lifestyle buyers: Benidorm & Villajoyosa
The Benidorm corridor is undergoing a genuine transformation. The new 5-star resort hotels opening in 2025–26, the expanded marina, and the regeneration of the old town are attracting a more affluent buyer profile than the resort's historical reputation suggests. New build apartments here still average €2,200/m² — a significant discount to Javea (€3,800/m²) with improving lifestyle infrastructure.
Best for long-term capital growth: Costa Blanca North (Javea to Denia)
Limited buildable land, planning restrictions, strong demand from affluent Dutch and German buyers, and the prestige of the north CB lifestyle proposition mean prices here have the strongest structural floor. The 24% Q1 2026 appreciation figure reflects a supply environment where new launches sell out at pre-launch within weeks. Buyers who can access developer launches before public release are at a significant advantage.
Emerging opportunity: Inland golf resorts (La Finca, Vistabella, La Manga)
Golf property on inland Costa Blanca resort developments is trading at a 30–40% discount to comparable coastal units despite offering similar amenity packages — pools, gym, concierge, rental management. As climate-driven buyers increasingly seek cooler inland microclimates and lower running costs, these resort developments are repricing. Q1 2026 data shows 26% transaction volume growth in the inland golf segment.
What Off-Plan Buyers Should Do Now
In a market rising at 18% annually with supply constraints that won't resolve before 2028, the cost of waiting is concrete and measurable. A buyer who delays 12 months on a €350,000 property at current appreciation rates is likely to face a €413,000 price tag for an equivalent unit — or find that the development they wanted has already sold out.
The practical steps for serious buyers in Q1/Q2 2026:
1. Get your financial pre-qualification in place
Spanish banks are currently approving mortgages for non-residents at up to 70% LTV (loan-to-value), with rates for variable mortgages starting around Euribor + 0.9%. Fixed-rate options are available at approximately 3.2–3.8%. Pre-qualifying with a Spanish broker — rather than waiting until you've found a property — removes a major time bottleneck when launch reservations open.
2. Register your interest with developers before public launches
The most in-demand developments on the Costa Blanca are selling out at pre-launch (often called 'phase zero' or reservation stage) before any public marketing. Agents with developer relationships can put buyers on notification lists. This is where the 18% paper gains are accessible — at post-launch pricing they've already been partially absorbed by the market.
3. Focus on developments with full planning permission in place
Licencia de obra mayor (major building licence) granted means construction can begin immediately and timelines are reliable. Developments still in the approval pipeline carry planning delay risk that becomes more consequential in a fast-moving market.
4. Budget for total acquisition costs, not just the purchase price
New build purchases in Spain incur 10% IVA (VAT), plus approximately 2% in notary, registry, and legal fees — total acquisition costs of around 12–13% on top of the purchase price. This is lower than resale (which incurs 10% ITP transfer tax plus the same notarial costs) but must be factored into cash flow planning.
Oppsummering
The Q1 2026 data confirms what buyers on the ground have been experiencing for the past 18 months: the Costa Blanca new build market has entered a period of sustained, structurally-supported price growth. The 18.3% annual figure isn't a one-quarter anomaly — it reflects a persistent mismatch between constrained supply and rising international demand that the pipeline won't resolve before 2028.
For off-plan buyers, the market dynamics remain favourable: developers are still pricing launches below anticipated completion values to move inventory quickly, and staged payment structures allow meaningful exposure to appreciation without full capital commitment. The window for below-market entry pricing narrows with every completed development that sells out above its launch price.
If you're considering a Costa Blanca new build purchase in 2026, the most valuable thing you can do is get into the pre-launch notification pipeline now. Browse our current new build listings or get in touch to discuss which developments match your budget, timeline, and investment goals.
Vanlige spørsmål
1How much did Costa Blanca new build prices rise in Q1 2026?▼
2Is now still a good time to buy off-plan on the Costa Blanca?▼
3Which areas of the Costa Blanca offer the best value for new build buyers in 2026?▼
4What are the risks of buying off-plan in Spain?▼
5What taxes apply when buying a new build property in Spain?▼
6Can non-EU residents get a mortgage for a Spanish new build?▼
7Why are Scandinavian buyers such a large part of the Costa Blanca market?▼
8How long does it typically take from off-plan reservation to completion on the Costa Blanca?▼
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