Madrid’s biggest surprise isn’t that apartments are cheaper than houses — it’s how much better they perform on rent. In the 6 Jun 2026 snapshot, Madrid flats delivered a gross yield of 4.13%, while houses lagged behind at 2.75%. That gap is the headline: in this market, apartments are doing more work for every euro invested.
The numbers make the contrast pretty clear. The median asking price for an apartment was €524,901, with median rent at €1,805/month. Houses, by comparison, sat at a much steeper €1,701,659 median asking price and €3,896/month in rent. So while houses generate higher monthly income in absolute terms, they require far more capital to buy — and that drags down the return.
What’s also interesting is the market mix itself: Madrid’s listing stock is heavily weighted toward flats, which reflects the reality of a dense capital city. For buyers looking at yield efficiency rather than lifestyle alone, apartments come out ahead. Houses seem to live in a different category altogether: more scarce, more expensive, and more of a premium product than a direct substitute.
Read the full analysis with interactive charts and district-level data on Realty Pulse
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