When I got back to Barcelona after spending the holidays at home, I was greeted with some unexpected news – I had to move immediately. My rental company eventually backed down, but after a few months of general frustration with my landlord, it looks like the time has come for me to move.
I’m still on the hunt, so in the meantime I thought I would share my piso-finding knowledge with any hopeful Spain residents. Here’s a breakdown of how to find and rent an apartment in Spain. I’ve never looked for a whole apartment, so my expertise is in looking for a room. But all these of sites do have the option to rent an entire flat.
Idealista
Pros:
This organized site is a non-intimidating way to dip you toe into a piso hunt. You can limit your search by area (there’s a map of the city), price, gender, number of roommates, etc., and it’s very easy. There are photos of almost everything, and it’s very, very easy to find what you’re looking for. You can then have a list of ‘favorites’, as well as discard ones you’re just not interested in.
This is also a good site for just getting an idea of what’s out there, and how much you should expect to pay for a flat in a specific area of a specific city. The map breaks it down by neighborhood, and you can also look at listings ‘pinned’ onto a map.
Oh, and if you don’t speak much Spanish, there are quite a few bilingual Spanish-English listings, and the site is easy to navigate in English.
Cons:
There aren’t as many listings as on the next site, which brings me to…
Loquo
Pros:
This site is absolutely chock-full of flat listings. It updates so frequently that I can’t keep on top of the listings while they’re being put up. I’d honestly be very, very surprised if you couldn’t find what you were looking for on Loquo! The listings are all pretty good – I found some great rooms through Loquo. The sheer quantity of this site means you’ll have tons of options.
Just pop in search words for what you want (like ‘exterior’, ‘Gótico’, and ‘doble’, for example), then give it an upper price limit (which the site has kindly decided is my lower limit lately).
Cons:
It’s pretty overwhelming and disorganized. You can’t discard items like on Idealista, and there aren’t as many maps to see where properties are (which is a feature I really like).
I’ve also met some pretty weird people while looking for flats on Loquo. Definitely a con, but there are crazy people everywhere so it might just be luck.
Easy Piso
Pros:
People with rooms or flats can contact potential renters on this site, so it works both ways. You can send them messages too. You make a little ad with your info (gender, age, maximum price you’ll pay, occupation, etc.) and then start looking!
This one limits stuff based on your profile, so you don’t have go to trawling through tons of ads not related to what you want.
Cons:
Not as many listings as the other two sites, so this is definitely a distant third for me.
It can also get a little annoying receiving messages from flats that you’re just not interested in for whatever reason.
This isn’t either a pro or a con, but it does tend to skew a little older than the other two, from what I’ve seen.
Other sites to find and rent an apartment in Spain:
- Piso Compartido (thanks to Elizabeth from Slightly Nomadic for telling me about this one)
- En Alquiler (Thanks to Amelie from Lost in Traducción for telling me about this one)
- Don Piso (which only rented out entire flats last time I used this)
Those sites should get you started, but there are also a few other options…
- Use an agency. I can’t recommend a specific one because I’ve never tried this. Honestly, it seems to me like unless you’re really struggling to find a place, have zero time, or flat-out don’t speak the language, an agency isn’t necessary.
- Stay with someone from Air B&B to get an idea of flats. According to the site’s rules, you can’t actually rent an apartment from here. But… I have heard you can arrange things outside of the site. You have to do it unofficially though, otherwise it’s violating their terms.
- Look on conversation boards of groups you’re in. I use CouchSurfing and some international groups on Facebook, and every so often someone will post a cool room or flat for rent.
- Ask everyone you know. Stuff in Spain works like this often, so look for an enchufe to hook you up. I’ve had friends offer rooms and put me in touch with people they know renting out rooms.
Some other tips to help you find and rent an apartment in Spain:
- Enlist a local friend to help you write a good introductory email to send people. My Spanish is good, but I wanted to make sure I got the tone and content right. I asked a bunch of friends what they would say, and settled on a message with my age, occupation, and a short sentence about what kind of flat I was hoping to find, and then a line about arranging a time.
- Rooms go FAST here, so if you find what you want, say yes right away. I’ve had friends go from “Maybe we’ll move in a few months, if at all” in the morning to calling me at lunchtime saying “Have you got any boxes? We found one!”
- Get a friend to go with you if you can. As a foreigner finding an apartment, I’ve run into some weird people who were way too interested in having a young foreigner in their house. Not many, but I always booked it out of those places as soon as possible. Even though Spain is a safe place, it’s better to be safe than sorry. Also, if your language skills are poor, a friend can help you understand everything better.
How much does renting a room cost in Barcelona?
In Barcelona, rooms top out around €450 and they’re almost always more expensive to rent as a couple. A month’s rent is the standard deposit. €350 is a reasonable price to pay for a single room in a good spot in the city (with utilities included). The cheapest rooms in the center go as low as about €250, but that probably means a small room with an interior window.
So far, I’m having the best luck with Loquo, but Idealista is my favorite site to use. Fingers crossed I’ll find a cool new flat soon!
Do you have any other ways to find a cool apartment in Spain? Are there any sites I’m missing?
Besos!
-Jess
Excellent tips Jessica! This will be extremely helpful when I begin my search in Almuñécar. Although, I’m sure there will be less options available there compared to Barcelona. I bookmarking this post and as soon as I’m done with work I’m going to look at these websites! Thank you!
Thanks Mike! There are probably fewer choices in Almuñécar but fingers crossed you’ll find something cool. 🙂
Good luck! As an auxiliar living on pennies, I needed to share an apartment. I had a good experience with pisocompartido.es, as it is all shared housing. Not to mention you can just walk around looking for se alquila postings taped up just about everywhere! I found that to be the weirdest thing at first, selling or renting a house by using flyers, but I guess it gets the job done!
Oh I’ve never used Piso Compartido, I’ll have to check that one out.
The flyer thing I’ve heard is super sketchy in Barcelona. Maybe in other places it’s not so bad, but here I was told to definitely avoid those!
I’ve had friends find apartments that way here in Sevilla, but the idea seems sooooo sketchy to me. I don’t think it is actually dangerous here, as it is pretty commonplace. If you go to any of the universities here, the flyers are lined up by the thousand. Where I draw my line is when the flyers are scribbled and handwritten…that to me defines sketchy! Haha.
Haha YES, scribbling is crossing the line!
This should come in very handy once I start on the flat hunt… THANKS 🙂
De nada! 🙂
This is going to be super helpful!! I will be living in Madrid next year for the auxiliares programme and will need to source my accommodation on my own so these sites should prove to be a great help! Thanks for a very educational post.
You’re welcome! Before I moved to Barcelona I had sooo much fun playing around with Idealista to pick out where I wanted to live. If you need a distraction, it’s great! 🙂
Haha, I still get emails from Idealista but they go straight to junk e-mail! I used Idealista in Madrid both times when looking for apartments and had pretty good sucess with both of them. Loquo is basically Spanish Craigslist which I am always super wary of. Not everyone on Loquo/Craigslist is sketchy but it is true there are more listings on those websites than Idealista. I also know of En Alquiler which seems to be set up like Idealista but I’ve never used it.
Unless you don’t speak a word of Spanish, I would avoid an agency because you have to pay extra fees.
Right, Loquo for sure has more sketchy things going on! Idealista is by far my favorite site to use, but there are way more listings on Loquo so they almost even out.
I’ve never heard of En Alquiler, I’ll have to check that one out. Thanks!
Thanks for posting!
You’re welcome! Hope you found it useful. 🙂
Great tips. My husband and I may be looking for a place to rent on the Costa Blanca next year. I will save these sites.Hope you find something soon. Cheers, Darlene
Cool, I’m glad it helped! Fingers crossed the search goes well.
Ahh, the housing search! It’s interesting to see which websites did and didn’t work for you in Barcelona–I feel that the trends are similar but slightly different in Madrid.
I tend to prefer idealista because I find the format user-friendly; in fact, this is the website that I typically recommend to people moving to Madrid. Interestingly enough, I found neither of my pisos through idealista! The first one I got through a friend (enchufe? sí señor) and the second one I got through Easy Piso. Easy Piso tended to drive me crazy though–there were so many sketchy, too-good-to-be-true deals and those incessant emails from landlords who were way outside of a) the city or b) my price range. I guess the lesson here is to cast your piso-catching net as wide as possible!
I agree, Idealista is much more user-friendly but I’ve found more flats I liked through other resources. I’m not sure why that is!
Easy Piso sends you SO. MANY. EMAILS. I mean, it’s nice that you don’t have to do all the legwork but it does get annoying, especially when they think when you write “city center” it really means “next city over and double the price, please”.
So, the website’s layout for Loquo como un poco loco? Sorry, that just popped into my head! 🙂 Thanks for providing some tips on your ongoing search, and hope you find the right place!
Haha I like that! It’s definitely un poco loco, and some days even worse. 🙂
fotocasa!! it is a must! I dont know how big it is in Barca but in Madrid there are zillions of listings… its great if you know the city youre living in pretty well because unlike most of the other sites you can search by having all the listings on a map and choose by location. It is my very favorite! fotocasa.es check it out!
Interesting! Thanks for the recommendation, I’d never even heard of that one. I love the setup and it had tons of categories to really help what you’re looking for.
The Barcelona offerings aren’t too great though. Most of the listings are old (like, over a year ago old). I’m surprised, it’s so useful!
Thanks Jessica, great tips and very interesting blog.
I miss Find-Roommate.net, it is easy to use and the site is growing up a little bit daily.
Regards!
I haven’t heard of that one either! Thanks Valeria 🙂
Question. What does rent include in Spain? ie. rates? power? etc…
Look for on whether the ad says ‘gastos incluidos’ or not. If it does, most flats come with everything (electricity, gas, wi-fi,etc.). If it doesn’t, most places add on another €35-50ish for gastos in Barcelona. Some are a bit higher, and some are flexible depending on what you spend that month.
A few places have extras, like a cleaning person or community fees.
Great thanks!
De nada! 🙂
How to Find & Rent an Apartment in Spain | ¡Hola Yessica! Os adrezco el compartir con todos nosotros toda esta amena información. Con estos granitos de arena hacemos màs grande la montaña Internet. Enhorabuena por este post.
Hello! I´m have rooms to rent at home, in Madrid, i usually post Ad´s in diferents webs, and fotocasa and idealista need a lot of information from my for commercial purposes. I think it should be illegal, and to fill the ad is boring and laborious.
I think one of the better webs is:
lingobongo.com
pisocompartido.com
tablondeanuncios.com
or similar webs, for shure they have commercial purposes for my in the future, but at the moment is easy and free.
Best regards, Sergio.
Bye! :))
Hi Jessica! Your blog is very helpful when moving to barcelona! Have you heard experiences from online apartment services like Spotahome? Are them safe to use?
-anna
Hi Anna! I’ve never used a service like that, I’m afraid, so I have no idea. Sorry I can’t be of more help!