Market Update · 9 min read
Dutch Buyers Overtake Germans in Spain: What the Foreign Buyer Reshuffle Means for Nordic Purchasers
10 June 2026 · Hansson & Hertzell
Dutch buyers have become the second most active foreign nationality in Spain's property market in 2026, overtaking Germans. For Swedish and British buyers watching the Costa Blanca, understanding the shifting buyer landscape explains a lot about price pressure, competition, and why certain areas are moving faster than others.
Spain's notarial statistics for Q4 2025 and Q1 2026 confirmed a shift that had been building for several years: Dutch buyers have overtaken Germans as the second most active foreign nationality in the Spanish property market, with 1,632 transactions in Q4 2025 alone (+15% quarter-on-quarter, +10.5% year-on-year).
The full ranking of foreign buyers in Spain's residential property market (Q1 2026 data):
- British — maintaining the top position with approximately 9,500+ transactions in 2025
- Dutch — now firmly second, up from third position in 2023
- German — fell to third, with a modest decline in transaction volumes
- French — stable fourth position
- Belgian — growing presence, particularly in the northern Costa Blanca
- Swedish — sixth position nationally, but disproportionately concentrated in Alicante province
Within Alicante province specifically, the picture is somewhat different. Dutch buyers are reported as the single largest foreign group by volume of property listing views (16.54% of foreign views), while British buyers lead on actual transaction completions.
Why Dutch Buyers Have Surged
Several factors explain the Dutch acceleration:
Dutch property market contraction. The Netherlands experienced one of the sharpest residential property price corrections in Europe in 2022–2023 — down approximately 15–20% from peak values. For Dutch homeowners who bought in Amsterdam, Rotterdam, or Utrecht before 2019, the equity position remains strong despite the correction. Many are deploying that equity into Spanish coastal property as a diversification and lifestyle upgrade.
Exchange rate stability. The euro-euro transaction removes any currency consideration for Dutch buyers. Unlike British buyers who face GBP/EUR exposure, or Swedish buyers with SEK/EUR movements, Dutch buyers purchasing in Spain face no exchange rate risk — they're buying in the same currency.
High Dutch cost of living. The Netherlands has extremely high housing costs relative to income — Amsterdam prices per square metre are among the highest in Europe. The value comparison with Costa Blanca property is stark: a Dutch buyer selling a modest Amsterdam apartment can purchase a significantly larger, better-specified Costa Blanca property with cash.
Established Dutch community on the Costa Blanca. The northern Costa Blanca (Jávea, Moraira, Calpe, Altea) has long had a substantial Dutch residential community. Community infrastructure — Dutch-speaking services, social networks, expat organisations — makes the lifestyle transition easier than arriving with no community anchor.
What This Means for Swedish and British Buyers
The shift in buyer mix has practical implications for other international buyers active in the same markets.
More competition in the €200,000–€400,000 range. Dutch buyers are concentrated in the mid-to-upper price range of the Costa Blanca market — the same segment where Swedish and British buyers are most active. This adds a demand layer that didn't exist at the same scale 3–4 years ago. Well-priced properties in popular areas are now competing for offers from a wider pool of nationalities.
Northern Costa Blanca price pressure. Jávea, Moraira, and Calpe — areas with particularly strong Dutch community presence — are seeing sustained price pressure from Dutch buyers who are highly familiar with these areas and willing to pay premium prices for the right properties. Swedish buyers in the north should expect Jávea and Moraira prices to remain elevated relative to Torrevieja/Orihuela Costa for this reason.
Dutch buyers and new build. Dutch buyers show a strong preference for new build developments with resort facilities — similar to British and Swedish buyer preferences. This convergence of demand preferences around the same product type (resort new build, €200,000–€400,000) means that well-positioned new build developments on the Costa Blanca are selling faster than in any previous cycle.
Investment market dynamics. Dutch buyers purchasing for investment have higher rental yield requirements (the Netherlands' residential market context makes 5%+ yield normal). Their presence as investors in short-term rental apartments in Torrevieja and Benidorm has contributed to the upward pressure on acquisition prices in the highest-yield locations.
The 51.5% Foreign Buyer Share: What It Means
In Alicante province (the Costa Blanca), foreign buyers now account for 51.5% of all residential property transactions — meaning more than half of all property sold in the province goes to international buyers. The national average is approximately 14%.
This extraordinary concentration of international buyers in one province creates a market that behaves differently from Spanish domestic real estate:
- Less sensitivity to Spanish economic cycles. When Spanish domestic buyer sentiment weakens (rising unemployment, election uncertainty), the international buyer base continues providing demand. The Costa Blanca property market has been insulated from Spanish economic volatility in ways that inland Spanish markets have not.
- More sensitivity to European economic cycles. When the UK property market is weak (as in 2023–2024), British buyers hold back. When Dutch confidence improves (as in 2025–2026), Dutch activity increases. The market is diversified across European economies rather than dependent on any single one.
- Price anchoring from wealthier buyer pools. British, Dutch, and Swedish buyers purchasing in Spain are typically doing so with equity from their home markets or pension/investment wealth. They are not financing 90% with local mortgages — they're cash-heavy buyers. This anchors prices above what pure domestic demand would support.
Areas Most Affected by the Dutch Surge
For Nordic and British buyers considering their location choice, the specific areas where Dutch buyer activity is highest:
Northern Costa Blanca (Jávea, Moraira, Altea, Calpe): Highest Dutch buyer concentration and the area where their demand has most directly pushed prices. Jávea in particular has become a Dutch lifestyle destination with an established community. Prices here are 20–40% higher per square metre than equivalent Orihuela Costa properties.
Torrevieja surroundings: Dutch investors are increasingly active in Torrevieja's short-term rental market. Less community-driven than the north, more yield-driven.
Golf areas around Orihuela Costa: Dutch buyers are drawn to golf resort developments in Las Ramblas, Villamartin, and Campoamor. This adds competition in a segment that British and Swedish retiree/second-home buyers also favour.
Our Perspective
The buyer landscape shift reinforces the underlying supply-demand dynamic we've discussed in our market reports: demand from northern Europe is diversifying and growing, supply is not keeping pace, and prices across the Costa Blanca will continue to reflect that imbalance through 2026 and into 2027.
For buyers trying to time purchases around anticipated demand softening — waiting for Dutch or British buyer volume to fall significantly — the structural diversity of the buyer pool makes that timing call increasingly speculative. The Costa Blanca is not dependent on any single buyer nationality; it is supported by six or seven distinct northern European buyer communities simultaneously.
H&H operates across the Costa Blanca, Costa Cálida, and Costa del Sol in Swedish, English, and Spanish. If you want a current read on where different buyer nationalities are most active and what that means for specific towns or price ranges you're considering, contact us for a market briefing.
