Spainability rankings · Updated July 2026
Cheapest coastal towns in Spain you'd actually want to live in
Coastal, cheap to buy in, and still a real town with services — ranked so the bargains aren't ghost towns.
Ranked among the 263 towns with a full published Spainability profile — not all 8,132 municipalities.
The ranking
- 1
Castelló de la Plana/Castellón de la Plana the Valencia region
Budget-coastal Spainability Score 96A provincial capital and one of the main cities of the Costa del Azahar, its sights centred on the Pza. Mayor. A strong pick for coastal living on a budget — 3 km from the sea and a hospital in town.
Honest tradeoff: ranks low on economic momentum.
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An ever-growing resort whose prime appeal is a superb twenty-minute ferry ride across the ría from Vigo. A strong pick for coastal living on a budget — 3 km from the sea and 26,698 people.
Honest tradeoff: ranks low on few rainy days a year.
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Determined to consign its gritty industrial reputation to the past, with a spruce arcaded old town and a struggling futuristic architectural showpiece. A strong pick for coastal living on a budget — 4 km from the sea and 75,915 people.
Honest tradeoff: ranks low on few rainy days a year.
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A small-beach coastal town known for its dockside prawn auctions, reputedly the best langostinos in Spain. A strong pick for coastal living on a budget — 30,516 people and 10 km from the sea.
Honest tradeoff: ranks low on spanish immersion (few foreigners).
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A neat white Almerian pottery town, famous throughout Andalucía for its handmade ceramics and woven jarapa textiles. A strong pick for coastal living on a budget — 32,772 people and 10 km from the sea.
Honest tradeoff: ranks low on local prosperity.
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An underrated Moorish port city — 'mirror of the sea' under its Nasrid rulers — refreshingly untouristed next to Andalucía's bigger cities. A strong pick for coastal living on a budget — 2 km from the sea and a hospital in town.
Honest tradeoff: ranks low on spanish immersion (few foreigners).
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A dynamic fishing village turned important tourist spot, retaining the charm of a seaside locality with leisure activities centred on the port. A strong pick for coastal living on a budget — 37,068 people and 12 km from the sea.
Honest tradeoff: ranks low on affordable to buy (sale €/m²).
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Calmer and more family-oriented than its neighbour Sitges, its main assets are its museums and fine, shallow sandy beaches. A strong pick for coastal living on a budget — 3 km from the sea and 71,305 people.
Honest tradeoff: ranks low on affordable to buy (sale €/m²).
How we ranked this
We answered our own 17-question quiz as a settler on a tight budget who still wants the coast — the quiz answers weight cheap housing heavily, keep the sea nearby, and ask for a real town with daily services rather than the cheapest empty village. Then we ran every one of Spain's 8,132 municipalities through the same scoring engine the quiz uses, and kept the top-ranked towns with a full published Spainability profile in this area. Ranked on purchase €/m² (registered sale prices, available for ~306 larger towns), not on registered rents — because the claim here is 'cheapest to buy'.
- Data INE census (population, origins), AEMET climate normals, regional PISA scores, and the Health Ministry's SISLE waiting lists — each town compared against the Spanish average.
- Reproducible Feed the same persona into our engine and you get this exact order. No hand-picking, no affiliate deals.
- Data completeness A town is excluded from this ranking if it's missing data for any of its key factors (affordable to buy (sale €/m²), on/near the sea and other europeans nearby) — we don't let a data-sparse town float to the top on the factors it happens to have. 42 otherwise-eligible towns were excluded here for missing that data.
- Spainability Score Each town's Budget-coastal Spainability Score is its percentile among the 2,555 municipalities we could score for this profile — a score of 88 means it fits better than 88% of them. It's the same per-persona percentile shown on that town's own page. How Spainability works →
- What we don't score We rank on purchase €/m², coast distance and services — not on rental availability, how touristy a place gets in August, or property condition. Cheap can mean 'needs work'.
Compare the top 8
| # | Town | Home price | Coast | Net income/person | Summer high | Daily services |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Castelló de la Plana/Castellón de la Plana | €1,527/m² | 3 km | €14,696 | 30.6°C | 1.4 |
| 2 | Cangas | €1,748/m² | 3 km | €14,034 | 25.1°C | 1.6 |
| 3 | Avilés | €1,531/m² | 4 km | €15,545 | 22.2°C | 1.6 |
| 4 | Vinaròs | €1,632/m² | 10 km | €13,117 | 31°C | 1.1 |
| 5 | Níjar | €1,182/m² | 10 km | €8,989 | 30.9°C | 2.2 |
| 6 | Almería | €1,675/m² | 2 km | €13,372 | 30.9°C | 1.2 |
| 7 | Cambrils | €2,423/m² | 12 km | €15,716 | 29.7°C | 0.9 |
| 8 | Vilanova i la Geltrú | €2,698/m² | 3 km | €16,690 | 28.6°C | 4 |
Values from the Spainability dataset (INE / AEMET / regional sources). "no data" = we don't have that number for this town and never guess it.
Questions
Where are the cheapest places to live on the Spanish coast?
The best value coastal buying is generally away from the Costa del Sol and Costa Blanca hotspots — parts of the Atlantic north, Costa de la Luz and the less-developed Mediterranean stretches. Our engine ranks the cheapest per €/m² that are still real, serviced towns.
Is cheap coastal property in Spain a good idea?
It can be, but 'cheap' often means older housing stock, seasonal crowds or fewer year-round services. We filter for towns with daily services and show the tradeoffs, so a low price isn't the only thing you're buying.
This is a generic budget-first coastal settler
Get your ranking, not this one →
This list scores one representative persona. Answer a dozen honest questions and we score all 8,132 municipalities against your priorities — climate, cost, healthcare, community, getting home — with the tradeoffs shown as plainly as the wins.
Take the 3-minute quiz →Last updated: July 2026 · Next update: on INE's next census release (expected 2027).
Re-generated from the Spainability dataset on each data release — the ranking is reproducible, not editorial.







