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  • The defining constraint is supply, not demand

    For most of the past decade, the question asked of Spanish and Southern European residential investment was whether the demand was real. That question is now settled. The data of the past two years has answered it emphatically — and reframed the entire problem. The constraint is no longer whether people will come, study, work and rent. It is whether anyone can build fast enough to house them.

    This is the central finding of the Argali Living Report 2026, our flagship study of the student housing, flexible living and urban residential markets across Spain, Portugal and Italy. The report runs the numbers across demographics, macroeconomics, the housing gap, the institutionalisation of purpose-built student accommodation (PBSA), and Madrid specifically. The conclusion is consistent at every level: demand is structural and growing; supply is constrained and slow. That gap is the opportunity.

    A demographic engine running on movement

    Spain reached a record 49.4 million residents by late 2025 — remarkable for a country whose fertility rate, at roughly 1.1 children per woman, is among the lowest in the world. The reconciliation is migration. In the year to October 2025 the population grew by around 474,000 people, even as the Spanish-born population edged down. More than one in five residents was born abroad.

    This is not a transient surge. It is a sustained inflow of working-age people, students and returning Spaniards into exactly the cities where housing is already tightest. Demographics, in other words, are not a tailwind for the next cycle — they are the cycle.

    Europe’s unexpected growth engine

    The macro backdrop amplifies the demographic one. Spain’s economy expanded by roughly 2.8% in 2025, after 3.5% in 2024 — multiples of the euro-area average of around 1.4%. Employment growth, tourism, services exports and foreign capital inflows have made Spain the standout performer among large European economies. Growth of this kind pulls people into cities and converts demographic pressure into hard, paying housing demand.

    When an economy outgrows its neighbours by a factor of two, the housing market is the first place the strain shows. In Spain, it already has.

    The housing gap is the headline

    Household formation is running well ahead of completions. The Banco de España has estimated a structural deficit on the order of several hundred thousand homes — a shortfall that widens each year construction fails to keep pace. Planning timelines, construction-cost inflation, financing friction and a fragmented developer base all conspire to slow delivery precisely where it is needed most.

    The consequence is visible in price. Rents have climbed sharply — Idealista recorded rental growth above 8% over 2025 — and the squeeze is most acute for the cohorts with the least bargaining power: students and young professionals. That is not a market failure to be lamented; for a disciplined operator it is a structural, multi-year demand signal.

    PBSA: from alternative to institutional

    Purpose-built student accommodation has crossed the line from niche to mainstream institutional asset class. Spain’s PBSA provision rate sits at roughly 7% — equivalent to around 17 students for every purpose-built bed — against double-digit provision rates in more mature Northern European markets. The national bed gap runs into the hundreds of thousands.

    Capital has noticed. Around €1.7bn was deployed into Southern European PBSA in the first nine months of 2025, and landmark transactions — including the circa €1.2bn Nido–Livensa platform acquisition — signal long-term institutional conviction rather than opportunistic positioning. Regulation is now a tailwind too: Spain’s Royal Decree 905/2025 introduces a requirement for new student-accommodation provision, formalising a demand the market was already failing to meet.

    Madrid: where the opportunity concentrates

    Every thread of the analysis converges on Madrid. The capital combines the largest university ecosystem in the country, a magnet effect for international students and mobile young professionals, and a PBSA provision rate around 7% against an estimated demand pool many times larger. Existing beds number in the tens of thousands; the structural deficit dwarfs the pipeline entering the market. The most concentrated supply clusters already show multiple students competing for every available bed.

    Madrid is not approaching equilibrium. A new scheme of several hundred beds absorbs a fraction of a percent of the deficit — which is precisely why execution, not market timing, is the determinant of success here.

    The new urban consumer

    The same forces that drive student demand extend naturally into flexible living. International graduates, corporate relocations and digital nomads — supported by Spain’s digital-nomad visa — want branded, amenitised, all-inclusive, professionally managed urban homes on flexible terms. The unit mix and tenancy length differ from PBSA, but the operating DNA is shared. That is the logic behind a multi-format living platform rather than a single-sector play.

    The defining challenge of Southern Europe is no longer demand. It is supply. The full analysis — eight chapters, with every figure sourced and visualised — is set out in the Argali Living Report 2026, which can be downloaded below.


      Thank you for your interest in Argali Equity Partners, you can download the report here