Despite an increase in supply of around 28%, the average price for flatshare rooms in Palma in Q3 2025 climbed to about €510. Who benefits, where are the city's interventions — and which short-term solutions help people searching?
Flatshare rooms in Palma: More rooms, but prices keep rising
On the street you hear it more often: “A room, please, affordable.” Yet the statistics tell a different story. In the third quarter of 2025 the number of individually rented rooms in Palma rose noticeably, while the average rent stood at €510 per month — about 2 % higher than a year earlier. Why aren't prices falling even though supply grew by roughly 28 %?
The hard numbers behind the feeling
At first glance it seems contradictory: more rooms should put downward pressure on rents. In Palma, however, several factors interact. While supply increased, demand fell slightly by an estimated 2 %. At the same time, rooms differ significantly: location, furnishings, internet quality or whether utilities are included — all of this creates price spreads in which expensive listings pull the average up.
By comparison, prices across Spain average around €405. Only Barcelona (approx. €600) and Madrid (approx. €550) are more expensive. That makes Palma the third most expensive city in the flatshare segment — a fact you hear about as much at the café on Passeig Mallorca as at the Plaça Major during evening viewings.
What public debate barely addresses
The usual explanation is: owners react to rising living costs. That is true — but incomplete. Less visible are structural shifts: converting entire apartments into multiple single rooms, short-term rentals that are then offered by the room in the low season, and the fact that platforms make listings more visible faster. In other provinces listings rose even more drastically — Castellón de la Plana by over 115 %, Teruel nearly 88 %, Badajoz around 85 % — this is not a Palma-only case but part of a nationwide trend.
Another less illuminated point: the legal grey area around sublet agreements and short-term flatshare admissions. Many owners rely on flexible, informal arrangements instead of clear, long-term rental contracts — this increases insecurity for tenants and makes price comparisons harder.
What this means concretely for searchers
For students and young professionals this means: decide faster, make compromises or look farther out. In practice you see queues at viewings, roommates dropping out after three days, and people running three listings at once to cover the deposit. Centrality is rewarded: those who want to live near the center or the beach pay comparatively more — the sound of mopeds on the street, the scent from the market or the echo from the café are reflected in the price.
The city administration is discussing information campaigns and possible rules for transparency — concrete resolutions are still pending. Until then creative stopgap solutions emerge: longer roommate agreements, sublets for the semester, shared apps to split utilities or organized flatshare fairs at the university.
Concrete measures we need now
Publishing numbers is not enough. What could help:
Transparency portal: A municipal register for flatshare rooms with minimum details on utilities, internet and deposit would create comparability and expose bad actors.
Minimum standards: Simple regulations for rented rooms (fire, hygiene and space standards) protect tenants and prevent arguments about a race to the bottom.
Incentives for long-term rentals: Tax benefits for landlords who rent permanently to local tenants could slow the conversion into short-term listings.
Support for co-living projects: Subsidized, well-organized housing projects for students and young workers would relieve pressure on the open market — ideally distributed across several neighborhoods instead of only in the center.
Strengthening tenant advice: Free legal advice and information centers at the city for flatshare contracts, deposit issues and utility billing would reduce uncertainty.
Conclusion: More supply does not automatically mean relief
Figures from the third quarter of 2025 show: more rooms do not automatically translate into relief for searchers. Decisive are contract forms, transparency and landlord behavior. Anyone now searching for accommodation in Palma should compare prices, ask specifically about utilities and deposits, and if necessary look a bit further out by train (SFM) or bus — a longer commute can be cheaper in the short term than a tiny room in the middle of the city.
Tip from the neighborhood: Always note during viewings whether heating, electricity, water and internet are included — this saves trouble and often hundreds of euros a year.
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