Prime Barcelona is concentrated in the Zona Alta — the affluent, residential belt above the Diagonal — and the classic Eixample grid below it. This guide covers the upper-city addresses buyers ask for most: Pedralbes, Sarrià, Sant Gervasi, Les Tres Torres and Turó Park — what each is like, what it costs in 2026, and who it suits.
At a glance
| Area | Character | Guide €/m² (2026) | Best for |
|---|---|---|---|
| Pedralbes | Barcelona’s most exclusive enclave; villas, gardens, pools | ≈ €7,000+ (villas far higher) | UHNW families, privacy, space |
| Sarrià | Former village; low-rise, leafy, family, calm | ≈ €6,500 | Families, character over flash |
| Sant Gervasi / La Bonanova | Classic Zona Alta; elegant apartment buildings | ≈ €6,100 | Affluent families, prestige + access |
| Les Tres Torres | Quiet, prime; reformed flats & terraced penthouses | ≈ €6,500 (penthouses €7,500–8,500) | Downsizers, prime apartments |
| Turó Park | Ultra-prime pocket; scarce supply | Toward Pedralbes levels | Discreet, trophy apartments |
| Eixample (for contrast) | Central Modernista grid; apartments & penthouses | ≈ €6,400 district (Dreta ≈ €7,800) | Central, walkable, pied-à-terre |
Figures are idealista 2026 asking prices; closing prices run below, and the gap is widest in central districts. Treat them as a guide.
Pedralbes
Pedralbes, in the Les Corts district, is Barcelona’s most exclusive address: a low-density quarter of detached and semi-detached villas with gardens and pools, set between Avinguda Diagonal and the green Collserola hills. It is quiet, leafy and private, away from the city bustle but minutes from it. Average asking prices sit around €7,000/m² and above, and prime villas trade far higher — this is where Barcelona’s trophy houses and its most expensive penthouse (€7m, 524m², with a private pool) are found. It suits families and international buyers who want space, privacy and a garden rather than a lock-up-and-leave apartment.
Sarrià
Sarrià is a former independent village absorbed by the city, and it still feels like one: low-rise, leafy, built around its square and church, family-oriented and calm. It is the most "neighbourhood" of the prime areas — character over glamour — with period townhouses, low-density villas and high-quality reformed apartments in classic buildings, at around €6,500/m² (idealista, 2026). It suits families and downsizers who want an established, walkable community with city access.
Sant Gervasi, Les Tres Torres & Turó Park
The rest of the Sarrià-Sant Gervasi district is the classic Zona Alta. Sant Gervasi-La Bonanova (around €6,100/m²) offers elegant apartment buildings with concierge and proximity to the city’s best international schools. Les Tres Torres (around €6,500/m²) is quiet and prime, strong on reformed flats and terraced penthouses, the best of which reach €7,500–€8,500/m². Turó Park is a small, ultra-prime pocket where scarce supply pushes values toward Pedralbes levels — discreet, leafy and sought-after for trophy apartments. El Putxet is the district’s value entry point at around €4,600/m².
The Zona Alta or the Eixample?
The central choice for most prime buyers is the upper city versus the grid. Choose the Zona Alta for space, privacy, gardens, family life, prestige and calm, with the trade-off of being slightly removed from the centre. Choose the Eixample for central, walkable, lock-up-and-leave living in a classic Modernista apartment — the district averages around €6,400/m², with the prime Dreta de l’Eixample (the Quadrat d’Or around Passeig de Gràcia) nearer €7,800/m² asking. New-build is scarce across prime Barcelona and carries roughly a 20% premium over resale, concentrated in transformation zones like Poblenou (22@) and the seafront rather than the historic core.
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Frequently asked questions
Which is the most expensive area of Barcelona?
Pedralbes is Barcelona’s most exclusive enclave — a low-density quarter of villas with gardens and pools between the Diagonal and the Collserola hills. Average asking prices sit around €7,000/m² and above, and prime villas trade far higher; Barcelona’s most expensive penthouse (€7m, 524m², with a private pool) is in Pedralbes.
What is the Zona Alta in Barcelona?
The "Zona Alta" (upper city) is the affluent, residential belt above the Diagonal — chiefly the Sarrià-Sant Gervasi district (Sarrià, Sant Gervasi-La Bonanova, Les Tres Torres, El Putxet, and the Turó Park pocket) and Pedralbes in Les Corts. It is prized for prestige, green calm, good international schools and quick city access.
How much does property cost in Sarrià-Sant Gervasi?
The district averages around €7,000/m² asking in 2026 (idealista), with Les Tres Torres around €6,500/m², Sant Gervasi-La Bonanova around €6,100/m², and El Putxet the value entry around €4,600/m². Prime reformed flats and terraced penthouses reach €7,500–€8,500/m².
Pedralbes or the Eixample — which should I buy in?
They suit different lives. Pedralbes and the Zona Alta are for space, privacy, gardens, family and prestige away from the bustle; the Eixample is for central, walkable, lock-up-and-leave living in a classic Modernista apartment. Pedralbes leans to villas; the Eixample to apartments and penthouses.
Are Barcelona asking prices the same as what buyers pay?
No. Published €/m² figures are asking prices; closing prices run below them, and in central districts such as the Eixample the gap can be 15–20% or more. Treat headline figures as a guide and expect to negotiate, especially on stock that has been on the market a while.