For buyers who want substance over a beach postcode, Girona makes a quietly compelling case: a heritage city at roughly half Barcelona’s price, a high-speed train that puts the capital 38 minutes away, world-class food, and year-round life. Here is the argument, with the numbers.
The value case
| Market | Guide €/m² asking (2026) | Versus Girona |
|---|---|---|
| Girona city | ≈ €2,715 | — |
| Girona Barri Vell (old town) | ≈ €4,276 | The city’s most expensive district |
| Barcelona city | ≈ €5,176 | Nearly double |
| Costa Brava front-line villas | up to ≈ €10,000 | A multiple of Girona |
idealista 2026 asking prices (closing prices run a little below). Girona’s apartment segment has been appreciating faster than houses.
The headline is simple: Girona city, at around €2,715/m², sits at roughly half the price of Barcelona and a fraction of front-line Costa Brava luxury, while offering a heritage city centre, a university and a real economy. For buyers priced out of the capital or the prime coast, that gap — for genuine quality — is the start of the Girona case.
Connectivity
Value would mean less without access, and Girona’s is excellent. The high-speed AVE reaches Barcelona in about 38 minutes, with roughly twenty services a day, and the city sits on the international corridor toward the French border. Girona–Costa Brava airport adds direct low-cost links to the UK and Northern Europe. You can live in a medieval city and be in central Barcelona faster than many of its own suburbs — a structural advantage for primary residents and second-home owners alike.
Year-round life, heritage and food
Unlike the coastal resorts, Girona does not empty out of season. It is a compact, walkable capital of around 104,000 people with a university and a service economy, wrapped around one of Catalonia’s great historic centres — the Barri Vell, the Jewish Quarter, the colourful houses over the Onyar and a cathedral with the widest Gothic nave in the world. Layer on a celebrated food scene led by El Celler de Can Roca — three Michelin stars and twice ranked the world’s best restaurant — and Girona offers a quality-of-life narrative that sustains demand without relying on the beach.
A world cycling capital
One draw sets Girona apart from any other Catalan city: it is widely regarded as one of the world’s great road-cycling destinations, and home to a large international community of professional cyclists who base and train there year-round. The mix of varied terrain in the Pyrenean foothills, a mild climate, quiet roads and excellent air and rail links has made it a magnet for elite riders and a global flow of affluent cycling tourists — with a whole ecosystem of cafés, bike workshops and tour operators to match. For property, it means a steady, international, well-heeled demand for training bases and second homes, and a year-round, active resident community that keeps the city alive out of season.
Who is buying — and the one caveat
Girona province has the highest share of foreign buyers in Catalonia — around one in four sales — with French buyers especially prominent given the border, and strong British, German and Dutch demand. The one caveat for investors: Girona city has suspended new tourist-rental licences in the old town and is tightening the rules, so the case is a value-and-lifestyle one with capital-growth potential, not a high-yield holiday-let play. Underwrite it on the price gap and the connectivity, not on nightly rates.
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Frequently asked questions
How much does property cost in Girona compared with Barcelona and the coast?
Girona city averages around €2,715/m² asking in 2026 (idealista) — roughly half Barcelona city (≈ €5,176/m²) and a fraction of front-line Costa Brava villas, which can reach €10,000/m². The historic Barri Vell is the most expensive district at around €4,276/m². That value gap, for a heritage city with fast links, is the core of the Girona case.
How far is Girona from Barcelona?
From about 38 minutes by high-speed AVE/Avant train, with around twenty services a day each way. Girona sits on the international high-speed corridor toward the French border, and has its own airport (Girona–Costa Brava) with low-cost links to the UK and Northern Europe. The connectivity is a big part of why Girona works as both a primary and a second home.
Is Girona a good place to live year-round?
Yes — and that is part of the point. Unlike the coastal resorts, Girona is a compact, walkable provincial capital with a university, a real working economy, heritage and a celebrated food scene, so it lives all year rather than emptying out of season. It suits buyers who want substance and city amenities over a beach postcode.
Who is buying in Girona?
Girona province has the highest share of foreign buyers in Catalonia — around one in four sales — with French buyers especially prominent given the border, alongside strong British, German and Dutch demand. The mix is part French border and lifestyle buyers, part international second-home and relocation buyers drawn by value, heritage and connectivity.
Is Girona a good investment?
It is best seen as a value-and-lifestyle play with capital-growth potential rather than a high-yield rental market. Girona city has suspended new tourist-rental licences in the old town and is tightening the rules, so do not underwrite a purchase on holiday-let income. The investment case rests on the price gap to Barcelona and the coast, the connectivity, and long-term demand for a heritage city.
Why do so many cyclists live in Girona?
Girona is one of the world’s premier road-cycling destinations and a year-round training base for a large international community of professional cyclists. The varied terrain of the Pyrenean foothills, the mild climate, quiet roads and fast air and rail links make it ideal, and a whole ecosystem of cafés, workshops and tour operators has grown up around it. For property, this supports steady international demand for training bases and second homes, and a lively year-round community.