€1,700 / mo
Flat / apartment in Calle del Mar, La Seu, València
- Ciutat Vella, Valencia
- Rent ~€2,350/mo
- medium expat community · Walkability 10/10
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What Ciutat Vella is actually like
Ciutat Vella draws a specific kind of expat: professionals in their 30s and 40s, remote workers, and retirees who want to live inside the history rather than near it. British, German, Dutch, and French nationals make up the largest expat cohorts, with many clustering around the streets between Plaza del Ayuntamiento and the Carmen neighbourhood. The district has 26 English-language services — from legal advisors to medical clinics — making it the most serviced district for incoming internationals in the city (RelocateIQ local data, April 2026). Expats tend to meet at specialty coffee spots like COFFEE and BIKES and Doux-Amer, both of which function as informal networking hubs.
Long-term Valencian residents — many of them older and owner-occupying renovated historic flats — still form the backbone of the population, though their share is shrinking as purchase prices rise. The social mix is genuinely urban: academics, architects, artists, and short-term visitors occupy the same stairwells. Expat density is classified as medium, which in practice means you will find your community without the district feeling like an international enclave (RelocateIQ analysis, April 2026).
Short-term tourist lets dominate a significant portion of Ciutat Vella's rental stock, which directly compresses the supply available to long-term tenants and keeps prices elevated. For a furnished one-bed, expect to pay €1,300–€2,000/month; unfurnished, €1,100–€1,700/month. A budget of €1,500/month furnished will realistically secure a well-located one-bed in a renovated historic building, though size will be modest — units in this district skew small (Fotocasa, April 2026). Two-bed furnished rentals start at €1,700/month and reach €2,600/month at the top of the market.
- ✓Young professionals
- ✓Digital nomads
- ✓Investors
- ✓Culture enthusiasts
- ×Families with kids
- ×Car owners
- ×Budget seekers
- ×Quiet seekers
What life actually costs in Valencia
Monthly estimates · compared to London
Figures are city-level monthly estimates. Source: Numbeo Cost of Living Index 2024, updated quarterly.
How connected is Ciutat Vella?
What's on your doorstep
The Ciutat Vella property market
Calculators for your situation
What renting here actually involves
Spanish law limits deposits to 1 month's rent for residential properties. Landlords sometimes request an additional month as guarantee. Expect 1–2 months upfront: approximately €4,700 for this property.
Standard Spanish rental contracts run for 5 years minimum (7 if landlord is a company). You can leave after 6 months with 30 days notice. Contracts must be in Spanish — always use a bilingual version.
You will need an NIE number to sign a rental contract in Spain. Register on the Padrón (local census) within 3 months of arriving — this unlocks healthcare, schools and local services.
Everything you need to know about moving to Valencia
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