Is Torroella de Montgrí rent-controlled?
Yes. Torroella de Montgrí (Baix Empordà, Girona) is a declared zona de mercat residencial tensionat — a rent-stress zone — so the rent on a new long-term lease here is capped: at the previous contract’s updated rent and, for large holders or homes not let in the last five years, by Catalonia’s official reference price index. It is one of 271 of Catalonia’s 947 municipalities declared in 2024.
The registered average rent in Torroella de Montgrí in 2025 was €622/month, across 153 contracts deposited with INCASÒL.
Declared a stressed market in 2024.
Via the official reference index.
Torroella de Montgrí average, 2025 (INCASÒL).
Girona average (MIVAU 2025).
For wider context: 27.1% of 2024 home purchases in Girona province were made by foreign buyers (Colegio de Registradores), and 47 of its 221 municipalities are declared rent-stress zones.
What rent controlmeans if you’re buying in Torroella de Montgrí
- Buying to let? The long-term rent you can legally charge is capped by the reference index, so the yield is constrained — model the deal against the cap, not the asking-rent next door.
- Buying it to live in? The rent cap doesn’t restrict you at all — it only bites on letting.
- Counting on tourist income? Short-lets need a separate HUT licence and are often frozen in these high-demand zones — verify before you rely on it.
- A demand signal. A zona tensionada is, by definition, where housing demand outruns supply — useful context on resale liquidity, with the price caveat above.
In Torroella de Montgrí to rent or to buy? Check the property first.
Paste any listing and VeoTrust gives an honest verdict in minutes — for renters, whether the asking rent is fair and within the legal cap and what it really costs a month; for buyers, the cadastre, registry, rent-control status and the real taxes.
How the cap works
Spain’s 2023 housing law (Llei 12/2023) lets regions declare a zona de mercat residencial tensionat where housing costs outpace incomes. Catalonia was the first region to apply it, and Torroella de Montgrí is on the list. In a declared zone, two caps govern a new long-term lease: the rent can’t exceed the previous contract’s rent (updated by the official annual index); and when the landlord is a large holder (gran tenidor) or the home hasn’t been let in the previous five years, it can’t exceed the ceiling of the official índex de referència de preus de lloguer either — the lower figure prevails. The declaration is reviewed periodically, so status can change — this page reflects the current official list.
Is Torroella de Montgrí rent-controlled?+
Yes — Torroella de Montgrí is a declared zona de mercat residencial tensionat (rent-stress zone), so long-term rents are capped. It was declared in 2024 under Spain's 2023 housing law (Llei 12/2023), via the Generalitat's Resolucions TER/800/2024 and TER/2408/2024.
How much rent can I charge if I let a flat in Torroella de Montgrí?+
On a new long-term lease the rent can't exceed the previous contract's rent (updated by the official annual index); and if the landlord is a large holder (gran tenidor) or the home hasn't been let in the last five years, it also can't exceed the ceiling of the official reference price index (índex de referència) — the lower figure prevails. The takeaway for a buyer is the same either way: in Torroella de Montgrí the achievable rent, and therefore the buy-to-let yield, is capped. The registered average rent in Torroella de Montgrí in 2025 was €622/month, across 153 contracts deposited with INCASÒL.
Can I short-let (tourist rental) in Torroella de Montgrí?+
That's a separate regime. Short-term tourist lets need a tourist-use licence (HUT) and are regulated apart from rent control. In high-demand municipalities — which is exactly what a declared zona tensionada is — new HUT licences are often capped or frozen, so check the town hall's current rules before counting on tourist income.
Does rent control change what I pay to buy in Torroella de Montgrí?+
No — rent control caps letting income, not the purchase price or the purchase taxes. On a resale home in Catalonia budget roughly 10–13% on top of the price (ITP transfer tax, plus notary and Land Registry fees); a new build carries 10% IVA + 1.5% AJD instead.
Sources: Generalitat de Catalunya — Agència de l’Habitatge (Resolucions TER/800/2024 + TER/2408/2024); Llei 12/2023 (Spain’s housing law); LAU (Ley 29/1994). Registered rents: INCASÒL — fiances de lloguer, 2025 (Dades obertes de la Generalitat). Province price: Ministerio de Vivienda (MIVAU 2025). Foreign demand: Colegio de Registradores 2024. Every figure public and cited; nothing estimated.
General information for people buying property in Spain — not legal, tax or financial advice. Rent-control status can change; confirm the current rules for a specific property before you rely on them.
Last reviewed June 2026.