Answer 6 quick questions. We rank all 10 districts using real listing data (rents, sizes, supply) and tell you what each is actually like to live in.
Short answer: the most popular Barcelona neighborhoods for newcomers are Eixample (central, best transport), Gràcia (village feel, community) and Sant Martí / Poblenou (modern, near the beach). Families favour Sarrià-Sant Gervasi and Les Corts; the best value is in Sants-Montjuïc, Sant Andreu and Nou Barris. The right pick depends on your budget, so use the free tool below to rank all 10 districts for your situation.
Average rental prices across Barcelona's 10 districts, based on listings tracked the week of 28 May 2026. Sorted by weekly listing volume.
| District | Avg rent | €/m² | Avg size | Listings/wk | Best for |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Eixample | €2,170/mo | 27.4 | 79 m² | 287 | Central living, transport |
| Ciutat Vella | €1,584/mo | 27.8 | 57 m² | 182 | Old town, nightlife |
| Sarrià-Sant Gervasi | €2,552/mo | 24.2 | 105 m² | 128 | Families, calm, upscale |
| Sants-Montjuïc | €1,363/mo | 22.4 | 61 m² | 93 | Value, connectivity |
| Gràcia | €1,552/mo | 25.4 | 61 m² | 93 | Village feel, expats |
| Sant Martí | €1,858/mo | 26.2 | 71 m² | 85 | Beach, modern, tech |
| Les Corts | €1,935/mo | 24.3 | 80 m² | 69 | Families, business |
| Horta-Guinardó | €1,569/mo | 20.3 | 77 m² | 45 | Space, green, value |
| Sant Andreu | €1,169/mo | 21.3 | 55 m² | 34 | Affordable, local |
| Nou Barris | €1,070/mo | 16.3 | 66 m² | 18 | Cheapest, residential |
Figures are averages of asking rents and update weekly. Indicative only.
Picking where to live in Barcelona comes down to a trade-off between price, space and atmosphere. Central districts like Eixample and Ciutat Vella put you in the middle of everything but command higher rents per square metre and smaller flats. Move out to Sants-Montjuïc, Horta-Guinardó or Nou Barris and the same budget buys noticeably more space, at the cost of being further from the old core.
Expats moving to Barcelona most often land in Eixample for its connectivity, Gràcia for its village feel and tight community, or Sant Martí if being near the beach matters. Families tend to favour Sarrià-Sant Gervasi and Les Corts for bigger flats, calm streets and schools. If budget leads the decision, Sant Andreu and Nou Barris offer the lowest rents in the city.
Whichever district you choose, the hard part is being first to the good listings: the best flats in Barcelona are often gone within hours. The neighborhood finder above ranks all ten districts against your budget and priorities; Prio then alerts you the moment a matching flat appears, before the portals notify everyone else.
Related reading: Best neighborhoods in Barcelona for expats · Barcelona rental market 2026 · How to find an apartment in Barcelona.
The most popular districts for expats are Eixample (central, well connected), Gràcia (village feel, strong community) and Sant Martí / Poblenou (modern, near the beach). Families tend to choose Sarrià-Sant Gervasi and Les Corts, while Sants-Montjuïc offers the best value close to the centre.
For the lowest rents, look at Nou Barris (around €1,070/mo), Sant Andreu (around €1,169/mo) and Sants-Montjuïc (around €1,363/mo). These districts are less central but offer more space per euro. Horta-Guinardó is also affordable and green.
Families most often choose Sarrià-Sant Gervasi (leafy, calm, good schools, larger flats averaging 105 m²) and Les Corts (residential, well connected, spacious). Horta-Guinardó offers larger homes at lower prices for tighter budgets.
Eixample is the most central and best-connected district, served by metro lines L1 to L5. Ciutat Vella, the old town of the Gothic Quarter, El Born and El Raval, is equally central and walkable, but with smaller, older flats and more nightlife.
Yes, completely free, with no account and no credit card. It uses real rental market data to rank all 10 districts against your budget and preferences in about a minute.