The Idealista property portal has released a list of the most expensive streets in Spain to buy a property, and the one for the Canary Islands is Calle Alcojora in Costa Adeje in the south of Tenerife, which is the same road that the golf club is situated on, which has properties with an average price of 3.32 million euros.
In the country as a whole, Andalusia, the Balearic Islands and Madrid have the ten most expensive streets to live in Spain, with homes ranging between 6.22 million euros to 9.95 million. The most exclusive street in the whole of Spain is located in the Malaga municipality of Benahavís and covers the entire Coto Zagaleta urbanization, where properties cost on average, 9.95 million euros.
Second place is occupied by Calle Sant Carles, in Calviá (Majorca), where the average price is 9.45 million euros, followed by Calle del Camino del Sur, in the urbanization of La Moraleja, in Madrid, where homes cost an average of 8.43 million euros.
In fact, Benahavís, Calviá and La Moraleja are repeated several times in the top 10, in which Andratx (Mallorca) also appears, in eighth position, with an average of 6.68 million euros per home on Calle Pagell. In ninth place is Calle Binicaubell (Palma), with houses worth an average of 6.55 million euros, and in tenth place, Paseo de los Lagos, in 'La Finca', in the Madrid municipality of Pozuelo de Alarcón, where a home can cost, on average, 6.22 million euros.
The idealista study also includes the most exclusive streets by Region. The cheapest region is Castilla-La Mancha, where its most expensive street is Avenida de España, in Albacete, with an average price of 339,423 euros.
In Extremadura, the highest prices are on Calle Pantano de Puerto Peña, in Badajoz, with average prices of 464,177 euros, while in La Rioja, the most expensive street is in Logroño, on Avenida de La Rioja, with homes of 485,143 euros on average.
The real estate portal highlights that six regions exceed an average of a million euros: Catalonia (4.7 million euros), Valencia (3.4 million), the Canary Islands (3.32 million), the Basque Country (1.75 million), Galicia (1.61 million) and Cantabria (1.39 million).