Nov 7, 2013

APARTMENT HUNTING IN BARCELONA

The last days were, well, intense. I was freaking out a little – we only had less than 2 weeks left to find an apartment. Chris and I were staying in a very tiny room and sharing the apartment with a flat mate, but we had to be out before the 1st of November.

Of course, Barcelona is a big city, and new apartments become available every single day. But it is not so easy to find an affordable flat in a nice area with all the basic things we need. We started looking for apartments online already weeks ago, and we actually almost got an apartment for the 1st of October. It was nice, cheap, had a spacious balcony and was really close to the beach. Unfortunately, we weren’t chosen by the owner and we had to keep on looking. Little did we know this was an exceptional offer and that it would be really hard to find anything similar. We browsed through hundreds of apartments every day, for weeks, without any result. Some of the things we learned the past weeks… 


1. Apartment hunting is great for learning Spanish

Don’t bother looking for ads in English, these will often be poorly translated; with knowing just a few words like alquiler (to rent), amueblado (furnished), fianza (deposit) and calefacción (heating), it is quite easy to decipher the ads, even those written in Catalan. I only have a basic knowledge of Spanish; I followed an intensive Spanish course in the beginning of this year, but afterwards I was a little too lazy to keep it up, except for watching the occasional Spanish art house movie or cooking shows on TV. But while I was reading all these ads for apartments, which were mainly in Spanish, sometimes in Catalan, I learned quite some words and sentences. I can’t have a simple conversation in the supermarket yet, but I was surprised how easily I could question home owners on things like the deposit, the length of the contract, whether the apartment comes furnished or when it becomes available to rent. It is not a must to speak fluent Spanish to find an apartment here (obviously, we managed to find one) but a certain vocabulary can be very useful.


2. Apartments in Barcelona come and go FAST

If you want to find a nice apartment in Barcelona, you have to stay up-to-date with the offer. Great apartments aren’t online for long – Barcelona is a popular city, many people are behind their laptops right this very moment, hunting for that one apartment in the right neighborhood, with the right size, a decent kitchen, a cute balcony, and all of that for the right price. There is a lot of crap out there; in order to find something good, you need to search daily on different websites. These are the ones we used the most:

http://www.idealista.com/  
http://www.segundamano.es/  
http://www.fotocasa.es/  
http://www.habitaclia.com/  
http://www.enalquiler.com/  
http://www.loquo.com/

I also posted an ad on Loquo under the category “busco piso” (searching for an apartment) with a short text in Spanish and in English, explaining who we are and what type of apartment we were looking for. I received quite a lot of replies on it (again, a lot of crap as well), so it is definitely worth the 2 minutes it takes writing the text. If you find an interesting apartment during your daily search or as a reply to your Loquo ad, it is ESSENTIAL to reply IMMEDIATELY, if possible by phone. Good apartments don’t stay online for long; someone will see it, call, schedule the appointment and decide right away. We missed out on a lot of apartments because we didn’t directly call or weren’t able to see the apartment the same day. Quite annoying: owners are looking for renters with a job, but they also very often ask to schedule an appointment in the middle of the day (evenings and weekends being out of the question). In short: hunt, identify your target (aka dream apartment) and ATTACK.


3. If you are not a millionaire, you have to lower your standards

When I say dream apartment, I mean a dream apartment for Barcelona standards: a house in relatively good condition in a safe neighborhood (make sure to avoid El Raval: it might look nice during the day, but you don’t want to walk there at night), rooms with windows, an equipped kitchen, some sort of heating and ideally with a balcony or terrace and close to either work, the center or the beach. If you want to live closer to the beach, the apartment will be more expensive and very small (in our budget, these were mainly studios or 30m2 sized one bedroom apartments). If you want to live in the center, you’ll have to live with noise and hundreds of tourists blocking your way every day. If you prefer a bigger and/or cheaper apartment, you might want to look for one close to a metro station, or else you’ll have to travel long every day. It’s all about compromise. We managed to find something spacious, in good condition, well equipped, close to Chris’ work and in a safe and very well connected area. It was a little over budget and not furnished, but we were able to buy the bed and the couch for a reasonable price and some closets came included. It was also a particular and not an agencia – most apartments online are from agencies, but they charge very high fees. Since we didn’t have to pay any commissions, we had money left to spend it on some furniture. 


4. Rent is sky-high, but prices are negotiable

Apparently, it is totally normal here to discuss the rent price with home owners or even with agencies. We often saw rent prices lowered online, sometimes with 150 euros a month. On most of the pages listed above, there are options to propose a lower monthly rent. This might not work with very popular apartments, but it can save you a lot of money. In the case of our apartment, we proposed a rent of 50 euros a month less, and they agreed! Rent prices are generally high in Barcelona, but luckily they can be reduced. Even at agencies, they proposed us lower rent prices. If you are not in a hurry to find a place, it might just save you a lot of money proposing lower prices at the end of the month, when owners are urgently looking for the next renter.


5. What you see isn’t always what you get

When browsing online, be aware of the fact that there are many, many fake ads out there. Huge, luxurious apartments, in the center of Barcelona, for 500 euros a month? FAKE! Anything that looks too good to be true really is fake. Whether particular or posted with a logo and link of an agency – it’s fake. Don’t even think about it, just click it away. There are a lot of scams here with apartments; they might charge you if you want to see the apartment or the contract, or after giving you the key. We have heard horror stories of both particulars and agencias and we are still not sure which one is the safest. The only thing we know is that agencies cost a lot of money and particulars not, so we decided to go with the last one.

Also, just trust your guts. Once, we had an appointment for an affordable temporary place at a great location, near Plaça Reial. We were standing in front of the door, full of graffiti; the apartment building itself looked quite spooky. We were supposed to be on the fifth floor, but we only counted four. We were quite desperate for an apartment, but we didn’t ring the bell, it didn’t feel right. Not looking forward to being robbed, we just decided to walk away.  

6. Keep believing, it is not impossible – hard work pays off

After 1,5 months of intense apartment hunting, less than 2 weeks before we were going to be thrown on the streets, we finally found a nice apartment. Spending hours every day browsing through the ads, wasting time visiting crappy apartments, with owners or agencies that either didn’t bring the right key (this actually happened twice) or didn’t show up at all. It can be very frustrating, but it is a battle you can win. And when you do, celebrate! You got an awesome apartment in BARCELONA!
 

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