Curious about the performance of short-term rentals in A Coruña, Spain? Over the last year, the average occupancy rate was 61% with an ADR (Average Daily Rate) of 93€. Hosts earned on average 1601€ per month.

90-day occupancy forecast for A Coruña so you can update rates and stay ahead of competitors.
Key metrics to optimize your pricing strategy
Avg. Monthly Revenue
1601€
$1457 USD
YoY Revenue Change
16%
vs. previous year
Occupancy Rate
61%
~18 days/month
Average Daily Rate
93€
$85 USD
Seasonality Index
96%
demand variation
Best Months
August, July
peak season
Worst Months
February, January
low season
Our AI-powered platform automatically optimizes your rates. Maximize your revenue with intelligent dynamic pricing.
Over the June 2025 to May 2026 window, A Coruña averaged 61% occupancy across about 220 booked nights a year, two points below the 63% Spanish national average, a respectable result for a regional Atlantic city rather than a marquee destination. Its 90 euro average daily rate sits below the national norm, reflecting Galicia's gentler pricing, producing average monthly revenue of 1,553 euros per listing.
The standout figure is a 13% year-on-year revenue increase, one of the strongest gains in this batch and a clear contrast with the declines posted by Porto, New Delhi and several Spanish peers. That growth, against a 97% seasonality index, signals a market where demand is rising and the high season is doing more work each year. Read together, the numbers describe an improving, under-priced market: occupancy is solid, ADR has headroom, and the revenue trend is among the healthiest here, making A Coruña a market on an upward curve.
Average occupancy rate by month in A Coruña, compared with the same month a year earlier.
| Month | Occupancy | Prior year |
|---|---|---|
| Jul 2025 | 75.3% | 71.4% |
| Aug 2025 | 79.3% | 81% |
| Sep 2025 | 65.5% | 63.1% |
| Oct 2025 | 57.6% | 61.7% |
| Nov 2025 | 55.9% | 59.6% |
| Dec 2025 | 54% | 57.4% |
| Jan 2026 | 54.3% | 53.7% |
| Feb 2026 | 64.8% | 56.5% |
| Mar 2026 | 54.2% | 62.2% |
| Apr 2026 | 59% | 65.1% |
| May 2026 | 66.9% | 61.6% |
| Jun 2026 | 66.1% | 71% |
📌 Historical trends reveal seasonal highs – plan accordingly.
These figures reflect real-time demand in A Coruña, helping you plan and price strategically.
A Coruña is an Atlantic port city in Galicia whose short-term rental demand is built on a striking peninsula setting, a long urban beachfront and a year-round mix of leisure, business and maritime traffic. Leisure visitors come for the Tower of Hercules, the world's oldest working Roman lighthouse and a UNESCO World Heritage Site, the curving Riazor and Orzán city beaches, the glass-galleried waterfront of the Marina, and the old town around the Plaza de María Pita. The city is also a celebrated gastronomy and seafood destination, drawing food-led weekend travellers from across the peninsula.
Demand is broadened by A Coruña's role as a regional business and port hub, by cruise calls at its Atlantic terminal, and by its position on the Camino Inglés pilgrimage route. Inditex, headquartered nearby in Arteixo, anchors steady corporate travel. The guest mix is therefore a healthy blend of domestic Spanish tourists, business visitors and a growing international leisure segment. With 132 active listings tracked, this is a mid-sized, mostly owner-operated market with room to professionalise.
A Coruña runs a clear summer-led season typical of northern Spain's Atlantic coast. The best months in the data are August and July, when warm but mild weather, the city's beaches and a packed festival calendar combine, August 2024 reached 80.9% and August 2025 hit 79.2%, the year's clear peaks. The María Pita festivals through August and events like the Noite de San Xoán bonfires on the beaches in late June reinforce the high-summer surge.
The weakest months are February and January, the Atlantic winter trough, with January 2025 at 53.7% and the deep dips reflecting cold, wet, short days. What distinguishes A Coruña, though, is how high the floor sits: even the worst months stay in the low fifties rather than collapsing. The 97% seasonality index marks a pronounced summer skew, but the strong shoulder seasons (a recovering spring and a resilient autumn) give operators a longer earning window than the headline index alone suggests.
The Ensanche, the central grid district, is the practical heart for short stays: walkable to the beaches, the train station and the shopping streets, it offers the broadest, most reliable inventory. The Ciudad Vieja (old town) on the peninsula, around the Plaza de María Pita, the Romanesque churches and the port, holds the most atmospheric, character-led stock and converts well on charm and location.
The Pescadería and Marina waterfront, with its famous glazed galleries (galerías) facing the harbour, blends old-town proximity with sea views and commands strong rates. For beach-driven demand, listings fronting Riazor and Orzán capture summer travellers who want sand on the doorstep and easy access to the seafront promenade. Monte Alto, the elevated district near the Tower of Hercules, offers quieter, more residential and value-oriented options within walking distance of the coastal path.
Short-term lets in A Coruña are governed by Galicia's vivienda de uso turístico (VUT) regime under Decreto 12/2017: every tourist home must file a declaración responsable and be entered in the Galician REAT (Registro de Empresas e Actividades Turísticas), obtaining a REAT registration number that must appear on all advertising. The property must also meet the decree's minimum equipment and habitability standards.
On top of the regional rules, Spain's national registry now applies: since 1 July 2025, under Royal Decree 1312/2024, every short-term rental must also hold a national Número de Registro de Alquiler (NRA) obtained through the Ventanilla Única Digital, and platforms must remove listings that cannot show a valid number. Galicia has been tightening enforcement and the regional stock has fallen as a result, so operators should confirm both the REAT registration and the national NRA, plus any A Coruña municipal restrictions, with the Xunta and the city before listing.
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* Calculations based on 30 days/month. Actual results may vary depending on market, season, property type, and implemented strategy.
A Coruña averaged about 61% occupancy over the June 2025 to May 2026 period, roughly 220 booked nights a year. That is two points below the 63% Spanish national average, a solid result for a regional Atlantic city. Notably, even the weakest winter months hold in the low fifties, so the demand floor is higher than in many seasonal markets.
August and July are the strongest months, with August occupancy reaching around 80% on the back of the city beaches, mild summer weather and the María Pita festivals. February and January are the softest, though they stay in the low fifties. The Noite de San Xoán bonfires in late June and the busy summer festival calendar make high summer the clear pricing opportunity.
Yes. Under Galicia's VUT regime (Decreto 12/2017) you must file a declaración responsable and register in the regional REAT, displaying the REAT number on all listings. Since 1 July 2025 you also need Spain's national NRA registration number via the Ventanilla Única Digital, or platforms must remove the listing. Confirm both registrations and any A Coruña municipal restrictions with the Xunta and the city before operating.
The Ensanche central grid offers the broadest, most walkable inventory near beaches and the station. The Ciudad Vieja (old town) around Plaza de María Pita converts well on charm, while the Pescadería and Marina waterfront with its glazed galleries commands strong rates and sea views. Listings fronting Riazor and Orzán capture beach demand; Monte Alto near the Tower of Hercules offers quieter, value-oriented options.