Curious about the performance of short-term rentals in Vigo, Spain? Over the last year, the average occupancy rate was 58% with an ADR (Average Daily Rate) of 85€. Hosts earned on average 1386€ per month.

90-day occupancy forecast for Vigo so you can update rates and stay ahead of competitors.
Key metrics to optimize your pricing strategy
Avg. Monthly Revenue
1386€
$1261 USD
YoY Revenue Change
6%
vs. previous year
Occupancy Rate
58%
~17 days/month
Average Daily Rate
85€
$77 USD
Seasonality Index
136%
demand variation
Best Months
August, July
peak season
Worst Months
February, January
low season
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Over the June 2024 to May 2026 window, Vigo ran 58% average occupancy across roughly 208 booked nights a year, sitting five points below the 63% Spanish national average, a reminder that this is a secondary, more industrial market rather than a top-tier tourist city. At an 84 euro (about 76 dollar) average daily rate, among the lower figures in the Spanish set, it produces average monthly revenue near 1,353 euros (1,230 dollars) per listing, reflecting modest rates and a market that depends on summer volume.
The positive note is momentum: revenue is up 4% year on year, a healthy gain against the broader Spanish picture. That growth, however, sits alongside an extreme 139% seasonality index, the defining feature of the numbers, meaning earnings are crammed into a few summer months across the 243 active listings tracked. Read together, the figures describe a below-average-occupancy but improving market whose economics live and die by the July-August peak, with the December Christmas-lights bump providing a useful but minor secondary season.
Average occupancy rate by month in Vigo, compared with the same month a year earlier.
| Month | Occupancy | Prior year |
|---|---|---|
| Jul 2025 | 75.3% | 69.6% |
| Aug 2025 | 82.2% | 82% |
| Sep 2025 | 51.1% | 48.4% |
| Oct 2025 | 48.2% | 38.8% |
| Nov 2025 | 54.7% | 47.7% |
| Dec 2025 | 58.9% | 58.4% |
| Jan 2026 | 33.9% | 32.7% |
| Feb 2026 | 46.3% | 40.6% |
| Mar 2026 | 52.1% | 49.7% |
| Apr 2026 | 50.6% | 55.9% |
| May 2026 | 63.4% | 50.1% |
| Jun 2026 | 62.4% | 59.3% |
📌 Historical trends reveal seasonal highs – plan accordingly.
These figures reflect real-time demand in Vigo, helping you plan and price strategically.
Vigo's short-term rental demand is shaped by its identity as Galicia's largest city, a working Atlantic port rather than a postcard tourist town. STR demand draws on three strands: leisure visitors using Vigo as the gateway to the Cíes Islands, the protected Atlantic Islands National Park whose white-sand beaches are reached by ferry from the city port; travellers on the Portuguese Coastal Camino de Santiago, which passes through the area; and a steady business and industrial layer tied to the Citroën/Stellantis plant, the fishing port (one of Europe's busiest) and the city's role as a regional economic hub.
The traveller mix is therefore a blend of summer beach-and-nature tourism and year-round practical demand. Vigo's hilly old town (O Berbés and the Casco Vello), its seafood culture along the Rúa da Pescadería oyster street, and increasingly its extravagant Christmas lights display, which has become a national draw in December, all feed visitation. This gives the market a strong summer leisure spine with secondary pulls from pilgrims, business travellers and a December festive spike.
Vigo is a sharply seasonal Atlantic market, with a very high 139% seasonality index, one of the most concentrated in the Spanish set. The strongest months are August and July, when Cíes Islands ferry traffic, beach tourism and the Camino season peak; August 2025 hit 82.1% occupancy, the high point of the series, with July close behind in the mid-70s. June and the early-autumn shoulder hold up reasonably, but the warm-weather window does the heavy lifting.
The trough is pronounced and winter-centred. January and February are the weakest months, with January readings dropping into the low-to-mid 30s as the Atlantic weather turns wet and cold and beach demand vanishes; October and the deep off-season are also soft. The notable exception is December, which lifts visibly (occupancy near 58-59%) on the back of Vigo's famous Christmas lights, a rare bright spot in an otherwise quiet winter. The practical implication is a market that earns most of its revenue across a short summer, with disciplined off-season pricing essential.
The Casco Vello, Vigo's restored medieval old town climbing the hillside above the port, is the highest-appeal zone for leisure guests, walkable to the historic quarter, the marina and the Cíes ferry terminal. O Berbés and the adjacent Rúa da Pescadería, the famous oyster street, trade on seafood culture and waterfront atmosphere, drawing food-focused visitors.
The central area around Rúa do Príncipe and Porta do Sol is the commercial and shopping heart, convenient for business travellers and well connected, while the seafront promenade and As Avenidas put guests near the port and ferries. Further out, the beach district of Samil, with the city's main urban beach, suits summer-leisure stays that prioritise sand over old-town character. Across the city, proximity to the port and ferry terminal, the gateway to the Cíes, tends to anchor the strongest summer demand.
Vigo sits under Galicia's regional framework for tourist housing, which is the binding regime today. Any vivienda de uso turístico (VUT) must be registered in the Galician tourism registry (REAT) before being let short-term, declaring the activity to the Axencia Turismo de Galicia, with a one-off registration fee (reported around 60 euros) and compliance with habitability and equipment requirements. Operating an unregistered VUT exposes the host to regional sanctions.
Layered on top, Vigo's city council is introducing a municipal ordinance to regulate tourist housing, initially approved in early 2026, that prioritises residential use and aims to limit and condition where VUTs can operate, in line with a wave of similar Spanish city rules. Because the municipal ordinance was still being finalised as this was written, and its restrictions on new VUTs by area could be significant, operators should register correctly in the REAT now and confirm the current municipal limits and any zoning or building restrictions directly with the Concello de Vigo and the Galician registry before committing to a unit.
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* Calculations based on 30 days/month. Actual results may vary depending on market, season, property type, and implemented strategy.
Vigo averaged about 58% occupancy over the June 2024 to May 2026 period, roughly 208 booked nights a year. That is five points below the 63% Spanish national average, reflecting its profile as a secondary, more industrial Atlantic market where demand is heavily concentrated in the summer rather than spread across the year.
August and July are by far the strongest months, driven by Cíes Islands ferry traffic, beach tourism and the Camino season; August 2025 peaked at 82% occupancy. January and February are the weakest, dropping into the low-to-mid 30s. December is a notable exception, lifting to around 58% thanks to Vigo's famous Christmas lights, so summer plus the festive bump are where the year is made.
Yes. Under Galicia's framework, any tourist dwelling (VUT) must be registered in the regional tourism registry (REAT) before letting, with a one-off fee reported around 60 euros and habitability requirements. Vigo is also introducing a municipal ordinance, initially approved in early 2026, that prioritises residential use and may restrict where VUTs operate. Register in the REAT and confirm the current municipal limits with the Concello de Vigo before committing.
The Casco Vello, the restored medieval old town above the port, has the highest leisure appeal, walkable to the marina and Cíes ferry. O Berbés and the Rúa da Pescadería oyster street draw food-focused guests, while the central Príncipe and Porta do Sol area suits business travellers. Samil, the main urban beach, fits summer stays. Proximity to the port and ferry terminal anchors the strongest summer demand.