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Liguria · Market data

Genova property market

Genova (Genoa), the capital of Liguria and Italy's historic maritime gateway, is one of the country's most overlooked value plays. A working port city wrapped around a steep amphitheatre of hills, it pairs a vast medieval old town with a long Riviera coastline — and prices that sit well below the headline cities to the north. For an international buyer who wants a genuine Italian city with sea, character and room to negotiate, Genova rewards a closer look.

€2,391
Median €/m²
€2,553
Average €/m²
€7.41
Rent €/m²/mo
3.7%
Gross yield

From PropIQ’s aggregated listings (1,741 sampled) · updated 2026-05-25. Gross yield is indicative — annual rent ÷ price, before costs.

A port city with real value and real character

Genova is a mid-priced city by Italian standards — noticeably cheaper than Milan or the prime Ligurian resorts a short train ride away. It draws a mix of local owner-occupiers, a growing remote-work and second-home crowd, and investors who have noticed that a major coastal city can still be bought at a discount to its smaller, glossier neighbours.

The city's geography defines its market. Genova stretches thinly along the coast and climbs steeply inland, so two flats a few hundred metres apart can differ sharply in light, sea views, lift access and walkability. The caruggi (the dense, narrow lanes of the old town) sit at the value end; the airy hillside and seafront avenues command a premium. Understanding that vertical, street-by-street variation is the whole game here.

Where to buy in Genova

The neighbourhoods most relevant to a foreign buyer fall into a few clear bands:

  • Centro Storico (the historic centre) — one of Europe's largest medieval old towns, around the UNESCO-listed Via Garibaldi and the Porto Antico (Old Port). Atmospheric and the value end of the market; quality is genuinely street-by-street, so location detail matters.
  • Carignano and the area near Via XX Settembre — handsome, central residential streets with period buildings; a steadier, more premium pick close to amenities.
  • Albaro and Foce — leafy, well-regarded seaside districts to the east, popular with established families and a reliable demand pocket; closer to the coast and seafront promenade.
  • Nervi — a former resort suburb to the east with its famous clifftop walk and parks; quieter, scenic, and favoured for lifestyle and second homes.
  • Castelletto and the hillside terraces — elevated positions reached by the city's funiculars and lifts, prized for panoramic views over the harbour.

The rental and investment angle

Because purchase prices are moderate while a major city generates steady tenant demand, Genova tends to show stronger rental yields than the pricier northern markets where capital values have run ahead of rents. Demand comes from the University of Genova's student population, hospital and port-sector workers, and a long-let professional market — alongside a tourism and short-let layer focused on the old port and the eastern seaside districts.

The flip side is the same fragmentation that defines the sales market: an old-town flat with no lift, no view and damp issues is a different asset from a bright Albaro apartment, even at a similar price. Short-let rules and condominio (building/owners' association) restrictions vary, so the yield case rests on the specific unit, not a city average.

Practical notes for foreign buyers

There is no general restriction on non-residents (including most non-EU nationals, subject to reciprocity) buying property in Italy, and the process runs through a notaio (notary), who handles the deed and title checks. Budget for purchase costs beyond the price — registration or VAT, notary and agency fees — which differ depending on whether you buy as a resident or non-resident and whether the home is your first.

Genova-specific diligence matters more than in flatter cities. Older buildings can carry issues around damp, structural condition, lift access and energy efficiency, and steep or stepped streets affect everyday usability and resale. Confirm the cadastral (land-registry) status, any building-association charges, and the true condition before committing. PropIQ helps foreign buyers cut through that street-by-street variation — scanning Italian portals, flagging listings that look undervalued against local benchmarks, projecting rental yield, modelling your full foreign-buyer purchase costs and running the due-diligence checks before you ever book a viewing.

Frequently asked questions

Can foreigners buy property in Genova, Italy?
Yes. Italy places no general restriction on non-residents buying property, and EU citizens face no barrier at all; most non-EU buyers can purchase under reciprocity rules that apply broadly. The purchase is completed before a notaio (notary), who verifies title and registers the deed.
Is Genova a good place to invest in property?
It can be, largely because purchase prices are moderate for a major Italian city while tenant demand from students, port and hospital workers and tourists stays steady — which tends to support healthier rental yields than the pricier north. Returns hinge heavily on the specific unit and district, given how sharply Genova's market varies street by street.
Which areas of Genova are best to buy in?
The atmospheric, value-end Centro Storico (historic centre) suits buyers prioritising character and price, while Albaro, Foce and Nervi to the east are the established, leafier seaside districts. Carignano and the hillside areas like Castelletto offer period buildings and panoramic views at a premium.
What extra costs do foreign buyers pay when buying in Genova?
Beyond the price, expect registration tax or VAT, notary fees and usually an agency commission, plus translation or legal costs if you don't speak Italian. The exact rates depend on whether you buy as a resident or non-resident and whether it is your first home, so model them before you commit.

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