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Sardegna · Market data

Olbia property market

Olbia is the principal gateway to Sardinia's Costa Smeralda, one of the Mediterranean's most prestigious coastlines, and that proximity defines its property market. Served by its own international airport and a busy ferry port linking the island to mainland Italy, the town funnels a steady stream of summer visitors, second-home owners and yacht traffic toward the glamorous resorts to the north. The result is a market shaped by seasonal and luxury demand, where prices sit toward the upper end of the Italian spectrum and well-located coastal property is genuinely scarce.

€2,879
Median €/m²
€3,107
Average €/m²
€10.02
Rent €/m²/mo
4.2%
Gross yield

From PropIQ’s aggregated listings (980 sampled) · updated 2026-05-25. Gross yield is indicative — annual rent ÷ price, before costs.

A coastal market driven by seasonal and luxury demand

Olbia sits in the Gallura region in the northeast of Sardinia, and its economy and property market both revolve around tourism. The town itself is a working port and commercial centre, but it functions above all as the arrival point and service hub for the Costa Smeralda — the stretch of coast around Porto Cervo developed from the 1960s into one of Europe's most exclusive holiday destinations. That association pulls values toward the upper end of the national market, especially for anything with sea access or views.

Buyers here are predominantly international and second-home oriented: northern Europeans, mainland Italians and a notable share of high-net-worth purchasers drawn by the yachting culture and the privacy of the coast. Genuine year-round residents are a smaller part of the picture than in mainland cities, which makes the calendar — and the airport and ferry connections — central to how the market behaves.

  • International airport (Olbia Costa Smeralda) and a major ferry port make it one of the most accessible parts of Sardinia
  • Strongly seasonal: demand and short-let activity concentrate around the summer months
  • Prices sit among the higher tiers in Italy, with a steep premium for coastal and view property

Where to buy in and around Olbia

The town centre, around the Corso Umberto and the old quarter, offers walkable apartments and a more urban, year-round feel at relatively more accessible prices than the resort coast. The areas along the Gulf of Olbia and toward Pittulongu — the town's most popular local beach — are sought after for proximity to the sea while remaining close to services and the airport.

Heading north, the coastline rises sharply in both price and prestige. Porto Rotondo and the wider Costa Smeralda (Porto Cervo, Cala di Volpe, Romazzino) represent the luxury end of the market — villas, exclusivity and resort amenities. Inland Gallura villages and the granite countryside offer a quieter, more value-oriented alternative for buyers willing to trade beachfront immediacy for space and authenticity (a rustico is a traditional rural stone house).

  • Olbia centro storico (historic centre) — apartments, year-round amenities, the most urban option
  • Pittulongu and the Gulf of Olbia — popular beaches close to town and the airport
  • Porto Rotondo and the Costa Smeralda — the luxury villa and resort tier
  • Inland Gallura — countryside and village property at the value end of the area

The rental and investment angle

Olbia's tourism profile makes it a natural short-let market, and well-positioned property near the coast or the airport can generate strong seasonal rental yields during the peak months. The flip side of a holiday-driven market is concentration: income is compressed into a short high season, so realistic projections must weigh peak nightly rates against off-season vacancy rather than assuming year-round occupancy.

Italy regulates short-term rentals at both national and regional level — short lets typically require registration and a regional identifying code, and rules can vary, so confirming the current requirements for the property's comune (municipality) is essential before counting on holiday-let income. PropIQ helps you model these dynamics realistically, projecting seasonal yield and ROI on individual Olbia listings and flagging where the asking price looks high or low against comparable coastal stock.

Frequently asked questions

Can foreigners buy property in Olbia, Sardinia?
Yes. Italy places no general restriction on EU citizens buying property, and most non-EU nationals — including UK and US buyers — can purchase freely under a reciprocity principle that Italy maintains with many countries. You will need an Italian tax code (codice fiscale) and an Italian bank account, and the transaction is finalised before a notary (notaio).
Is Olbia expensive compared with the rest of Italy?
Yes. As the gateway to the Costa Smeralda, Olbia and its coast sit toward the upper end of the Italian market, and prime beachfront or view property commands a steep premium. The town centre and inland Gallura are more accessible than the luxury resort coast to the north.
Is Olbia a good place to buy a rental property?
It can be, thanks to strong seasonal tourist demand and excellent airport and ferry links. The key caveat is seasonality — income concentrates in the summer, so you should model peak rates against off-season vacancy rather than assume year-round occupancy, and confirm local short-let registration rules before committing.
How do I get to Olbia and how connected is it?
Olbia has its own international airport, Olbia Costa Smeralda, with seasonal connections across Europe, plus a major ferry port linking Sardinia to mainland Italy. This accessibility is a core driver of its property and rental market, particularly for second-home owners who visit seasonally.

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