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Emilia Romagna · Market data

Rimini property market

Rimini is the capital of Italy's Adriatic Riviera — a long sandy coastline on the east of Emilia-Romagna built around summer tourism, beach clubs and a historic core that traces back to Roman times. For foreign buyers it sits at the upper-mid end of the seaside market: more affordable than Liguria or the lakes, but with a deep, well-established holiday-rental economy that few other Italian coastal towns can match. The result is a property market with two faces — a seasonal seafront aimed squarely at letting, and a year-round inland town where locals actually live.

€3,008
Median €/m²
€2,978
Average €/m²
€8.84
Rent €/m²/mo
3.5%
Gross yield

From PropIQ’s aggregated listings (1,253 sampled) · updated 2026-05-25. Gross yield is indicative — annual rent ÷ price, before costs.

A seasonal resort market with a year-round town behind it

Rimini's appeal rests on one of Italy's most developed beach-tourism machines: kilometres of organised beach (the stabilimenti, or licensed beach clubs), a packed summer calendar of nightlife and events, and an airport plus a fast rail line that pull in visitors from across northern Europe. Demand peaks hard in summer and thins in winter, which shapes everything about how property here is priced, used and let.

Buyers tend to split into two camps. There are lifestyle buyers — Italians from the inland Po Valley cities and foreigners after a sea-view holiday flat — and pure investors chasing the holiday-let income. Because the town is genuinely lived-in away from the seafront, you can buy either a tourist asset or an ordinary residential home, and the two behave very differently.

  • Strong, mature short-let tourism economy rather than a niche second-home market
  • Sharp seasonality: summer-driven demand, quieter winters
  • Good transport — Rimini airport plus the Bologna–Adriatic rail corridor
  • Sits at the value-to-mid end of Italy's coastal markets, not the luxury tier

Where to buy in Rimini

The Marina Centro seafront — the strip of hotels and apartment blocks fronting the main beach — is the classic holiday-let location, commanding the strongest seasonal rents but also the most competition and the most dated stock. The historic centre (centro storico) around the Tempio Malatestiano, the Roman Arch of Augustus and Piazza Cavour offers a more year-round, characterful alternative that has been steadily regenerated.

Heading south, neighbourhoods like Miramare (near the airport) and the resort districts toward Riccione offer a quieter, family-oriented beach product, while inland areas away from the front are where you find the more affordable, everyday residential housing that locals occupy in winter. The closer to the sand, the higher the price and the more the value depends on summer letting.

  • Marina Centro — prime seafront, peak seasonal lets, older blocks
  • Centro storico — Roman and Renaissance core, more year-round appeal
  • Miramare / southern beaches — family resort feel, near the airport
  • Inland districts — the value end, everyday residential stock

The rental and investment angle

Rimini is one of the more credible places in coastal Italy to run the numbers on a holiday let, precisely because the tourist demand is real and long-established rather than aspirational. A seafront flat can generate intense income across the summer months, but a buyer has to underwrite the off-season honestly: gross headline returns can look strong, yet occupancy collapses in winter, and management, cleaning and beach-club costs eat into the seasonal take.

The smarter play for many foreign investors is to weigh a pure short-let asset on the front against a more balanced unit slightly inland or in the centre that can blend tourist lets with longer winter tenancies. PropIQ scans the Italian portals for Rimini, flags listings that look undervalued against the local market, projects realistic year-round yield rather than peak-season headlines, models the full set of foreign-buyer purchase costs, and runs the due-diligence checks — so you can see which of these two strategies a given property actually supports before you commit.

Practical notes for foreign buyers

Non-Italians can buy freely in Italy; most EU and many non-EU nationals (including UK and US citizens) face no special restriction thanks to reciprocity rules. You will need an Italian tax code (codice fiscale) and a local bank account, and the transaction runs through a notary (notaio), a public official who verifies title and registers the sale.

Budget beyond the asking price: purchase taxes differ sharply between a primary residence and a second home, and as a foreign holiday-home buyer you will usually fall into the higher second-home bracket, plus notary, agency and translation costs. Anything let to tourists also needs to meet Emilia-Romagna's regional registration rules for short-term accommodation, so factor compliance into the plan.

Frequently asked questions

Can foreigners buy property in Rimini?
Yes. Italy places no general restriction on foreign ownership for EU citizens, and most non-EU nationals — including UK and US buyers — can purchase under reciprocity agreements. You will need an Italian tax code (codice fiscale) and the sale must be completed before a notary (notaio).
Is Rimini a good place to buy a holiday-let investment?
It is one of the more proven coastal short-let markets in Italy, with a deep, long-running summer tourism economy rather than speculative demand. The key caveat is seasonality — strong summer income has to be weighed against a quiet winter, so realistic year-round yield matters more than peak-season headline figures.
Which areas of Rimini should I focus on?
Marina Centro and the seafront strip are the classic holiday-let locations, while the historic centre offers more year-round character and regeneration. Southern beaches like Miramare suit family resort buyers, and inland districts are where the more affordable everyday housing sits.
What extra costs do foreign buyers face in Rimini?
Expect purchase taxes that are higher for a second home than a primary residence, plus notary, agency and translation fees on top of the price. If you intend to let to tourists, you must also register the property under Emilia-Romagna's regional short-term rental rules.

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