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Date Published: 22/06/2026
Remember when a coffee cost less than a euro? Here is how much everyday prices have changed in Spain
From the menú del día to a trip to the cinema, the numbers tell a striking story about the rising cost of daily life
If you have been living in Spain for more than a decade, you will probably have a nagging sense that things cost a lot more than they used to. You are not imagining it. Inflation has been quietly eroding the value of money for years, and the gap between what things cost then and what they cost now is sharper than most people realise. Here is a look at some everyday items and how much the price tag has changed.The everyday essentials
Let´s start with the basics. A loaf of bread, which used to cost around 50 cents, now regularly costs more than a euro. A dozen eggs, previously just over a euro, will now set you back around three. At the petrol station, prices of 80 or 90 cents per litre feel like ancient history. Today, €1.50 or more is the new normal.
Getting around
Transport costs have risen sharply too. A 10-trip metro card in Madrid cost €5 when the euro was introduced. Today it costs €12.20, though transport subsidies have brought it down to €7.30 in 2026. Parking in a blue zone has effectively doubled as well, from around 50 cents an hour to over a euro in many places.
Leisure and lifestyle
Going to the cinema used to cost around €5 a ticket. Now you are looking at around €10, and potentially more at weekends. A newspaper, for those who still buy one, has gone from around €1 to over €2. A basic men's haircut, once rarely more than €10, now tends to come in closer to €15, particularly in larger cities. A school backpack that cost €15 now costs more than €30. And if you fancy a day on the beach with a hired sun lounger, expect to pay upwards of €15 for the privilege, compared to less than €5 not so long ago.
Food, drink and eating out
A coffee at a bar, once reliably under a euro for many years, now tends to cost closer to two euros, and sometimes more. And perhaps the most felt change for anyone living in Spain is the menú del día, that great Spanish institution of a three-course lunch with a drink. The days of paying €10 or €12 are largely gone. Today €15 is about the minimum you can expect, and in many places €20 to €25 is perfectly normal, especially at weekends.
It all adds up to a picture of daily life that costs noticeably more than it did, even if the change has crept up gradually enough that it is easy to miss until you stop and do the maths.
You might also ne interested in: The small summer spending habits that quietly drain your wallet without you noticing







