A prestige market where supply is the constraint
Florence sits firmly at the premium end of the Italian market. The historic centre is small, protected, and almost impossible to expand, so genuinely good apartments — period buildings with light, character, and a defensible location — trade at a clear premium and tend to sell quickly. This is a market driven by scarcity rather than speculation.
Buyers here are a mix: international second-home owners drawn by the art, lifestyle, and Tuscan setting; Italian professionals and returning expatriates; and investors targeting the city's deep, year-round tourism demand. Few people buy Florence purely on rental yield — they buy it for the asset quality and the near-certainty of demand whenever they choose to sell or let.
Where to buy in Florence
The centro storico (historic centre) inside the old city — around the Duomo, Santa Croce, and the Santa Maria Novella area — is the trophy address: maximum prestige, maximum short-let appeal, and the tightest supply. Just south of the river, the Oltrarno (the artisan quarter around Santo Spirito and San Niccolò) is one of the most sought-after areas, prized for its authentic, less touristy character.
Beyond the core, the city offers a spread of options for different budgets and goals.
- Oltrarno / Santo Spirito — bohemian, artisan, walkable; strong with lifestyle buyers and short-let investors
- San Niccolò — riverside, leafy, close to Piazzale Michelangelo and its views
- Le Cure and Campo di Marte — residential, well-connected neighbourhoods that sit toward the better-value end of the market
- Fiesole and the surrounding hills — villa territory above the city, the classic prestige Tuscan-view buy
- Coverciano / Gavinana — quieter family areas where budgets stretch further
Rental and investment angle
Florence's investment case is built on demand, not headline yield. As a premium, supply-constrained city, gross rental returns tend to run lower than in cheaper Italian markets — you are paying for prestige and liquidity. The standout opportunity is short-let and tourism-driven demand: the centre attracts visitors all year, and well-located, well-finished apartments perform strongly on the short-stay market.
Crucially, short-term letting in Florence is regulated. The city has moved to restrict new short-let registrations in the historic centre, so any tourism-led strategy must be checked against current local rules before you commit. A long-let or student-let approach (Florence has a large university and a major international-student population) is the steadier alternative.
Practical notes for foreign buyers
Non-residents can buy freely in Italy, and Florence is well used to international purchasers. Budget realistically for transaction costs on top of the price: purchase taxes (higher if the home is a second home rather than a primary residence), notary (notaio) fees, and agency commission. Many historic-centre buildings are listed or under conservation constraints (vincolo), which can limit renovation — verify what you can and cannot change before signing.
Always confirm the cadastral and planning status, condominium charges, and any short-let restrictions before the preliminary contract (compromesso). PropIQ helps foreign buyers screen Florence listings against automated valuations to spot the rare undervalued opportunity, project realistic rental and ROI scenarios, and model the full foreign-buyer purchase cost so the number you plan around is the number you actually pay.