The Algarve has long attracted British buyers, but Dutch interest in the western stretch around Lagos has grown notably over the past six years. In 2026 the Netherlands sits among the largest source markets for foreign purchases in the region, and the reasons are practical rather than sentimental. This piece looks at what is drawing Dutch households specifically to the western Algarve and how the purchase process compares with buying at home.
Direct flights and a manageable distance
Faro airport connects to Amsterdam, Rotterdam and Eindhoven throughout the year, with journey times of roughly three hours. Lagos sits about an hour and twenty minutes west of Faro by the A22. That combination makes the western Algarve viable for owners who want to visit several times a year without a long-haul commitment, which is a meaningful factor for a nation of frequent short-break travellers. For households that keep working ties in the Netherlands, the ability to be back in the Randstad by early afternoon turns a second home from an occasional escape into a regular part of life.
A price step up in space and climate
Compared with the Randstad, where housing supply is tight and prices high, the western Algarve offers substantially more space and outdoor living for the money. A budget that buys a modest apartment near Utrecht can secure a villa with a pool in the Lagos hinterland. The climate difference, with around 3,000 hours of sunshine a year, is the draw that turns a financial comparison into a lifestyle decision. Many Dutch buyers describe the appeal as buying a garden, a pool and a terrace that would be unthinkable at the same price at home.
- More outdoor space per euro than the Randstad
- Year-round direct flights from three Dutch airports
- An established Dutch-speaking community around Lagos
- Around 3,000 hours of sunshine a year
How the purchase process differs
Dutch buyers are used to a notary-led system, which eases the transition to the Portuguese process, where a notary formalises the deed. The key differences are the promissory contract, the CPCV, which is signed with a deposit well before completion, and the transfer tax. Non-resident buyers of a home pay a flat 7.5 percent IMT under Portugal’s 2026 reform, effective 1 September 2026, rather than progressive bands, which simplifies the sum for a second-home purchaser. Agencies with Dutch-speaking staff, among them Ten Hoopen Realty, have become a common first port of call for buyers from the Netherlands, both for the language and for the familiarity with how Dutch households expect a transaction to run.
What Dutch buyers tend to prioritise
In the western Algarve, Dutch purchasers lean toward villas with private outdoor space and energy efficiency, reflecting a domestic culture that values sustainability. Newer builds with strong energy ratings and solar provision attract a premium among this group, and older properties are often bought with a renovation plan already in mind. Practical, well-insulated homes that stay comfortable through the hotter months without heavy air-conditioning use are increasingly sought, and Dutch buyers are among the more likely to ask detailed questions about a property’s energy certificate before making an offer.
Renting before buying
A growing number of Dutch households now spend a winter or a summer renting in the western Algarve before committing to a purchase. This has become a sensible first step, since it lets a buyer test the difference between the villages around Lagos, understand the drive times to Faro and the shops, and confirm that the year-round reality suits them. Those who buy after renting tend to make more confident decisions and are less likely to resell within a few years.
The Reality for Dutch Buyers in 2026
The western Algarve offers Dutch households a familiar legal framework, easy flight access and a clear lifestyle upgrade, which explains the sustained rise in Dutch purchases around Lagos. The practical advice is the same as for any cross-border buyer, namely to budget for the full acquisition cost, use an independent lawyer, and view enough of the market to understand local price differences before committing.
