What is the most expensive street in Italy to buy property? It's time to discover some of the richest neighbourhoods in Italy.
Punta Lada is home to properties such as this one worth 15 million euros
Punta Lada is home to villas such as this one worth 15 million euros idealista

Punta Lada, in Olbia, is the street with the most expensive properties for sale in Italy, with an average value that reaches 5,558,889 euros, according to a study carried out by idealista, Italy's leading real estate portal. The most expensive street in Italy is located near Porto Rotondo, in the heart of the Costa Smeralda and boasts elegant luxury villas with only the best features such as a swimming pools, idyllic gardens and much more, some of which are on the market for as much as 15 million euros. Let's have a closer look at the 10 most expensive streets in Italy in 2022.

From the second to the fifth step of the ranking we find four addresses that lead us to Tuscany, with Forte dei Marmi in the limelight with three streets at the top of the list: Luigi Raffaelli (5,309,091 euros), Via Corsica (4,925,000 euros) and Viale Italico (4,257,647 euros). The other street in the central Italian region, which occupies the fourth step of the national ranking, is San Casciano in Val di Pesa, near Florence, where we find Via Malafrasca (4,504,496 euros) dotted with charmin farmhouses and cottages typical of the Tuscan countryside.

In sixth place in the ranking of the most expensive streets in Italy is Via Tragara (4,148,292 euros), in Capri, which offers magnificent views of the island. Here you'll be spoilt for choice with the selection of luxury villas and apartments on offer overlooking the sea.

Seventh is the Strada statale 125 Orientale Sarda at the Gulf of Arzachena (3,707,404 euros), full of characteristic villas of the Costa Smeralda.

We then move on to the most expensive street in Rome, Via Appia Antica (3,628,250 euros), near the Colosseum and in the picturesque setting of Piazza di Spagna (3,421,900 euros), where there are apartments and penthouses overlooking the capital's monuments. The most expensive street in Milan is Piazza San Babila, a stone's throw from Milan Cathedral, closes the ranking, where the average price of a home is 2.7 million euros.

 Street ComunePrice (euros)
1Punta LadaOlbia5,558,889
2L. RaffaelliForte dei Marmi5,309,091
3CorsicaForte dei Marmi4,925,000
4MalafrascaSan Casciano in Val di Pesa4,504,496
5ItalicoForte dei Marmi4,257,647
6TragaraCapri4,148,292
7Statale 125 Orientale SardaArzachena3,707,404
8Appia AnticaRome3,628,250
9Piazza di SpagnaRome3,421,900
10Piazza San BabilaMilan2,700,000

The analysis conducted by idealista also includes the most expensive streets and squares in each of Italy's 20 regions.

The study showed that the top streets where the average house price exceeds one million euros add up to 268 and are mainly located in northern and central Italy. In fact, the highest concentration of streets with houses above one million euros is found in Tuscany, Lombardy, Liguria, Lazio and Sardinia.

The undisputed star of the ranking is Tuscany, with numerous streets in Forte dei Marmi, but also in the centre of Florence and the Tuscan countryside with its typical villas and estates.