A running tracker of Portugal's housing market — the INE price index, bank valuations, rents and affordability. Updated with each new data release.
We gather here, in one place, how Portugal’s housing market is moving. Instead of one article per data point, we update this page with the essentials: the INE price index, bank valuations, rents and affordability for buyers and renters. Official data is at INE.
Updates
11 July 2026
A yellow light on the supply side: Portugal’s statistics office INE counted just 6,586 licensed construction and rehabilitation projects through April, down 7% on the same period of 2025, while new-housing construction costs rose 6.9% year-on-year in May. Fewer permits plus pricier building is a recipe that usually ends somewhere familiar — more price pressure down the road.
10 July 2026
House prices rose 8.9% year-on-year in June, according to idealista — the eighth consecutive record high, with the square metre at €3,156. The pace eased (from 10.2% in May), but prices rose in all 20 district capitals and autonomous regions, led by Portalegre (+25.8%), Castelo Branco (+24.3%) and Santarém (+24.2%). Lisbon still tops the table at €6,107/m2, followed by Porto (€4,053) and Funchal (€3,921).
9 July 2026
Idealista: in May the median asking price stood at 3,142 euros/sqm and the average listed value rose to about 430,500 euros (+3.7% year on year), though sales and prices are cooling. On rentals, the national median rent reached 9.46 euros/sqm in Q1 (+9.1%), with Lisbon nearly double that (17.42 euros/sqm).
8 July 2026
Porto Vivo will put another 159 affordable-rent homes on the market by December, taking the below-market units it manages to 588 by the end of 2026. On the sales side, the average asking price hovered around 430,000 euros in May, up 3.7% year on year, while first-quarter transactions fell 8.7% — prices rising, activity cooling.
6 July 2026
The average asking price for homes reached 430,500 euros in May, up 3.7% year on year, according to Imovirtual’s price report — but the market is showing clear signs of cooling. In the first quarter, sale prices even dipped slightly while rents rose in most districts. The regional gap in mortgage payments remains huge: Aveiro has the highest average monthly payment (near 967 euros) and Viseu the lowest (around 398 euros), a difference of almost 570 euros a month.
4 July 2026
Rents have fallen for five straight months nationally, but Lisbon remains one of Europe’s least affordable capitals. Portugal is in Europe’s top three for purchase-price increases.
1 July 2026
House prices hit a new record in May: up 10.2% year on year, with the median reaching 3,142 euros per square metre, though the pace is starting to show signs of cooling.
30 June 2026
Bank valuations of homes reached a new high (2,208 euros/m²) and the INE price index confirmed the rise at the start of the year.