Portuguese house prices hit a new record — and in 157 municipalities they more than doubled
The median price reached €3,142 per square metre, the seventh straight high. And it's no longer interest rates doing most of the pushing.
If you’re house-hunting and feel like prices simply won’t stop, it’s not in your head. The median cost of buying a home in Portugal reached €3,142 per square metre at the end of May — a new all-time high, and the seventh month in a row breaking the previous record.
The number that really lands, though, is another one: in 157 municipalities prices have more than doubled over recent years. And this isn’t just Lisbon and Porto — the climb has spread across the country, and plenty of areas that used to be “affordable” no longer are.
There’s an interesting twist in the explanation, too. For a long time we blamed interest rates. Now analysts say what’s pushing prices most is economic growth and a shortage of supply — too much demand, too few homes. In other words, lowering Euribor alone won’t fix the underlying problem.
What it means for us
The Centro region remains the cheapest (around €1,794/m²), which keeps the argument alive for anyone swapping city crowds and city prices for municipalities like ours. There are signs of cooling — buyers are more cautious and slower to decide — but anyone waiting for “the big drop” could be waiting a long while.
Illustrative · Photo: Reinaldo Simoes / Pexels