Houses at record highs: it's not mainly the interest rates
Prices rose 10.2% in a year and hit a fresh record. A recent analysis points the finger at a growing economy and a shortage of supply — more than at the cost of credit.
If you’re house-hunting, this isn’t the cheeriest headline: in May, asking prices for homes in Portugal rose 10.2% year-on-year, with the median reaching €3,142 per square metre. That’s a fresh all-time high — the seventh month running to set a record.
The obvious question is “why?”. For a long time the easy answer was interest rates. But a recent analysis flips the argument: what pushes prices up most is a growing economy and a shortage of supply — more people able to buy and too few homes to go around. Rates matter, of course, but they’re not the main engine.
And if you’re watching
There’s a small consolation in the data: after months running hot, sales have started to slow and price growth is losing some steam. It’s not a fall — just the foot easing off the accelerator.
On the map, Greater Lisbon leads at €4,391/m², followed by the Algarve. The Centro region remains the most affordable at €1,794/m². For anyone searching in the northern interior and the Vale do Sousa, the gap to the capital is still the strongest argument for settling away from the coast.
Illustrative · Photo: Pavel Danilyuk / Pexels