Buying a home in Portugal: prices at record highs and only 8% of listings drop
Housing access worsened again in June. With supply missing, prices stubbornly refuse to fall.
Bad news for anyone house-hunting: housing access in Portugal has worsened again. The average price is at a record high and, contrary to what many expected, the long-awaited “drop” still isn’t showing up.
The numbers tell the story. In May, the square metre in Portugal sat at €3,142 — up around 10% year-on-year. In Porto, the country’s second most expensive municipality, it’s about €4,044/m². And only 8% of listings cut their price at the start of 2026; in Porto and Viana do Castelo, the share is even smaller.
Why prices won’t budge
The explanation is almost always the same: not enough supply. It’s structural — there simply aren’t enough homes reaching the market for the demand that exists, and that demand stays strong, partly thanks to public support for young buyers.
The read for Lousada
When Lisbon and Porto tighten, towns like Lousada gain appeal — a more humane price per square metre, improving transport, and quality of life. It isn’t immune to the broader rise, but for many families it’s still the budget that actually balances.
Illustrative · Photo: Jakub Zerdzicki / Pexels