Portuguese homes hit a new record: average price tops €262,000
Statistics office INE confirms all-time highs for housing. There's a hint of slowdown, but buying a home is still a stretch for most.
If you’re house-hunting, you already suspected it: it keeps getting more expensive. The numbers from INE confirm what your wallet feels. In the first quarter of 2026, the average price of homes sold reached €262,839, an all-time high, up 13% on a year earlier.
And it’s not just the sale price. The median bank valuation hit €2,208 per square metre in May, also a record, with Lisbon and Porto pulling the figures up as usual.
A very gentle brake
There is, however, one detail worth noting. The housing price index rose 17.8% year on year — wild, yes, but it was the first slowdown since mid-2024, after touching 18.9% at the end of 2025. In other words: still rising fast, just a little less fast.
Families are starting to hesitate too. Between January and March, 37,745 homes were sold, down 8.7% on the same period in 2025. With Euribor stubbornly refusing to fall and prices sky-high, some would rather wait and see.
The picture is the familiar one, made worse: wages that don’t keep up, supply that doesn’t arrive, and a younger generation feeling that owning a home drifts a little further away each year.
See also: how the home loan instalment looks with Euribor and the IMT exemption for young buyers. The official data is at INE.
Illustrative · Photo: Jakub Zerdzicki / Pexels