Homes hit a new high: prices up 10.2%, but the pace is starting to ease
Median house prices set a fresh record in Portugal. Even so, agencies and analysts are beginning to talk about a gentle slowdown on the horizon.
Anyone house-hunting in Portugal already suspected it, but now there are numbers to confirm it: prices have hit a record again. The median value rose 10.2% in a year, reaching around €3,142 per square metre — a new all-time high. Put plainly, buying has never cost this much.
Regional gaps remain vast. Greater Lisbon leads with a median price of about €4,391/m², followed by the Algarve (around €4,057/m²) and Madeira (close to €3,647/m²). Looking for a home in Lisbon or along the Algarve coast is, today, an exercise for deep pockets — or for plenty of patience and a willingness to head inland.
But there’s an important nuance here, and this is where hope lives for those who haven’t bought yet. Several signs point to a gradual cooling. The ratings agency DBRS expects price growth to slow, driven by factors such as fewer immigrants, higher inflation and less generous credit. It doesn’t talk of a crash or a bubble — quite the opposite, it rules that out — but of a rise that’s running out of steam.
The listings themselves are starting to tell that story. In early 2026, 8% of homes for sale had cut their price — not much, but more than the 6% of a year earlier. It’s a timid, almost imperceptible move, but it shows some families are more cautious and that not everything sells at the first asking price.
The overall read, then, comes in two tempos. In the short term, the market stays expensive and tight, with limited supply holding values up. In the medium term, the expectation is of a gentle slowdown, without major jolts. For buyers, that’s not exactly immediate relief — but it may be the first sign that the runaway race of recent years is, at last, losing speed.
Illustrative · Photo: Vera Emilie / Pexels