I am surprised Germany is darker than France. Population in Germany is growing slower than France (correct?), so the market price should grow slower too, isn’t ?
…now do only Center & North Italy…
I think I’ll just move to Italy.
Depends on who is source of data for Slovakia? Central Bank was talking about 19% just last year, while statistic office was talking only about 8%…
we would need a redder red if we were to include Switzerland.
Yeah Sweden has been growing the same like the stock market, but without the risk. Lucky me owning property during that time
Makes me happy to see a map with prices going up in red and down in green. That’s the right message to send – houses are to live in not “invest”.
Prices can’t go higher if they were already record high ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
czech is only correct if you are averaging the entire country. Prague has increased 350% since 2010
I can confidently confirm this data from personal experience; my mom owns a house (110 sq/m) in the center of a small town 40 mins south of Rome, the property was valued at 300k € back in 2009, she refused an offer for 270k € in 2012, and kept on wishing to sell it for its designated value. Years went by with fewer offers every time decreasing the value, now in 2022 the house got re-value for 120€k. Needless to say she should have sold it back in 2012… worst decision of her life.
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I am surprised Germany is darker than France. Population in Germany is growing slower than France (correct?), so the market price should grow slower too, isn’t ?
…now do only Center & North Italy…
I think I’ll just move to Italy.
Depends on who is source of data for Slovakia? Central Bank was talking about 19% just last year, while statistic office was talking only about 8%…
we would need a redder red if we were to include Switzerland.
Yeah Sweden has been growing the same like the stock market, but without the risk. Lucky me owning property during that time
Makes me happy to see a map with prices going up in red and down in green. That’s the right message to send – houses are to live in not “invest”.
Prices can’t go higher if they were already record high ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
czech is only correct if you are averaging the entire country. Prague has increased 350% since 2010
I can confidently confirm this data from personal experience; my mom owns a house (110 sq/m) in the center of a small town 40 mins south of Rome, the property was valued at 300k € back in 2009, she refused an offer for 270k € in 2012, and kept on wishing to sell it for its designated value. Years went by with fewer offers every time decreasing the value, now in 2022 the house got re-value for 120€k. Needless to say she should have sold it back in 2012… worst decision of her life.
What really matters:
[https://ibb.co/JpB3Ks0](https://ibb.co/JpB3Ks0)