Good thing we will have an vacant property tax of 3% to discourage property hoarding.
> Nationally, property prices are now just 2.5% off their 2007 peak.
Journalists can’t wait for that barrier to break and mention it at every opportunity.
Monthly Changes
Feb 21: 0.4%
Mar 21: 0.5%
Apr 21: 0.9%
May 21: 0.8%
Jun 21: 1.4%
Jul 21: 1.7%
Aug 21: 2.2%
Sep 21: 1.6%
Oct 21: 1.2%
Nov 21: 1.3%
Dec 21: 0.9%
Jan 22: 0.9%
Feb 22: 0.8%
Absolutely fantastic news. I had to do a little jig in the Kitchen this morning upon hearing this,my house is worth €790,000 atm so l am hoping l can hit €870,000+ by Christmas, very nice. No chance of a Crash this time either thanks to the sweet flow of humanity coming into lreland,it will keep House prices nice and high for years. Brilliant, brilliant news!
bang average semi-d near me was sold in 2018 as new for 440,000
sold at tail end of last year for 620,000 – someone is making a killing
Every time I think to myself prices cannot get any higher… They get higher.. utterly hopeless for people trying to buy a home
And still young families battle with investors to buy their first home.
There’s something seriously wrong with this government.
I’m lucky to own my own house, extremely fortunate.
I really can’t see a “crash” per se coming down the line any time soon at all, what I think we’re entering now is a new cycle of the phasing out of private home ownership.
It’s my (possibly incorrect) opinion that what we’re seeing now is the start of the only solution to house people, which is the emergence of a complete shift to a professional rental model where the housing market is somewhat handed completely to investors only through barrier of entry.
I don’t think it’s intentional or malicious as some would portray, though I do think it’s completely related to policies implemented (or lack thereof) 10+ years ago.
So I guess in essence, some will say it’s “unsustainable”, I’d counter and say it’s completely sustainable, it just depends on your access to extreme levels of credit or capital.
are all the ghosts estates now occupied lads?
End deemed disposal, make other investments viable.
we’re into that stage of monopoly where nobody is having fun anymore, only difference being, I’m not sure there’s someone who’s prepared to upturn the board
We’re still not back to what the prices were in 2006.
February I was looking for some property new houses in south Dublin, 580k for 3 bedrooms. After a month, the same house, the same project, the same area, the price was 780k
Imagine having a government that didn’t actively strive for this.
15 comments
Very sustainable.
Good thing we will have an vacant property tax of 3% to discourage property hoarding.
> Nationally, property prices are now just 2.5% off their 2007 peak.
Journalists can’t wait for that barrier to break and mention it at every opportunity.
Monthly Changes
Feb 21: 0.4%
Mar 21: 0.5%
Apr 21: 0.9%
May 21: 0.8%
Jun 21: 1.4%
Jul 21: 1.7%
Aug 21: 2.2%
Sep 21: 1.6%
Oct 21: 1.2%
Nov 21: 1.3%
Dec 21: 0.9%
Jan 22: 0.9%
Feb 22: 0.8%
Absolutely fantastic news. I had to do a little jig in the Kitchen this morning upon hearing this,my house is worth €790,000 atm so l am hoping l can hit €870,000+ by Christmas, very nice. No chance of a Crash this time either thanks to the sweet flow of humanity coming into lreland,it will keep House prices nice and high for years. Brilliant, brilliant news!
bang average semi-d near me was sold in 2018 as new for 440,000
sold at tail end of last year for 620,000 – someone is making a killing
Every time I think to myself prices cannot get any higher… They get higher.. utterly hopeless for people trying to buy a home
And still young families battle with investors to buy their first home.
There’s something seriously wrong with this government.
I’m lucky to own my own house, extremely fortunate.
I really can’t see a “crash” per se coming down the line any time soon at all, what I think we’re entering now is a new cycle of the phasing out of private home ownership.
It’s my (possibly incorrect) opinion that what we’re seeing now is the start of the only solution to house people, which is the emergence of a complete shift to a professional rental model where the housing market is somewhat handed completely to investors only through barrier of entry.
I don’t think it’s intentional or malicious as some would portray, though I do think it’s completely related to policies implemented (or lack thereof) 10+ years ago.
So I guess in essence, some will say it’s “unsustainable”, I’d counter and say it’s completely sustainable, it just depends on your access to extreme levels of credit or capital.
are all the ghosts estates now occupied lads?
End deemed disposal, make other investments viable.
we’re into that stage of monopoly where nobody is having fun anymore, only difference being, I’m not sure there’s someone who’s prepared to upturn the board
We’re still not back to what the prices were in 2006.
February I was looking for some property new houses in south Dublin, 580k for 3 bedrooms. After a month, the same house, the same project, the same area, the price was 780k
Imagine having a government that didn’t actively strive for this.