Poland recorded the European Union’s second-highest annual growth in house prices in the latest figures from Eurostat. They also show that the country saw Europe’s highest quarterly price growth after the introduction of a mortgage subsidy scheme for first-time buyers last summer stimulated demand

The data, from the third quarter of 2023, show that prices in Poland were 9.3% higher than the same period a year earlier. Only Croatia (10.9%) saw faster growth among the EU’s 27 member states plus Norway and Switzerland.

Across all 29 of those countries, average price rises were 1.1%. Eleven countries saw prices fall, with Germany (-10.2%) and Luxembourg (-13.6%) seeing the biggest annual drops.

In terms of price changes from the previous quarter, Poland saw the highest growth of 4.5%, followed by Romania (3.4%) and Denmark (3.1%).

That jump came after the then Polish government in July introduced a programme offering first-time buyers mortgages with a guaranteed interest rate of 2% over ten years, with the state covering any differences compared to the market rate.

 

The scheme saw mortgage applications record a three-fold year-on-year increase in July. There was also a record number of applications in December as the scheme came to an end.

In the last quarter of 2023, house prices in Poland saw further increases, reaching an annual growth of up to 30% in some large cities, such as Poznań or Kraków.

Although the mortgage subsidy programme was halted in early January after the designated funding ran out, the new government, which took office in December, is considering introducing a similar, albeit more restricted, programme from mid-2024.

Prices have also been pushed up by a shortage of housing, with some estimates pointing to a shortfall of as many as 4 million units. That has made entering the market difficult for young Poles, nearly half of whom live with their parents, one of the highest figures in the EU.

According to the housing affordability index created by news service Politico Europe, Warsaw is the fourth-hardest EU capital for local residents to buy an apartment in, behind only Paris, Prague and Bratislava.

To buy a 75-square-metre flat in Warsaw, one would have to put aside an average local salary for almost twenty years, compared to just over 23 years in Paris, Politico calculated.


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Main image credit: Jenia Flerman/Unsplash 

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