Showing posts with label Values. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Values. Show all posts

Friday, 6 April 2018

Data Shows January Spanish Home Values up 3.6%


2018 is a perfect time to buy costa del sol property
Data Shows January Spanish Home Values up 3.6%


Statistics published by Spanish property valuation firm Tinsa this week show the average home in Spain was worth around 3.6% more at the end of January 2018 compared to January 2017. 

With the increase of between 5-6% in 2017 – depending on the metric – signs are strong that 2018 will be another positive year for Spanish property. 

The data from Tinsa highlighted not just the nationwide average increase of 3.6% but also different regional variances. The data showed that property prices were up over 5% in the larger cities and provincial capitals of Spain during January, with an increase of around 4.1% across the Balearic and Canary islands.

Average prices increased around 3% for most of the Mediterranean coast, which is just below the national average. This is a reflection of the fact that demand for coastal properties is generally at its lowest in the winter months. Tinsa believes that home prices across the Mediterranean will reach above the national average as the summer sets in. 

An interesting note is that while the data from Tinsa doesn’t reveal the average selling price of Spanish homes for January, it does say that home values have reached the averages of June 2013, which was a time when the market faced a number of price corrections. 

Things were moving downwards back then while they are moving upwards today, and substantially at that. Home sales are increasing by an encouraging amount; 11-15% over the past few years. The average mortgage loan amount is also steadily increasing.



Tuesday, 22 August 2017

Average Spanish Property Values 2.3% Higher in June Compared to Last Year

Average Spanish Property Values 2.3% Higher in June Compared to Last Year

Costa del sol continues to be a great investment 

Data on the price of Spanish property from valuation firm Tinsa shows that the average selling price of property in Spain was 2.3% higher this June compared to June of last year, bringing the streak of monthly increases in house prices to 10 straight months. 

While the data from Tinsa doesn’t go into the actual average property price for each region, it does show the largest increases in prices are found in the coastal regions and major cities. The average property price for regional capitals was 4.2% for example, which is above the national average. While property prices increased an average of 2.4% across the Mediterranean coastline. 

When analysing the average house price across the first half of 2017, Spanish property prices were up 2.8% compared to the first half of 2016, with island property prices seeing the sharpest increase at 7.2%. 

The price increases will no doubt be welcomed because they are gradual and steady. There hasn’t been a price shock, spike, or crash across the past 18 months plus. It’s just been a consistent increase in demand, which means a consistent increase in price. 

These factors are giving economists and property experts alike plenty of encouragement. They can see for themselves an industry with plenty of foreign investment and a growth in domestic interest, as well as increasing confidence from businesses and lenders. 

This is the reason for the 2.4% increase in building licenses across the past year. It’s also why actual sales increased 23% year-on-year as of May, and mortgage approvals increased 10.4% in April – a figure that correlates with the decrease in unemployment as Spanish unemployment has fallen 10.7% across the past year.

Monday, 27 February 2017

Spanish Home Values Rise 10% in Three Years

Spanish Home Values Rise 10% in Three Years

The latest data from the National Statistics Institute (INE) about the Spanish real estate market shows average home values have increased 10.8% in Spain during the past three years.
The property market is on the rise, take a viewing trip
with Costa Del Sol Property Group

In just 2016, the housing price index in Spain showed that house prices were up 4% by the end of the third quarter over the same period of time in 2015. As such house prices have increased by an average of 4% each year since 2014, which is when they bottomed out.

The increase in house prices in Spain is both a driving factor for – and a result of – the increased amount of interest in buying and selling Spanish property. Growth was stunted during the recession between 2007 and 2014, which eliminated confidence in the industry. Spain has since come out on the other end of these dark times.

Many of these transactions are due to an increase in foreign demand for Spanish property, which was still there for the recession. The data from the INE also suggests that there is another positive trend developing in the form of housing starts; people buying their first homes.

This figure rose above 60,000 during 2016, and it’s expected that some 67,000 first homes will be bought in 2017. The housing market right now is a perfect cocktail for the first buy market; the economy is stronger, there’s more job security, better mortgages, and a growing but affordable property market. There’s never been a better time for property investment.

New housing starts grew 32% in 2016 compared to 2015. The result is that only 17.5% of young Spaniards are currently living in rented accommodations.

It’s becoming tougher to find rented accommodation in Spain. Spain has the fewest amount of homes for rent in the entirety of Western Europe, with only 2% of accommodations in Spain up for rent.

Friday, 23 December 2016

Official Data Shows Spanish Home Values up 4% Over Last Year


Official Data Shows Spanish Home Values up 4% Over Last Year





The statistics unit of the Spanish central government released their latest figures recently showing that the property industry is going from strength the strength as the average price for residential property in spain increased 4% over the past 12 months.



Buying property in the Costa del Sol is on the
increase and will continue to grow.
The official figures look at many different kinds of monthly data, trends, and regional variations and they seem to show that just how the real estate market of 2016 has performed.



The data comes from information on deeds that were registered through the year, revealing that there was an increase of 3.5% of resale property values over last year, with new home builds being about 7.3% more expensive.



If taken on the quarterly basis then the figures represent an increase of 0.8% over the previous quarter, which is another encouraging sigh for the industry that these steady increases in property prices have become the norm now. It should also alleviate the fears of people on both ends of the spectrum; both the fear that prices are going up too much and that they have begun to stagnate.



The reality of the situation is far more reassuring and sober. There are still some stark regional differences, which is actually a good thing. While it’s true some prices fell a little in some regions, in particular Murcia, Castilla y León, and Communidad Valenciana, there were also increases in the more popular areas of Madrid, along with Catalunya, the Costa del Sol, and the Balearics. These increases show how much buyers value location and infrastructure.



The figures should offer people considering jumping on the property ladder in 2017 some encouragement as it’s expected that, as strong as 2016 was, 2017 will be even stronger to buy property in Spain and the Costa del Sol. 

Saturday, 14 May 2016

Spanish Home Values up 4.3% According to EU Data


Spanish Home Values up 4.3% According to EU Data



The statistics database of the European Union (Eurostat) found that the value of Spanish property rose by an average of 4.3% in 2015. This is above the average in Europe which is good news for buying property in Spain.

In the final quarter of last year the Spanish property values stayed steady so Spain could be seeing an end to the rising property prices that it saw in the past few quarters.

Homes in Spain saw an increase in value across all quarters leading to the property value being 4.3% higher than for the same period in 2014. The three previous quarters also saw an increase higher than 4%.

Home prices in Costa del Sol are no the up
Analysts feel confident that this trend will carry over into 2016. Data from the first quarter will be out soon and people in the housing industry are eagerly anticipating finding out if the encouraging results of 2015 will indeed lead to a great 2016.

In the whole of the EU property prices increased an average of 3.8% last year. Sweden was ahead of the league with an average rise of 14.2%. Hungary came second with 10.3% and the UK came third with 7.1%.

Croatia, Italy and Cyprus, all of whom have been considered the next big thing when it comes to overseas investment, fell flat. They saw a contraction of 2.1%, 0.9% and 0.6% respectively.

It’s been predicted by CBRE that Spanish property prices will rise by as much as 5% in 2016.

Overall buying property in Spain is a good investment and looks to continue to rise over the next few years.
Spanish-Home-Values-4.3%