According to data from National Statistics Institute (INE), in 2023 housing had a median cost of 1,611 euros per square meter (euros/m2), a value 2.0% higher than the year ended in the previous quarter and 8 .6% higher than the 12 months ending in the same quarter.
In 2023, “50 municipalities presented a median price higher than the national value, mainly located in the Algarve sub-regions (14 out of 16 municipalities), Greater Lisbon (all 9 municipalities), the Setúbal Peninsula (8 out of 9 municipalities) and in the Porto Metropolitan Area (7 out of 17 municipalities)”, highlights the institute.
But the good news is that the majority of the 300 municipalities with available data (in a universe of 308 municipalities) have much lower house prices.
What are the cheapest municipalities to buy a house?
According to a report by idealista, it is in the interior of the country that you can find the municipalities that have houses for sale at more affordable prices. In Mêda, Guarda district, it is possible to buy the cheapest homes in the country, with a median cost of 156 euros/m2 in 2023. This means that it is possible to buy a 100 m2 house for less than €16,000.
The municipality of Figueira de Castelo Rodrigo - also in the district of Guarda - presented the second most affordable house price of all 300 municipalities with available data: 185 euros/m2. In third place is Tabuaço (Viseu district), where buying a house cost 226 euros/m2. Thus, it is possible to purchase a 100 m2 house in Figueira de Castelo Rodrigo for around 19 thousand euros and in Tabuaço for less than 23 thousand euros.
At the end of the list of the 10 cheapest municipalities to buy a house is Celorico da Beira, in Guarda, where a 100 m2 cost 295 euros, in average terms, reveals INE. In other words, in this municipality it is possible to buy a house to live in for less than 30 thousand euros.
And where is it most expensive to buy a house?
The large urban centres of Lisbon, Porto and Faro, is where the most expensive municipalities in the country for purchasing housing are found. The most expensive municipality of all is Lisbon, where houses were sold for a median price of 4,167 euros/m2 in the last year ending in December 2023. Therefore, a house was purchased for a median price of 416.7 thousand euros in 2023. Next is the municipality of Cascais, with a price of 3,976 euros/m2.
The list of the most expensive municipalities to buy a house in Portugal includes three municipalities in the district of Faro: Loulé, Lagos and Vila do Bispo, where house prices exceed 3,150 euros/m2. In other words, families who bought houses in these municipalities paid more than 315 thousand euros.
The district of Faro is the one with the most municipalities in the ranking of the 10 most expensive municipalities to buy a house – a total of 6. The district of Lisbon is represented by four. The municipality of Porto is the only one to represent the metropolis of Invicta, appearing in eighth place, with the median price of houses sold at 2,866 euros/m2.
Great.
But then of course once you have bought the property and employed builders got permission got the solar panels on order and have spent €100k…bought car cars bike motor homes.. try getting a renewal on your residency permit…
Ah but nah..spend the money sure absolutely… allowed to stay, nope….
Im beginning to think that immigration to PT is like ponsit scam, looks great initially but at the end of the day……. Nada
By Luc from Other on 26 Apr 2024, 19:26
Luc,
What are the advertisements for me to buy in your country as a foreigner compared to the reality?
Just an Interested guy
By will from Algarve on 27 Apr 2024, 19:53
Most of the people leaving Portugal, dreams dashed, are those who thought they could buy one of these 30,000 euro homes to fix up. You don't mention how very difficult that is to do. There is a great shortage of laborers in this country, especially in construction, so good luck getting anything done. Delays, no shows, higher costs than projected....for many people it's a nightmare. Very misleading article. Do you write for the Portuguese Chamber of Commerce?
By Natalie Gray from Other on 29 Apr 2024, 10:43
Keep in mind that the so called "houses" in the €30k bracket are deteriorated/collapsed aka ruins!
By Joaquim from Beiras on 29 Apr 2024, 11:03
Misleading headline. CHEAPEST PROPERTIES, but nearly half of the article is about the most expensive??? How about listing the 10 cheapest areas?
By Gary from Algarve on 29 Apr 2024, 11:05
Hi. I live in Caldas Da Rainha. I think that doing a piece on the cheapest places to buy combined with their annual temperatures and internet availability would be super popular. Lots of Digital nomads will live flexibly if there is good internet.
By Cordelia Blake from Other on 29 Apr 2024, 11:11
Anything that cheap and even more expensive are mostly uninhabitable.
By Jorge Maia from Lisbon on 29 Apr 2024, 14:44
Please do development for central portugal everything there is going to ruins. Lisbon n porto r already overcrowded but still no plans of development there.
By Riya from Açores on 02 May 2024, 08:34
Why is there a shortage of laborers....translated "skilled trades"? I will tell you why. The digital age generation is soft like their hands. They're afraid to get their hands dirty, sweat out toxins, get free daily exercise, and take pride in what they can make with their own two hands. They want a place to live, so why don't they just 3D print a house?
By William from Other on 03 May 2024, 12:15
The interior is the `real´Portugal. If you must be near the sea, don´t follow the herd.
By Steve from Algarve on 04 May 2024, 10:04
In the articles like this, it would be nice to have a map! The cheapest places were marked with blue and the most expensive with red. Then add a yellow background color of fiber or 5G coverage!
By JJussi from Other on 04 May 2024, 17:32