Greece Posts One of Europe's Steepest Rent Rises as Housing Crisis Deepens

Greek residential rents surged 8.66 percent year-on-year, placing the country among Europe's fastest-rising rental markets and deepening a housing crisis that is rapidly eroding affordability for ordinary households, according to a comparative study by the Global Property Guide.

Only Montenegro at 14.43 percent, Bulgaria at 12.32 percent and Bosnia-Herzegovina

at 8.89 percent recorded higher annual rental inflation in the region. By contrast, Germany saw rents rise just 2.21 percent and France 1.91 percent over the same period.

The figures reflect a cumulative increase of 26 percent over the past five years and 18 percent over the past decade — a near-complete reversal of the property value collapse Greece suffered during its financial crisis.

While average monthly rents in Athens remain below those in London or Zurich, the gap between rental costs and local wages is widening at an accelerating pace.

Greece's homeownership rate has now slipped below 70 percent, according to data from the Hellenic Statistical Authority and Eurostat, meaning more than three in ten Greek households depend entirely on the rental market — a structural shift that amplifies the impact of each successive price increase.

Analysts point to a confluence of pressures: a shortage of long-term rental supply, rising demand from a growing urban workforce, and the continued expansion of short-term tourist lets that remove properties from the residential market.

With tourism revenues at record highs and investor appetite for Greek real estate strengthening, relief for renters is not expected in the near term.

By Giorgos Pappous

Διαβάστε περισσότερα στο iefimerida.gr

Greek residential rents surged 8.66 percent year-on-year, placing the country among Europe's fastest-rising rental markets and deepening a housing crisis that is rapidly eroding affordability for ordinary households, according to a comparative study by the Global Property Guide.

Only Montenegro at 14.43 percent, Bulgaria at 12.32 percent and Bosnia-Herzegovina at 8.89 percent recorded higher annual rental inflation in the region. By contrast, Germany saw rents rise just 2.21 percent and France 1.91 percent over the same period.

The figures reflect a cumulative increase of 26 percent over the past five years and 18 percent over the past decade — a near-complete reversal of the property value collapse Greece suffered during its financial crisis.

While average monthly rents in Athens remain below those in London or Zurich, the gap between rental costs and local wages is widening at an accelerating pace.

Greece's homeownership rate has now slipped below 70 percent, according to data from the Hellenic Statistical Authority and Eurostat, meaning more than three in ten Greek households depend entirely on the rental market — a structural shift that amplifies the impact of each successive price increase.

Analysts point to a confluence of pressures: a shortage of long-term rental supply, rising demand from a growing urban workforce, and the continued expansion of short-term tourist lets that remove properties from the residential market.

With tourism revenues at record highs and investor appetite for Greek real estate strengthening, relief for renters is not expected in the near term.

By Giorgos Pappous

Διαβάστε περισσότερα στο iefimerida.gr

Keywords
Τυχαία Θέματα
Greece Posts One, Europes Steepest Rent Rises,Housing Crisis Deepens