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Residential property recorded a negligible, average decrease of 0.8% for second quarter of the year after falling by 2.3% during the previous quarter, data of the statistics office shows. Photo by BGNES
The average asking sales prices for residential property in Bulgaria continued to fall, though slightly, in the second quarter of 2010, official data shows.
Residential property recorded a negligible, average decrease of 0.8% for second quarter of the year after falling by 2.3% during the previous quarter, data of the statistics office shows.
The year-on-year comparison shows an average decrease of 9.7%. Prices fell by 7.8% on an annual basis in the first quarter of 2010.
More significant price reductions have been registered in 13 regional centers with the biggest slumps in Gabrovo - 8.3%, Shumen – 7.8% and Vratsa – 6.9%. In Sofia residential prices remained unchanged.
The average market price of residential properties in Bulgaria is BGN 971.20 per square meter – the prices are the highest in the Black Sea capital Varna – BGN 1593.97 per square meter, followed by Sofia with BGN 1558.33 and Burgas with BGN 1231.33.
Local brokers have recently commented that the recovery of the real estate market in Bulgaria will not be as steady as initially expected, judging by the mixed signals that the market sent in the first quarter.
With the onset of the crisis, the activity on the market, which reached its peak in September 2007, dried up and many of the projects ended up frozen.
Buyers are unwilling to buy residential buildings, whose construction is not completed yet, which gives an advantage to the apartments on the so-called “second-hand market”.
Bulgaria’s rental housing market has entered a new phase of maturity and international visibility.
Housing prices in Bulgaria have been increasing at a steady and often double-digit pace in recent years
Bulgaria has experienced a remarkable surge in real estate prices in recent years, a trend further boosted by the country’s anticipated adoption of the euro on January 1, 2026
Experts say Bulgaria’s entry into the eurozone does not automatically drive property prices upward
Georgi Shopov, chairman of the National Association of Construction Entrepreneurs, expects greenfield property prices in Bulgaria to rise by 10% as the country enters the eurozone
Bulgaria’s property market is booming in 2025.
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