Research Briefing | Mar 13, 2025

Housing affordability lowest in Greek, Danish, and German cities

House prices across Europe have soared over the past decade, especially in cities. During this time, incomes in Europe have not kept pace with house price hikes on average, squeezing the purchasing power of homebuyers in many European cities.

What you will learn:

  • Housing affordability—a measure of an individual’s ability to afford to buy or rent a property— has become increasingly worse since 2020. In most European cities, affordability improved between 2013 and 2020. But a surge in house prices after the onset of Covid-19, further compounded by rising rental prices, energy costs, and mortgage repayments for households, have weighed on overall housing affordability.
  • House prices in Athens are lower than many other cities, yet housing affordability is more challenging for residents in the Greek capital than any other major city in Europe, which is in part due to Greece’s weak economic conditions over the past decade. Europe’s largest economy, Germany, has ten urban regions (NUTS2)—including Berlin and Hamburg—which are less affordable than an average European city. While the theme that cities are significantly less affordable than rural areas within a country is most pronounced in Denmark, underpinned by the second least affordable major European city—Copenhagen.
  • A combination of reasonably strong demand and considerable supply-side constraints will sustain upward pressure on house prices in major European cities over the next five years. Subsequently, we expect total housing costs to continue to rise and for the current subnational disparities in affordability to persist.
Back to Resource Hub

Related Content

The European housing market has turned a corner, but challenges remain

The housing market across most of Europe has now improved, but has it reached the tipping point?

Find Out More
Labour’s plan to build more homes is encouraging, but do not expect it to profoundly reform the market

In a previous research briefing we looked at the macroeconomic implications of a new Labour government. Here, we delve into one of the UK’s most persistent political issues—housing—and explore what changes a Labour government might bring to regional development.

Find Out More
Why rate cuts will do less than rate hikes

Rate cuts by the European Central Bank over the course of 2025 may not boost growth to the same degree that the central bank's aggressive rate-hiking cycle in the wake of the pandemic constrained it. This reinforces our view that quarterly eurozone growth will remain broadly stable at last year's humble pace.

Find Out More
Rebalancing Canada’s housing market will take a decade

In this month’s video, Tony Stillo outlines why we think it will take another decade to build enough homes to restore housing affordability across Canada.

Find Out More