Compact apartments are back in favor. Buyers want more rooms, but the minimum area they can accept in a given type of apartment is still decreasing.
Can Poles afford bigger apartments?
Due to the pandemic’s dampening effect on the increase in property prices, the gap between the price of units offered by developers and buyers' ability to finance apartment purchases narrowed significantly at the end of 2020. The only city where the average prospective buyer’s budget is less than the purchase price of an average apartment is Warsaw. One of the reasons for this state of affairs in the capital city may be the shrinking pool of apartments offered by developers as well as demand outstripping supply,
comments Katarzyna Kuniewicz, Head of Residential Research at JLL.
In this situation, it is not surprising that there is little interest in the largest apartments. It is difficult to imagine a comfortable four-room apartment of 61 or 63 square meters. Although Poles are wealthier today compared to a few years ago, and housing prices are stable compared to average earnings, this does not change the fact that a large number of Polish families still live in conditions that, according to Eurostat, could even be considered cramped,
comments Aleksandra Gałabuda, Analyst at the JLL Residential Research Team.
It’s not just the pandemic that has brought changes
Changing work and study patterns and the specter of another lockdown have changed the way many people look at their own apartments and the most important features. The need for additional autonomous workspace in an apartment is so strong that buyers are prepared to either increase their budgets or give up looking for properties in central locations,
comments Aleksandra Gałabuda, Expert at JLL.
More rooms, but fewer square meters
The process of looking for a flat takes on average 5-6 months and is very complicated. It of course involves matching the buyers' preferences with their budgets. And although each case is different, a cross-the-board look at many purchasing paths allows us to identify and understand these processes,
comments Marian Bruliński, vice president and CMO in obido.