Housing · Ireland

Ireland's housing shortage is not a headline. It's your first year there.

Last verified: 8 July 2026

Every guide to moving to Ireland should start with housing, because housing is the thing most likely to break your plan. Ireland built more homes in 2025 than in any year since records began in 2011 — and it still wasn't close to enough. Here are the real numbers, from the CSO and the Residential Tenancies Board, and what they mean for a couple arriving from North America.

The key numbers · 2026
  • €390,461 median price of a home, 12 months to March 2026 (CSO) — Dublin: €500,000
  • +6.5% national price growth in the year to March 2026 — the shortage is still winning
  • €1,755/month average rent on new tenancies nationally, Q4 2025 (RTB) — existing tenancies average €1,503
  • 36,284 homes completed in 2025 (+20.4%) — the most since 2011, still below estimated need
  • ~3.3% national vacancy rate; under 1% in much of Dublin (CSO)
  • 2%/year or CPI — the national rent-increase cap since 1 March 2026

Why it's like this

Ireland underbuilt for a decade after the 2008 crash while its population grew faster than almost anywhere in Western Europe — up 78,300 people in the year to April 2025 alone, to 5.46 million. The result is a structural gap between households formed and homes built. 2025's record 36,284 completions was a real improvement, but housing bodies and the ESRI put annual need meaningfully higher. Until that gap closes, prices and rents rise — national prices were up 6.5% in the year to March 2026.

For you, the practical translation: the constraint isn't only price. It's availability. In tight markets — Dublin above all — decent rentals get dozens of applications within days. Arriving with a North American assumption that "we'll just find a place when we get there" is the single most common planning error.

What renting actually costs

Ireland's rental market is two-tier: sitting tenants pay materially less than new arrivals, because rent caps held existing tenancies down while turnover repriced. You will be paying new-tenancy rents.

AreaAverage rent (RTB, Q4 2025)≈ USDBasis
National — new tenancies€1,755/mo$2,000New tenancies registered Q4 2025
National — existing tenancies€1,503/mo$1,710What sitting tenants pay — 16.8% less
Dublin~€2,200/mo$2,510New tenancies run well above the national average (Q3 2025 Dublin average: €2,173)
Cork City~€1,413/mo$1,610RTB Q4 2025 city average
Galway City~€1,409/mo$1,610RTB Q4 2025 city average

At €1 = $1.14 (1 July 2026). Limerick posted the fastest new-tenancy rent growth in the country in Q4 2025: +12.6% year on year.

The rules changed on 1 March 2026 — mostly in tenants' favour. Rent Pressure Zones were replaced by national rent control: one increase per year, capped at 2% or CPI inflation, whichever is lower, on every private tenancy in the state. New tenancies from that date carry 6-year minimum-duration protections — during the 6 years a landlord can only end the tenancy on narrow grounds (e.g. an immediate family member moving in). Rents can only reset to market in limited cases, such as after a tenant leaves voluntarily. Source: RTB and the Department of Housing.

What buying actually costs

There are no citizenship or residency restrictions on buying Irish property — anyone can buy. But buying a house gives you no right to live in Ireland; residence is an immigration question (start here).

MarketMedian price (12 months to March 2026, CSO)≈ USD
National€390,461$445,000
Dublin€500,000$570,000
Dún Laoghaire-Rathdown (most expensive)€685,000$781,000
Donegal / Longford (least expensive)€200,000$228,000

The 2.5× spread between Dublin's southern suburbs and the rural northwest is your main lever. The trade-offs — services, healthcare access, transport, broadband — are covered honestly in Where to Live. Note that cheap counties are cheap partly because of a thinner job market and services; rural vacancy runs near 10% in some towns while Dublin's is under 1%.

How to plan around the shortage

  1. Rent first, buy later — but budget rent honestly. Use new-tenancy figures (€1,755 national, ~€2,200 Dublin), not the averages quoted in news stories about sitting tenants.
  2. Line up your first lease before you commit to dates. In Dublin, Cork, and Galway, expect competition. Documentation that reassures a landlord — proof of income, references, deposit ready — matters more than in the US or Canada.
  3. Consider the second cities and commuter counties. Cork and Galway run 20–35% below Dublin on rent; well-connected county towns run lower still.
  4. If you'll buy, understand the March 2026 tenancy rules before becoming a landlord-in-waiting — buying with a sitting tenant now means inheriting a 6-year protected tenancy in many cases.
  5. Stress-test against your visa maths. If you're on Stamp 0, remember ISD expects a lump sum indicatively equal to a home's price — the CSO median gives you the number.

Sources

  1. CSO — Residential Property Price Index, March 2026 (median €390,461; Dublin €500,000; +6.5% y/y): cso.ie
  2. RTB — Rent Index Q4 2025 (new tenancies €1,755; existing €1,503; city figures): rtb.ie (published May 2026)
  3. RTB — Rental law changes from 1 March 2026: rtb.ie
  4. Department of Housing — Government reforms to the rental sector starting 1 March 2026: gov.ie
  5. CSO — New Dwelling Completions Q4 2025 (36,284 homes in 2025): cso.ie
  6. CSO — population estimate April 2025 (5,458,600; +78,300): cso.ie
  7. CSO Housing Hub — vacancy estimates: cso.ie
This guide is general information, not financial or legal advice. Property and tenancy figures are period averages — individual markets and properties vary. Confirm current rules with the RTB before signing anything.