Ireland · Property Prices

Median: €390,461.
Two markets, two speeds.

The official median home costs €390,461 — €500,000 in Dublin, €200,000 in Donegal. Prices are still rising 6.5% a year nationally, but the cities are cooling while rural counties run at 8–13%. Here's every verified number, and which register it comes from.

Figures verified 8 July 2026

The market in official numbers

Ireland's benchmark is the CSO Residential Property Price Index, built from stamp-duty returns — actual filed sales. The March 2026 release (published 13 May 2026): national median €390,461 (~$457,000) for dwellings purchased in the 12 months to March. The index rose +6.5% in the year to March — the lowest annual rate since February 2024. Dublin +5.7%; outside Dublin +7.2%. In March alone, 4,123 household purchases were filed (+14.0% y/y), worth €1.80 billion.

The portals run ahead of the register. Daft.ie's Q2 2026 report puts the national benchmark 3-bed semi at €445,000 asking, with list-price growth slowing to +3.8% y/y (from +6.8% a year earlier) — and its early transaction data show Dublin prices actually falling, −2.3% y/y, even as the official CSO index still shows Dublin up 5.7%. The CSO lags the portals by roughly three months; date-stamp everything you read, including this.

Affordability, roughly. Average weekly earnings were €1,074 in Q1 2026 (+4.4% y/y, CSO) — about €55,850 annualised. Against the €390,461 median, that's roughly 7.0× average earnings. Our calculation, not an official statistic. Rents: new tenancies averaged €1,755/month in Q4 2025 (+5% y/y, RTB), with sitting tenants paying about 19% less than new ones.

Prices area by area

AreaPrice≈ USDBasis
Ireland (national median)€390,461$457,000OFFICIAL — CSO median, 12 mo to Mar 2026
Dublin (county)€500,000$585,000OFFICIAL — CSO median
— Dún Laoghaire-Rathdown€685,000$801,000OFFICIAL — CSO median (dearest local area)
— Fingal€475,500$556,000OFFICIAL — CSO median (cheapest Dublin area)
— A94 Blackrock€845,000$989,000OFFICIAL — CSO median (dearest Eircode)
Wicklow€462,022$541,000OFFICIAL — CSO median (dearest outside Dublin)
Kildare€444,999$521,000OFFICIAL — CSO median
Galway (county)€362,000$424,000OFFICIAL — CSO median
— H91 Galway city / Salthill€415,000$486,000OFFICIAL — CSO median, +~10% y/y
Donegal / Longford€200,000$234,000OFFICIAL — CSO median (cheapest counties)
— F45 Castlerea, Roscommon€150,500$176,000OFFICIAL — CSO median (cheapest Eircode)
National 3-bed semi€445,000$521,000ASKING — Daft.ie, Q2 2026
Cork city 3-bed semi€439,000$514,000ASKING — Daft.ie, Q2 2026 (+5.1% y/y)
Mayo 3-bed semi€270,000$316,000ASKING — Daft.ie, Q2 2026 (+7.9% y/y)
Sligo 3-bed semi€253,000$296,000ASKING — Daft.ie, Q2 2026 (+3.9% y/y)

Conversions at €1 = $1.17 (8 July 2026), rounded. CSO medians cover dwellings purchased in the 12 months to March 2026. Regional growth from the same CSO release: Midlands +13.4% (fastest), Border +10.5%, South-West (Cork and Kerry) +3.6% (slowest outside Dublin), Dublin city houses +6.0%.

Counties we haven't published yet. Kerry, Meath and Waterford medians exist in the CSO's HPM08 table, but we hadn't pulled the exact figures at verification time — so they're not here. We publish verified numbers or nothing.

Where our numbers come from

CSO Residential Property Price Index — the official monthly index plus median prices by county and Eircode, built from stamp-duty returns; the last three months are provisional. The Residential Property Price Register (PSRA) lists every actual sale price since 2010 — a raw register you can search yourself. The RTB/ESRI Rent Index is the official rent series, from registered tenancies. The CSO New Dwelling Completions series tracks supply quarterly.

Daft.ie — Ireland's largest portal — publishes quarterly sales and rental reports by Prof. Ronan Lyons (Trinity College Dublin); it's the standard market reference, but its sales figures are asking prices. MyHome.ie, the second-largest portal, publishes a quarterly report with Bank of Ireland.

Honesty note. Asking prices are seller hopes, not closed sales — they typically run above what's finally paid, and in a cooling Dublin market the gap widens. When a Daft figure and a CSO figure disagree, the CSO figure is what people actually paid, three months ago.

What to watch

The shortage is the story. Ireland completed 36,284 homes in 2025 — up 20.4%, the most since records began in 2011 — and still landed about 4,700 short of the Government's 41,000 target. The new target is 300,000 homes by 2030. Second-hand listings remain roughly 50% below pre-pandemic norms (~10,100 homes for sale nationally on 1 March 2026); in Connacht-Ulster, stock is about 64% below the 2015–19 average. Scarcity, not froth, is what's holding prices up.
Rent rules changed on 1 March 2026. A new national tenancy and rent-setting regime replaced the old Rent Pressure Zone patchwork. If your plan is rent-first-then-buy — and it should be — read the current rules on citizensinformation.ie and rtb.ie before signing anything; our housing hub covers what the change means for a new arrival.
A genuine two-speed market. Dublin and the other cities are flat to falling on the portals (Dublin −2.3% y/y on Daft's transaction data; the other four cities combined −0.2% on list prices), while rural Connacht-Ulster counties still run +8–13%. Where you're looking determines which market you're in.
Buying gets you property, nothing else. There are no nationality restrictions on purchase — and no purchase confers any right to live in Ireland. Residency runs through the immigration system, covered elsewhere on this site.

Sources

  1. Medians, index, volumes: CSO, Residential Property Price Index March 2026 (released 13 May 2026) — cso.ie; Eircode medians: CSO table HPM08
  2. Galway figures: CSO data via GalwayBayFM, 12 months to March 2026 — galwaybayfm.ie
  3. Asking prices: Daft.ie Irish Sales Report Q2 2026 — daft.ie/report; as reported by Anglo Celt, TheJournal.ie and RTÉ, 23 June 2026
  4. Sale-price register: propertypriceregister.ie (PSRA)
  5. Rents: RTB/ESRI Rent Index Q4 2025 — rtb.ie; two-tier gap from the Q3 2025 index
  6. Earnings: CSO Earnings and Labour Costs Q1 2026, via RTÉ; price-to-income ratio is our calculation
  7. Supply: CSO New Dwelling Completions via RTÉ and gov.ie; listings data: Daft via World Property Journal
  8. Rental reform (1 March 2026): citizensinformation.ie; rtb.ie
This page is general information, not legal or investment advice. Engage your own solicitor for any Irish purchase.
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