Europe’s real estate recovery looks set to pick up steam in 2025

Europe’s real estate recovery looks set to pick up steam in 2025


Residential 19th century style residential buildings in historic center of Paris, France.

Kolderal | Moment | Getty Images

Europe’s real estate sector is poised for further recovery in 2025, as investment activity picks up and growth returns across key market segments, analysts have predicted.

A gradual uptick in transactions in 2024 looks set to gain pace in the coming 12 months, with further interest rate reductions seen easing pressure on the sector and reviving lackluster growth from recent years.

Real estate investment activity is now forecast to increase 15% next year across the U.K. and other major European markets, according to real estate firm CBRE, which has dubbed 2025 a “pivotal” year for the sector.

“All property capital values are showing early signs that they’ve reached a turning point, which is expected to gather momentum throughout the year ahead,” Jennet Siebrits, CBRE’s head of U.K. research, said. “Our forecasts indicate competitive returns across all property segments, with prime assets expected to deliver the strongest performance.”

Offices

Europe’s office sector is seen recovering further next year, as occupancy rises alongside return-to-office mandates.

That will push leasing levels closer to historic averages compared to their anaemic rates over recent years, according to CBRE. 

European real estate set for further recovery in 2025

Recovery in the sector will be polarized, however, with rents and valuations diverging between “the best and the rest,” M&G Investments said in a December outlook.

Primary or Grade A office supply will remain constrained and in high demand, while interest in secondary assets will remain low, it added.  

Residential

The residential market is also positioned for greater activity next year, as borrowing costs fall further, analysts agreed. 

Average asking prices are expected to rise 4% by the end of 2025 — an uptick on recent years but in line with the long-term average, according to Rightmove. Meanwhile, rents will remain elevated as supply constraints persist.

Among prime real estate, price growth is set to continue, too, maintaining Europe’s status as a global wealth hub.

Stockholm, Marbella and Madrid are seen leading that charge, recording price growth of more than 5%, Knight Frank noted in its prime residential outlook for 2025. Meanwhile, London and Paris will remain leading luxury markets despite political flux and a clampdown on the uber wealthy, it said.

Beds and sheds

Elsewhere, demand for operational real estate — or beds and sheds — will remain strong, with particular opportunities in logistics hubs, student accommodation and hospitality.   

Residential concrete apartment building covered with green plants, Madrid, Spain

Alexander Spatari | Moment | Getty Images

But, analysts warn that understanding structural trends — such as digitization and demographic shifts — will be key to differentiating between the winners and the losers.

Key trends for 2025

Investors will also be closely watching a few key trends that could impact the real estate market next year.

Incoming sustainability targets in the U.K. and Europe will require strong coordination between occupiers, landlords, investors and lenders, while new construction targets could create more opportunities in key markets.

Artificial intelligence is set to become more critical to the sector, with 85% of respondents to a 2024 PwC survey saying they expect AI to have some, or a large impact, on all areas of real estate over the next five years.  

That could include current use cases, such as maximizing hotel occupancy and predicting why a tenant selects one property over another, or future applications like property management and market analysis, the report said.



Source

Design executive behind ‘Liquid Glass’ is leaving Apple
World

Design executive behind ‘Liquid Glass’ is leaving Apple

File: Then Apple Creative Director Alan Dye celebrates the launch of the July Issue at the new WIRED office on June 24, 2015 in San Francisco, California. Kimberly White | Getty Images Apple‘s head of user interface design, Alan Dye, will join Meta, in a notable shift of executive talent in Silicon Valley. The iPhone […]

Read More
A little-known startup just used AI to make a moon dust battery for Blue Origin
World

A little-known startup just used AI to make a moon dust battery for Blue Origin

Artificial intelligence has created a device that turns moon dust into energy. The moon vacuum, which was unveiled on Wednesday by Blue Origin at Amazon‘s re:Invent 2025 conference in Las Vegas, was built using critical technology from startup Istari Digital. “So what it does is sucks up moon dust and it extracts the heat from […]

Read More
Micron stops selling memory to consumers as demand spikes from AI chips
World

Micron stops selling memory to consumers as demand spikes from AI chips

A person walks by a sign for Micron Technology headquarters in San Jose, California, on June 25, 2025. Justin Sullivan | Getty Images Micron said on Wednesday that it plans to stop selling memory to consumers to focus on meeting demand for high-powered artificial intelligence chips. “The AI-driven growth in the data center has led […]

Read More