Tuesday, 02 January 2024 12:17 GMT

Brazil's Housing Market Defies High Rates As Prices Outrun Inflation


(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Brazil's property market is quietly delivering real gains in 2025, even as borrowing costs sit at their highest level in nearly two decades. The FipeZAP index of advertised home prices rose 6.22% between January and November, while consumer prices increased 4.15%.

Over the last 12 months, housing is up 6.92% against overall inflation of 4.48%, meaning homeowners have, on paper, beaten the cost of living. Behind the national average lies a map of different realities.

Vitória tops the ranking with a 15.08% jump so far this year, followed by Salvador (14.82%), João Pessoa (14.51%), São Luís (13.48%) and Belo Horizonte (12.29%).

In November alone, prices climbed 0.58%, a touch above October's 0.54%. Smaller apartments are moving fastest: one-bedroom units rose 0.96% in the month, while three-bedroom properties gained just 0.37%.

Price levels also vary sharply by city. Among the 56 municipalities monitored, the average advertised price stands at R$9,585 ($1,775) per square metre. Vitória again leads, with R$14,102 ($2,611) per square metre, followed by Florianópolis, São Paulo and Rio de Janeiro.



At the other end of the table, Aracaju averages R$5,270 ($976) per square metre, highlighting how far a similar budget stretches between coastal capitals.

Crucially, this price cycle is unfolding with the benchmark Selic rate at 15% per year, keeping mortgage costs elevated. Yet demand has stayed surprisingly firm.

Industry data show that around 206,900 homes were sold in the first half of 2025, up 9.6% on a year earlier, while launches grew 6.8% to 186,500 units. The stock of new homes fell to 290,000 units, enough for just over eight months of sales at the current pace.

Government housing subsidies also play a role. The Minha Casa, Minha Vida programme, recently expanded to families earning up to R$12,000 ($2,222) a month, saw sales jump more than 25% in the first half.

Supporters say the programme helps lower-income families access ownership; critics warn that subsidies, complex rules and slow licensing keep supply tight and favour insiders over new private investment.

For households and investors, the message is simple: in much of urban Brazil, waiting for a bargain in 2025 has so far meant watching the market walk away.


































































































Capital (State) Average Price (R$/m2)
Vitória (ES) 14,102
Florianópolis (SC) 12,647
São Paulo (SP) 11,882
Curitiba (PR) 11,758
Rio de Janeiro (RJ) 10,801
Belo Horizonte (MG) 10,666
Maceió (AL) 9,813
Brasília (DF) 9,648
Fortaleza (CE) 8,884
São Luís (MA) 8,585
Recife (PE) 8,465
Belém (PA) 8,214
Goiânia (GO) 8,114
João Pessoa (PB) 7,926
Salvador (BA) 7,874
Porto Alegre (RS) 7,520
Manaus (AM) 7,172
Cuiabá (MT) 6,798
Campo Grande (MS) 6,409
Natal (RN) 6,107
Teresina (PI) 5,784
Aracaju (SE) 5,270

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The Rio Times

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