The builders point out three factors mainly
Access to housing is one of the main problems that the citizens of Mallorca have. Faced with this situation, many people wonder why homes on the Island are so expensive, compared to those sold on the Peninsula.
The manager of the Balearic Builders Association, Sandra Verger, explains that the price of housing is so high on the island, it is so high for three main reasons.
The first of these is that on the Island the land is limited, and consequently, the land available to build. This means that its price has skyrocketed and the Balearic Islands have the most expensive square meter in Spain on average. Faced with this situation, the builders call on the Consell de Mallorca and the town councils for urban planning measures to make better use of the available land. In this way, more buildings could be built.
Another reason that makes the price of housing more expensive is that there is a lot of demand from foreigners, who do have economic possibilities to buy real estate at higher prices than residents, due to their greater purchasing power.
Finally, the shortage of building materials has increased the price of housing by 17%. In the last year there have been price increases that exceed 100%, in the case of copper. Wood has become 30% more expensive, as has steel; corrugated steel, 78%; aluminum, 56%; bituminous mixtures, 85%; and PVC pipes, 70%. To this must be added the cost of insularity.
All these circumstances have led to access to housing becoming one of the main problems for Majorcans, especially the youngest. Many of them have to continue living with their parents, despite wanting to become independent.
The opinion of economists
Luis García Langa, director of Corredordefondos.com, explains that “as in all assets, the price of real estate works by supply-demand. In the Balearic Islands, supply problems can be separated into four:
The first is the serious problems of concession and agility in licenses. “This stoppage causes construction to be long delayed and ultimately creates a bottleneck. It is clear that construction must be ecologically sustainable but it must be possible to build and above all to rehabilitate. It also takes forever, especially in some municipalities, to grant permission for major work to rehabilitate.
The second is “the need for many homeowners to sell their homes at prices higher than their purchase, either because they don't want to lose, or because they have a mortgage to cover. If this always happens, the real estate market works like a pyramid in which nobody could lose and would always climb. Taking into account that a housing bubble has passed, having prices higher than it is a problem ”.
The third is the factor of foreigners, who tend to buy houses with high amounts. “When it comes to statistics, they add up to a lot for the amount but it does not affect all ranges of the homes. Obviously it does not help but, at least for the moment, a middle class person is less affected. Of course, while in Mallorca we continue to have problems of net salaries (before taxes) that are so low, either due to the low qualification of workers, due to how little wages are linked to productivity and due to seasonality, this problem may increase and become the principal ».
The fourth is «the rising cost of supplies, which is something general for all areas: steel, copper, lithium, fuel to bring it, energy ... it is a social problem that is bad for everyone (except for the producers of these raw materials) but in the Balearic Islands we add the seasonal factor and the costs necessary to bring according to what material. Cost that the Balearic economy has been claiming for years via a REB that never arrives ».
Pau A. Monserrat, member of the CES and professor at the UIB, states that “housing in the Balearic Islands is expensive and will continue to be due to a basic economic issue: there is a lot of demand, people who want to buy or rent, and a supply of housing limited. When demand grows and supply remains more or less stable, prices rise. No more no less".
In his view, to attack the problem of access to housing “the easy measure for the politician, and of little or no effectiveness, in practice is to limit prices. The perverse effects are of different types: appearance of a powerful black market (a part of the sale or rental price is paid in black), search for alternative markets (if the rental price is limited, the owners prefer to sell to rent) , even more demanding selection of the tenant (which would leave out the groups with more problems to rent), among other undesirable effects ».
I think Monserrat should bet on increasing the supply of real estate, but it requires planning time, public and private money. "We are talking, in the case of rent, of encouraging owners to want to rent, which goes through aid to reform, direct or indirect, improvement of legislation so that non-payment is expensive, etc.".
“As for construction, the possibility of increasing plants will have to be studied, since some limited islands cannot grow real estate across the width, but must do so at the top, allow smaller houses for one-person families, and so on. It is also essential to have a high number of publicly managed properties in VPO on a rental basis, well managed. Property VPO ends up generating black sales, skipping the legal maximum price, as we have seen in the previous real estate bubble ”.
Finally, he points out the need for "truly quality public transport, which would allow many families to rent or buy outside urban areas, a cheaper option."
«In other words, incentives and aid for owners and potential buyers and tenants. The opposite of what is being considered at the moment, I'm afraid, "he concludes.
The majority of Spanish provincial capitals (32 of the 52) now have much less rental housing than there was a year ago. In the case of Palma, the drop is up to 30 percent.
The fall in rent in Spain has been evident in the last year. The supply of rental homes has decreased by 17 percent, nationwide during the fourth quarter of 2022, compared to the same quarter of 2021,...
The Balearic Housing Institute (IBAVI) will guarantee 20% of the mortgage down payment for the purchase of a home, a measure aimed at helping all those people with the financial capacity to pay the mortgage loan but who cannot assume this initial expense. All in all, the range of possible beneficiaries arranged by the Government is strikingly wide, since people with an income of up to 68,541...
Read moreThe real estate sector in the Balearic Islands has opened up to the US market by landing on the islands Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices, which Nova Mallorca has acquired, so that it will become the reference real estate agency for the US, as reported yesterday by the Balearic National and International Real Estate Association (Abini).
Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices is the...
In 2022, the demand to buy a home represents 50% of the market, compared to 38% looking for a rental. The remaining 12% search simultaneously in both markets. This is one of the main conclusions of the Fotocasa Research report 'Radiography of the housing market in 2021-2022' prepared by the real estate portal Fotocasa, for the fifth consecutive year, with the intention of making an...
Read moreThe brainy Financial Times has just put Sa Pobla on the real estate map of Majorcan luxury estates. The world-renowned economic newspaper dedicated two pages to Mallorca in its highly-rated edition last Sunday, under the heading “Where the hills meet the sea”. No, it is not about the adaptation of the balcony to natural spaces, perfected this week on the island.
...
Being consistent with our great progress as a public property portal and in accordance with SEO and SEM standards, we have changed the access domain to REU.
Now it is: www.portalreu.com Much easier to remember!
n the second month of the year, 1,416 homes changed hands in the archipelago.
In Spain, home sales and purchases increased by 24% compared to a year earlier and for the twelfth consecutive month, to 56,623 units, the highest figure for a month in almost 14 years (since April 2008).
Home sales in the Balearic Islands increased by 42% in February (1,416 homes), compared to the...