A mid-year report devoted to the average home prices in Turkey has been published, based on the performance in the first half of 2022 (January through June) and over the past 12 months, which are quite indicative. It was approximately by the beginning of last July that life in Turkey almost normalized after the previous pandemic year. This was the time developers found new momentum, as traveling around the country became far easier, particularly when visiting it from abroad. By then, buyers could select and purchase a home at leisure and after adequate consideration.
Home prices continue to grow and show no signs of slowing down.
According to Endeksa (an analytical web portal), the annual increase in home prices in Turkey was 182% as of June.
In June, Endeksa published detailed statistics on 30 of the most expensive provinces based on the average value per square meter of residential property.
Istanbul, Antalya, and Mersin were the top three by growth value. Remarkably, Mersin repeatedly makes it to the top of different ratings. This province is rapidly developing its economy and becoming more important as the Akkuyu Nuclear Power Plant is being built there and a great number of competent professionals, blue-collar workers, and others flock there. The value of housing increases accordingly.
The performance of the TOP 3 provinces is as follows:
Province | Average selling price in June 2022 (TL/1 sq m) | Average cost of residential property for sale in June 2022 (TL) | Average selling price over past 12 months (TL/1 sq m) | Average cost of residential property for sale over past 12 months (TL) | Investment payback period (years) | Change (growth) of value (%) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Muğla | 24,969 | 3,469,023 | 15,517 | 2,048,244 | 18 | 178 |
Istanbul | 17,592 | 2,109,480 | 10,000 | 1,150,000 | 17 | 234 |
Antalya | 14,961 | 1,944,930 | 8,500 | 1,045,500 | 16 | 226 |
Aydin | 14,232 | 2,063,630 | 9,000 | 1,305,000 | 38 | 170 |
Izmir | 12,742 | 1,656,460 | 7,785 | 973,125 | 20 | 172 |
Balikesir | 11,591 | 1,483,648 | 6,900 | 848,700 | 30 | 184 |
Çanakkale | 11,467 | 1,134,840 | 6,500 | 747,500 | 23 | 193 |
Yalova | 9,219 | 1,197,430 | 5,500 | 687,500 | 21 | 186 |
Bursa | 8,986 | 1,231,082 | 5,235 | 680,550 | 23 | 179 |
Mersin | 8,914 | 1,335,150 | 4,625 | 693,750 | 20 | 223 |
Kocaeli | 8,716 | 1,177,200 | 4,862 | 632,060 | 21 | 203 |
Bartin | 8,615 | 896,584 | 5,187 | 544,635 | 27 | 152 |
Adana | 8,581 | 1,372,960 | 5,118 | 818,880 | 26 | 199 |
Gaziantep | 8,306 | 1,327,520 | 5,517 | 885,135 | 23 | 149 |
Samsun | 8,223 | 1,151,080 | 4,710 | 635,850 | 22 | 178 |
Edirne | 8,177 | 938,170 | 4,800 | 528,000 | 20 | 151 |
Sakarya | 8,119 | 974,280 | 5,100 | 596,700 | 22 | 178 |
Isparta | 8,087 | 1,051,830 | 5,000 | 650,000 | 23 | 138 |
Denizli | 7,981 | 1,077,705 | 5,000 | 700,000 | 24 | 140 |
Sinop | 7,733 | 927,360 | 5,132 | 615,840 | 28 | 139 |
Tekirdağ | 7,570 | 1,058,540 | 4,431 | 598,185 | 18 | 201 |
Trabzon | 7,519 | 1,210,237 | 4,310 | 689,600 | 32 | 170 |
Ankara | 7,389 | 982,604 | 4,500 | 585,000 | 17 | 171 |
Eskişehir | 7,308 | 913,500 | 4,923 | 590,760 | 23 | 138 |
Rize | 7,292 | 1,025,640 | 4,429 | 611,202 | 28 | 144 |
Zonguldak | 7,148 | 928,590 | 4,333 | 563,290 | 24 | 137 |
Manisa | 7,145 | 914,560 | 4,786 | 598,250 | 24 | 133 |
Ordu | 7,143 | 964,035 | 44,223 | 592,682 | 28 | 153 |
Tunceli | 7,104 | 921,830 | 5,119 | 691,065 | 24 | 85 |
Burdur | 7,104 | 923,390 | 4,286 | 533,322 | 25 | 148 |
Rental rates are increasing rapidly along with selling prices. According to Endeksa analysts, the rent in Turkey grew by 156% over the past year and by 234% over the past four years, based on averaged and official performance indicators. This means that rental rates can differ drastically in certain provinces, cities, districts, and even neighborhoods.
The average rent per square meter in Turkey was TL 48.74, while the average rental payment in June was TL 5,361. The average payback period of investment in buy-to-rent residential property was 17 years.
Province | Average cost of housing rent in June 2022 (TL/1 sq m) | Average cost of rent per residential property in June 2022 (TL) | Average cost of housing rent over past 12 months (TL/1 sq m) | Average cost of rent per residential property over past 12 months (TL) | Investment payback period (years) | Change (growth) of rental rates over 12 months (%) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Muğla | 136 | 14,937 | 72 | 7,900 | 18 | 73 |
Antalya | 95 | 10,397 | 46 | 5,021 | 17 | 310 |
Istanbul | 79 | 8,107 | 49 | 5,079 | 17 | 168 |
Izmir | 61 | 6,968 | 32 | 3,552 | 20 | 172 |
Çanakkale | 37 | 3,487 | 23 | 2,101 | 23 | 140 |
Ankara | 37 | 4,393 | 22 | 2,622 | 17 | 164 |
Sakarya | 34 | 3,260 | 19 | 2,057 | 22 | 151 |
Kocaeli | 33 | 3,801 | 19 | 2,192 | 21 | 178 |
Gaziantep | 33 | 3,282 | 20 | 2,600 | 23 | 91 |
Tekirdağ | 32 | 3,563 | 20 | 2,200 | 18 | 147 |
Samsun | 31 | 3,038 | 18 | 1,966 | 22 | 153 |
Nevşehir | 30 | 2,332 | 19 | 1,601 | 19 | 86 |
Eskişehir | 30 | 2,707 | 18 | 1,617 | 23 | 131 |
Aydin | 30 | 3,285 | 20 | 2,200 | 38 | 88 |
Yalova | 30 | 3,277 | 22 | 2,400 | 21 | 112 |
Edirne | 30 | 2,446 | 20 | 1,800 | 20 | 89 |
Isparta | 29 | 1,726 | 18 | 1,170 | 23 | 140 |
Denizli | 28 | 2,660 | 17 | 1,637 | 24 | 100 |
Bartın | 28 | 2,217 | 16 | 1,500 | 27 | 141 |
Bursa | 28 | 3,172 | 19 | 2,095 | 23 | 99 |
Mersin | 27 | 3,205 | 19 | 2,596 | 20 | 83 |
Tunceli | 26 | 3,096 | 18 | 2,187 | 24 | 48 |
Adana | 25 | 2,963 | 17 | 2,117 | 26 | 110 |
Konya | 25 | 3,274 | 14 | 1,972 | 24 | 171 |
Manisa | 25 | 2,720 | 17 | 1,833 | 24 | 120 |
Zonguldak | 25 | 2,082 | 15 | 1,500 | 24 | 105 |
Balıkesir | 25 | 2,456 | 19 | 1,912 | 30 | 67 |
Düzce | 24 | 2,046 | 15 | 1,384 | 22 | 128 |
Kirklareli | 24 | 2,379 | 15 | 1,610 | 23 | 124 |
Bolu | 24 | 2,395 | 14 | 1,500 | 25 | 143 |
As the table shows, the provinces with the highest rental rates were Muğla (with resorts such as Fethiye, Marmaris, Bodrum, Ölüdeniz, and others), Antalya (with the resorts of Antalya, Alanya, Kemer, Side, Belek, Kaş, Kalkan, and others), and Istanbul.
Over the same period, the annual rent growth in Muğla, the most expensive province, was not as impressive with 73%, and an average rent of TL 136 per square meter and TL 14,937 for a residential property, with a payback period of 18 years.
The rent in Antalya made a huge leap of 310% over the past year. The average rent per square meter is TL 95, and the rent for residential property is TL 10,397. The payback period reached 16 years.
In Istanbul, renting a square meter cost TL 79 in June, and an average apartment, TL 8,107. The rent grew by 168%, while the payback period dropped drastically – down to only 17 years (it used to be far longer).
Görkem Öğüt, the partner, founder, and General Manager of Endeksa evaluated this statistical data and made the following conclusion: “Summer months are a time of significant residential activity in seafront provinces. At the same time, home prices continue to grow significantly. On the other hand, even though the value of residential property increases every month, we observe a slight downtrend in the growth rates, e.g. the monthly growth of 14.7% in May reduced to 11.4% in June. The decision to impose restrictions on granting home loans based on several parameters may cause a partial reduction in prices of the so-called investment-oriented housing.”