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12-05-2025


According to recent data from the Association of German Pfandbrief Banks (VDP), the German real estate market is witnessing a notable rebound, with residential property prices climbing by an average of 3.6% in the first quarter compared to the previous year. This uptick marks a significant recovery from the previous period of price declines, highlighting a renewed vigor in the housing sector.

Metropolitan areas such as Berlin, Frankfurt am Main, and Cologne are at the forefront of this resurgence, with prices in these cities increasing by approximately 5%. Frankfurt and Cologne lead the pack with a 5.2% rise, followed closely by Berlin at 4.9%, Hamburg at 4.6%, and Munich at 4.5%. The growth in Düsseldorf and Stuttgart was more modest, at 3.2% and 1.9% respectively, indicating a varied pace of recovery across the country's largest cities.

Jens Tolckmitt, VDP's Chief Executive, pointed to the escalating shortage of housing as a critical factor driving prices upward. 'The challenges facing the new federal government and the Federal Ministry of Housing could hardly be greater,' Tolckmitt remarked. He also noted that while the coalition agreement contains promising approaches to address these issues, the focus now shifts to implementation.

The VDP's report also sheds light on the rental market, where new contract rents in multi-family homes have risen by 4.3% nationwide and by 4.4% in metropolitan areas, with Berlin experiencing the highest increase at nearly 5%. These figures underscore the broader trend of recovery in the real estate market, though Tolckmitt cautioned against overestimating the positive developments at the year's start, citing unresolved trade conflicts and the announcement of debt-financed investments in Germany as factors yet to fully impact the market.