EECFA 2025 Winter Construction Forecast

EECFA released its 2025 Winter construction forecast on 12 December. Check out a sample report and place your order on eecfa.com. For discount, please contact us.

Southeast European construction markets

Bulgaria’s total construction output is forecasted to increase by 3% on average for 2026-2027” – says Yasen Georgiev at Economic Policy Institute (EPI), EECFA’s Bulgarian research institute. He adds that this is to follow estimates for a similar performance of almost 3% in 2025. The sectoral background, however, shows, a nuanced picture – cooling of residential construction, positive news from non-residential and a robust performance of civil engineering. The latter will benefit from investments which will be backed by the absorption of EU funds through the Recovery and Resilience Plan (RRP) and classical operational programmes, both with implementation deadlines in 2026 and 2027. At the same time, Bulgaria’s economy is to expand by 2.4% on average in 2026-2027 – a period continuously shaped also by the Euro adoption on 1 January 2026.

Michael Glazer (SEE Regional Advisors) and Tatjana Halapija (Nada Projekt), EECFA’s Croatian members, think that declining dwelling sales in Croatia have, paradoxically, failed to stop the growth in the value of Croatian residential output, because increases in the price per square meter of those dwellings that do get sold have more than compensated for the lower number of square meters bought. “But how long this can continue is unclear” – they add. “The policies that the Croatian government is implementing in order to ease the country’s housing crisis are confusing the residential picture still more, since a number of those policies have contradictory effects on output. As to non-residential building construction, output growth during the period covered by the current forecast will depend greatly on the sector, with some likely to continue to benefit from catch-up growth and EU support for a bit longer and others moving toward a steady state or even a decline. In civil engineering, EU funds continue to play the dominant role in financing construction of all sorts. Sports facility construction is experiencing a boom, but given the speed with which such projects are completed, the effect on output will be relatively brief. Renewable energy construction should be growing rapidly, but regulators’ hostility toward the sector are holding it back.”

Romania’s economy is entering a challenging period as the recently implemented measures to reduce the national account deficit begin to take effect” – reports Dr. Sebastian Sipos-Gug, EECFA’s Romanian researcher at Ebuild. “While most forecasters do not anticipate a recession, economic growth is expected to remain subdued over the next two years. Inflation is the highest in the EU, boosted in 2025 by increases in sales taxes. As a result, consumer prices are rising at a pace that is forecasted to outstrip wage growth, leading to a decline in real incomes in both 2025 and 2026. Government spending is also facing cuts, thus both private and public consumption are predicted to decline, with a chilling effect on most construction activity types. There is also the challenge of the massive level of public investment required by civil engineering projects that have started since 2023, which will be difficult to sustain under the austerity and the mounting pressure of losing even more EU funding. On the brighter side, both the economy at large and the labour market are expected to be quite resilient. By 2027, assuming the deficit reaches manageable levels, the effects of contractionary policies should fade out, inflation could ease, and interest rates could come down. This means that demand for construction would rebound and with it, construction activity.”

Dejan Krajinović, EECFA’s Serbian researcher (Beobuild) says that “Serbia’s overall construction output sank into a negative territory in 2025, primarily owing to the weaker performance in civil engineering. This year recorded growth in building construction, but the substantial consolidation in civil engineering dragged totals in red. The completion of major road, railway and energy projects contributed mostly, but delayed construction starts played a role as well. Residential construction is stable and is on historical levels, while non-residential construction is booming led by the hosting of the EXPO 2027 in Belgrade. Investments into commercial, hotel and office buildings are all spurred by the event, with the purposely built EXPO 2027 complex consisting of numerous venues being the single largest investment in non-residential. Improving financial conditions and sustained demand still support relatively high construction activity, but a lot of global political and economic uncertainties are dimming future prospects.”

Dr. Aleš Pustovrh at Bogatin, EECFA Slovenia, says that Slovenia’s construction sector is holding steady at EUR 6bn, though growth has cooled. Residential buildings remain the anchor, with output expected to show only a slight dip in 2025, helped by strong employment, rising wages and cheaper mortgages. Property transactions rebounded in early 2025, reversing last year’s slump, while prices continue to climb amid land shortages and slow permitting. Public housing programmes are ambitious, but private developers are concentrating on Ljubljana and coastal towns. Non-residential construction is mixed: offices are recovering slowly, retail stays subdued, but industrial and warehousing thrive on export demand and automation while health and education remain at very high levels. Civil engineering and public works lean on EU-backed projects and are anticipated to reach historically high levels by 2026. 

Eastern European construction markets

Andrey Vakulenko at Macon, EECFA’s Russian research institute notes that “the high key rate and the overall economic slowdown are constraining the Russian construction industry with negative trends expected for the current year and over the next two years. An easing of monetary policy, which has already begun, could help normalize the situation, but a positive effect is not expected until 2027. The main drag on construction output will likely be the residential subsector where high rates and revised government demand support principles are reducing activity among both buyers and developers. Negative trends will also likely persist in most non-residential segments due to declining growth rates of budget financing, a general decrease in business activity and a slowdown in consumption. The overall descending dynamics in the construction market may somewhat be mitigated by stable growth in civil engineering driven by export projects in energy and transport, but this growth is not predicted to be enough to keep the construction market in a positive zone”.

Prof. Ali Türel, EECFA’s Turkish researcher, reports that “the major effect of inflation-curb policies in Türkiye is the decline in disposable income and in the purchasing power of wage earners and pensioners. The moderate to lower-income population is unlikely to save enough equity for buying a home when rents have also become unaffordable for many. Ironically, housing sales have been increasing at a much higher rate than the growth of households. This can be attributed to the typical trend in Türkiye, where, during inflation, people expect a higher real return on their financial assets from real estate investments compared to alternative investment options. The reconstruction of earthquake-damaged buildings and infrastructure also contributed to the high rate of growth in building starts and completions from Q2 2025 onward, leading to the highest rates of change in the construction sector’s contribution to GDP compared to other sectors. Our latest forecast indicates that total construction output in Türkiye may reach 6.4 trillion TL in 2027 (EUR 180 billion), all at 2024 prices.”

According to Prof. Sergii Zapototskyi of Uvecon, EECFA Ukraine, despite the war and high risks, Ukraine’s construction industry remains one of the key drivers of economic recovery in 2025. The RDNA4 (the latest Rapid Damage and Needs Assessment Report) estimates Ukraine’s reconstruction needs for the next decade to be USD 486-524 billion, creating long-term demand for residential, non-residential and civil engineering construction works. Major challenges persist, including the uncertainty regarding the duration of the war, especially in frontline regions, labour shortages, bureaucratic barriers in the urban planning legislation, and logistical constraints due to the relocation of production facilities, and often, shortages in building materials. At the same time, the industry is demonstrating resilience: developers are diversifying supply chains, stabilizing procurement schedules, and increasing activity in the Central and Western regions. Demand for housing, intensive infrastructure restoration, and international investment from the EBRD, EIB, and other partners continue to support positive dynamics. The sector’s development prospects for 2026-2027 will largely depend on the security situation and the effectiveness of state recovery programs.

Aparthotels: new growth spot for non-residential construction in Russia

Written by Andrey Vakulenko – MACON, EECFA Russia

Russia’s resort real estate market has seen a dynamic growth in recent years, partly due to the emergence of aparthotels – a format attractive to both developers and hotel operators. The coming years are also expected to see a sharp increase in aparthotel construction, supporting the non-residential construction market – according to Andrey Vakulenko, EECFA’s Russian analyst.

Thriving aparthotel segment

Resort real estate has been one of the fastest-growing segments of the Russian construction market in recent years. Aparthotels – apartment complexes with minimal infrastructure and services, and with the mandatory availability of a trust management – have particularly seen a rapid growth, though they are relatively new to the Russian market. The core of the supply is (and will be) resort projects, i.e. aparthotels in locations with developed recreational and tourist infrastructure for seasonal vacations. Urban aparthotels – primarily in metropolitan areas with minimal infrastructure – are rather aimed at business travelers and to a lesser extent at traditional tourism and long-term rentals.

As of Q3 2025, the aparthotel market size stood at 25,200 units with a total area of ​​612,500 sqm and by the end of this year, roughly 143,000 sqm of new aparthotels, or 4,300 new units are expected to open. Based on the announced plans, the next three to four years will register a sharp rise, and by the end of 2029 aparthotels may amount to around 109,800 units with over 3.6 million sqm, almost six times higher than the current level.

Behind the growth

One of the main reasons for the anticipated expansion of the aparthotel format is that domestic tourism gained popularity after 2022 due to the reduced accessibility of many international resorts (because of the suspension of air travel, the weak ruble, visa issues, and other internal or external restrictions). Rise in domestic tourism created stable high demand for accommodation in virtually all key resorts in Russia.

Another reason is that developers specialized in multi-unit residential construction began to start many projects in aparthotel and resort real estate construction amid the decline in the residential real estate market following the cancellation of the mass preferential mortgage program.

Also, there are significant incentives and state support for developing tourism infrastructure and the domestic tourism industry, including the construction of hotel complexes and aparthotels.

Furthermore, in 2024 the status of aparthotels was legalized; they were included in the official hotel classification system, creating uniform standards for the segment and transparent conditions for market participants.

Besides, the departure of many large foreign hotel operators from the market in 2022 led to the expansion of Russian hotel chains (Azimut Hotels, Cosmos Hotel Group, Alean Collection, ZONT Hotel Group, VALO Hotel Services, Mantera Group, among others), which began collaborating with aparthotels, increasing the latter’s attractiveness and guaranteeing a high level of service and trust management services.

Moreover, many investors appeared in the market who found the trust management model used in aparthotels and the opportunity of generating passive income attractive. The operating return on investments in aparthotels in developed resorts managed by well-known hotel brands can reach 7%-10% and higher. And given the rise in the market value of apartments, long-term returns can reach 13%-17% per annum, exceeding the return on long-term bank deposits (currently 8%-10% per year for a three-year deposit).

All this suggests that aparthotels will be a major segment of non-residential construction in the coming years.

Coastal regions: top locations for aparthotels

The aparthotel format is developing most actively on the Black Sea coast, currently accounting for over half of the total supply in this segment. Urban aparthotels are primarily in Moscow and St. Petersburg with just over one-fifth of the total supply.

In the coming years, it is also the Black Sea coast that will likely register the biggest expansion in supply, but new aparthotels are also set to be actively emerging on the Caspian Sea coast, in Dagestan.

In coastal regions (Krasnodar Krai, Crimea, Dagestan), aparthotels under construction already amount to more than a quarter of all multi-unit residential real estate under construction and this figure is expected to grow further.

There is also an increase in the construction of similar projects in other resorts across the country, for example, on the Baltic coast or at mountain and spa resorts in the North Caucasus, the Altai Mountains and the Urals, among others.

EECFA 2025 Summer Construction Forecast

EECFA released its 2025 Summer construction forecast on 23 June. See a sample report and place your order on eecfa.com. To get discounts, you may contact us.

Southeast European construction markets up to 2027

According to Yasen Georgiev at Economic Policy Institute (EPI), EECFA’s Bulgarian research institute, total construction output in Bulgaria is anticipated to grow by 3% on average for 2025-2027 with a stronger growth in the middle of the period when the absorption of operational programmes and the implementation of the Recovery and Resilience Plan are to gain momentum. According to the sectoral breakdown, residential construction is expected to be the subsector with the weakest performance, while non-residential construction and particularly civil engineering are predicted to see stronger growth figures. Against this backdrop, the country’s economy is set to register a slower-than-expected growth in 2025 and 2026. In parallel, it is awaited to benefit from the effects from the full Schengen area membership effective from the beginning of 2025 and from the euro adoption expected on 1 January 2026.

Michael Glazer (SEE Regional Advisors) and Tatjana Halapija (Nada Projekt), EECFA’s Croatian members think that Croatia’s construction as a whole continues vibrant due to the combination of continuing transitioning-economy catch-up growth and large inflows of EU money. Both are beginning to diminish, however, and that will affect all construction segments, some more strongly and more quickly than others. In building construction several sectors have seen the end or are close to seeing the end of catch-up growth. Others, particularly those that benefit most from EU finance, are still going strong. Civil engineering continues to profit greatly from EU funding, and because of the poor initial condition of Croatia’s infrastructure after independence, much catch-up construction remains to be done. Certain government policies will have a great influence on specific building and civil engineering sectors. Those policies include the housing policies embodied in Croatia’s new National Housing Policy Plan until 2030, the new tax on real estate and the country’s renewable energy permitting and electrical grid hook-up fee rules.

Romania’s macroeconomic outlook remains positive, but more reserved as the political instability and fiscal uncertainty have done little to improve growth opportunities’ – says Dr. Sebastian Sipos-Gug, EECFA’s Romanian researcher at Ebuild. At the same time, he adds, the country has the largest government deficit in the EU, which will dampen public investment capabilities. All these will make it harder to finance public works and could negatively impact civil engineering. This is doubly worrying as this subsector countered the decline in other construction segments in 2024, and thus the outlook for total construction remains negative in 2025 and 2026 in real terms. Not all is gloom and doom, however. As inflation and interest rates come down, and employment indicators remain strong, private consumption could boost demand for residential and non-residential construction.

‘In 2025 Serbia’s construction is making new gains in building construction, while civil engineering has entered a period of consolidation after the strong expansion during 2023 and 2024′ – believes Dejan Krajinović, EECFA’s Serbian researcher at Beobuild. Building construction is supported by both public and private investments, boosted by the hosting of the EXPO 2027 in Belgrade. Non-residential construction is the main beneficiary of this event, particularly commercial, office and hotel segments, while residential construction is also keeping historically high volumes. Some delays are seen in civil engineering, but the overall performance is still strong with a long list of planned projects in all major subsegments. Domestic demand is still relatively strong, but economic growth and the level of investments are being muffled this year by uncertainties in the global markets, particularly the weak EU economy, international trade issues and the ongoing wars in Ukraine and the Middle East.

‘Total construction output in Slovenia is expected to decrease from the historic high of EUR 5,5 billion reached in 2023. In both 2024 and 2025, it could contract but remain above EUR 5 billion annually’ – as per the opinion of Dr. Aleš Pustovrh at Bogatin, EECFA’s Slovenian member institute. He predicts the sector to return to growth in 2026 and 2027, mostly on the back of a healthy growth in residential construction buoyed by decreasing mortgage rates. On the other hand, civil engineering is prognosticated to shrink significantly in 2024 and 2025 due to some large projects nearing completion, like the new railroad connecting Port Koper. Both non-residential and civil engineering depend to a large degree on public financing that was widely available in the post-Covid period but will become much less available in 2025-2027. Especially if the overall economic activity continues to slow down. This deceleration and more foreign labourers have also caused lower construction cost growth, but other challenges persist such as the additional bureaucratic burdens (changed permitting process, increase in tax, ongoing discussion on changes to short-term rental legislation, among others) and many external risks in the global economic and political environment. 

Eastern European construction markets up to 2027

‘In the forecast horizon, the construction sector of Russia will be under pressure from a range of macroeconomic factors, the main one being the high key rate, which will negatively affect the pace and volume of construction projects’ – according to Andrey Vakulenko at MACON, EECFA’s Russian research institute. The tight monetary policy and the reduced availability of mortgages will likely slow down housing construction, on the one hand. On the other, the high cost of project financing, the general cooling of the economy as well as reduced consumption and business activity will likely shrink the volume of investment in non-residential construction. However, these trends can partly be offset by high volumes of government financing of priority infrastructure and energy projects, which can support civil engineering and ensure near-zero growth in total construction market in 2025-2027.

Prof. Ali Türel, EECFA’s Turkish researcher says that Türkiye has been trying to control high inflation by raising the base rate and managing exchange rate increases through market instruments by the Central Bank and maintaining wage growth at zero or negative rates. This created financing difficulties for industries and businesses, reduced demand for basic consumer goods, and led to affordability problems for mortgage credits. Big declines in building starts and completions in Q1 2025 may also be related to these measures. Yet, the Central Bank’s inflation target for 2025 remains high at 24%. Positive real changes in housing prices relative to building construction costs encourage house building, while their negative real change compared to inflation may be the leading factor in the increase of home sales through equity financing when mortgage credits are not affordable for most households. Rebuilding the quake-damaged 870 thousand units requires about EUR 100 billion and these expenditures have been the primary factor of the large national deficits in recent years.

‘This year, in spite of the continuing war and the economic instability in the country, Ukraine’s construction industry shows signs of recovery and growth on the back of successful programs financing both the construction of new facilities and the reconstruction and restoration of infrastructure in eastern and southern regions’ – according to Prof. Sergii Zapototskyi at Uvecon, EECFA Ukraine. The World Bank estimates that reconstruction would require USD 486 billion. On the negative side for the sector are bureaucratic barriers in the urban planning legislation, shortage of workers caused by mobilization, shortage and high cost of building materials, and logistical difficulties. On the positive side for the sector is demand for housing and the need to restore damaged infrastructure. The near-term future of the industry depends on the level of security, the effectiveness of restoration programs and the volume of international investments.

EECFA 2024 Winter Construction Forecast

EECFA released its 2024 Winter construction forecast on 16 December. Check out a sample report and purchase any of the 8 reports or the package of 8 reports at eecfa.com. For discounts, contact us.

Southeast European construction markets

Total construction output in Bulgaria is forecasted to grow by an average of 3.3% in 2024-2026, which is slightly above real GDP growth projections for the same period. The subsector breakdown shows that residential construction is expected to lose momentum, but this is likely to be compensated by a more dynamic performance of non-residential construction and civil engineering. In parallel, general economic activity in Bulgaria in the forecast period is to be influenced by the effects from the full membership in the Schengen area from 2025 onward and the prospects for the country to introduce the euro on 1 January 2026.

Croatian building construction presents a varied picture across subsectors, with anticipated output growth ranging from significantly positive to somewhat negative. Civil engineering is more uniformly positive, but certain sectors show the effects of the completion and commencement of large projects. Both building and civil engineering output growth will be strongly influenced by new government laws and regulations, the consequences of which, while likely to be large, are difficult to predict for both the short and medium terms. These include the new National Housing Policy Plan until 2030, the new tax on real estate and measures to balance the playing field between different types of tourism accommodations.

Despite the rise in investment, Romania will likely continue to see a stifled growth in construction in real terms due to costs remaining high. Stubborn inflation and the slightly disappointing macroeconomic performance combined with increased wages and still high interest rates create a less appealing environment for investors in building construction. On the bright side, high income and importsare indicative of strong demand for consumption and could translate to demand for construction. While infrastructure did well, the current political turmoil and uncertainty could hobble performance going forwards. Even assuming deficit remains high but stable, as the EC expects, it would continue to raise public debt and make financing further projects more politically difficult. As some downside factors could improve by then, construction growth is forecasted to return to positive in 2026.

Serbia’s construction is likely to have closed another strong year led by civil engineering, but non-residential also entered a new growth cycle with positive outlook boosted by public investments and the hosting of the EXPO 2027 in Belgrade. The construction of commercial, office and hotel buildings are all set to grow in the coming period, followed by education and health. Residential construction is already on historically high levels with a relatively stable performance. In civil engineering, road and railway construction continues unabated, breaking new record volumes on the way, but other segments also have an impressive project pipeline. The economy is set to expand by 4% in 2024 and 2025 on the back of strong consumption and high investment, so construction outputs may sustain formidable levels up to 2026.

Slovenia’s construction sector is expected to maintain post-pandemic levels with annual output consistently exceeding EUR 5 billion up to 2026 against the EUR 3 billion pre-pandemic. Public financing has been a key driver with national budget expenditure up from EUR 10 billion in 2019 to over EUR 15 billion in 2024, though there will be spending limits in 2025-2026. Civil engineering in the forecast period will be supported by major infrastructure projects. Residential construction is set to drop slightly first in 2024 before rebounding by 2026 driven by lower mortgage rates. Non-residential construction is forecast to grow steadily but remain dependant on the availability of public financing. Other challenges remain such as labour shortages, permit backlogs and high costs, but construction cost growth is set to stabilize at under 3% annually.

Eastern European construction markets

In 2024, the Russian construction industry fared better than previously expected driven by the high pace of project implementation and the massive budget support in civil engineering and non-residential construction. It could even offset the negative impacts of the decline in housing construction caused by the end of the mass preferential mortgage program. However, this positive momentum is expected to gradually fade owing to the tight monetary policy of the Central Bank and several other internal and external factors that are slowing down the economy in general and the construction industry in particular. In 2025-2026, the record budget expenditures planned within the framework of new national projects and other measures of state financing will likely maintain construction market volumes in Russia in the positive territory, but with minimal growth.

In Türkiye, increased interest rates and the Central Bank’s policy to reduce the depreciation of the national currency to curb inflation has not yet produced the intended outcomes. And high interest rates are blamed for shrinking industrial output and decelerated trade growth. The interest rate and the Central Bank’s policies had two major effects on the construction sector: big negative real rates of change in construction costs and housing prices. Housing sales are growing as real prices drop and rely on equity financing since mortgage loans have become unaffordable at high interest rates. Building permits in most segments decreased in Q3 2024, while completions had a positive trend. The government’s legal obligation to rebuild the earthquake-damaged 350 thousand buildings with 870 thousand independent units has been the main factor in huge budget deficits that impede the Government from providing sufficient funds for civil engineering projects.

As a consequence of the war ongoing for over 1000 days, Ukraine’s construction market is facing economic difficulties, limited resources, huge losses in buildings, hike in building material prices, lack of skilled workers and limited access to financing, topped with the unpredictability of government decisions and the instability of property rights. The destroyed homes of more than 1.5 million families create a huge demand. Non-residential construction also focuses on the restoration of destroyed buildings and the construction of new ones in safer central and western regions. Civil engineering is also boosted by the renovation of bridges, roads, railways, pipelines, communication and power lines. The ‘Unified portfolio of public investment projects’ recently approved by the government includes 750 big reconstruction projects on roughly UAH 2.36 trillion, while the state budget also has UAH 256.1 billion for public projects in 2025. First, the EUR 50 billion under the EU’s Ukraine Facility are to be used. Financing is also planned through international financial organizations and foreign governments. The priority is energy, transport, utility and public buildings such as schools.

Life after the preferential mortgage scheme in Russia

Written by Andrey Vakulenko – MACON, EECFA Russia

The biggest preferential mortgage scheme in the history of Russia, a temporary response to the pandemic in 2020, lasted much longer than planned. The market got accustomed to relatively low rates, prices rose sharply, and mortgages became the main tool for purchasing homes. However, external conditions changed dramatically in the meantime, and this summer the program was phased out. Housing demand immediately collapsed, and the main question now is whether the market will be able to find balance, or the current problems are just the beginning of a major crisis.

The saga of the preferential mortgage scheme

Even though the Russian housing market developed well in the pre-pandemic period, in 2020 the pandemic (lockdown, decline in the economy and in the population’s income) threatened the construction industry. Hence the state program to subsidize mortgage rates. Such programs existed before but only targeted certain groups (e.g. families with children). The new scheme in 2020 was large-scale with no restriction on the type of buyer and was to support demand and ensure stability in the housing market that is one of the key construction segments in Russia.

But good intentions soon turned into problems. The impact of preferential mortgages on demand was disproportionately big: buyer activity soared against the backdrop of a relatively short lockdown and a more-favorable-than-initially-expected dynamics of the economy during the pandemic. Increased demand led to a surge in the cost per square meter. Many investors took out mortgages to make money on rapidly rising prices. Initial savings on loan interest at the start of the program were quickly exhausted due to growing prices. Eventually, the preferential mortgage program, designed to support the solvency of home buyers, reached the exact opposite: it sharply reduced the availability of new homes for them, so much so that it is now at its lowest level of the last 15 years. Another key problem was the excessive length of the scheme. It was kept in the post-pandemic period and extended several times, continuing to stimulate demand and price growth (although conditions were revised to be stringent). So, the market became dependent on state participation and ensured affordable mortgage rates for all types of buyers.

By early 2024, the preferential mortgage scheme started to show side effects such as structural market imbalances (secondary housing became significantly cheaper than primary housing as the secondary market did not have such support), increased indebtedness of the population, and the risk of a primary housing market bubble. The drawbacks of the scheme gradually began to outweigh its benefits. However, either the continuation or the abrupt phase-out of the program would have damaged the market. Yet, external conditions have become extremely difficult, and rising inflation has contributed to a sharp tightening of monetary policy. The key rate of the Central Bank of Russia has increased from 7.5% to 19% since last summer and is now at historical highs. At the start of the scheme in 2020, market mortgage rates were at 8%–9%, and the state subsidized them to 6.5%. In 2024, mortgage rates on average grew to 20%-21%, while the program allowed borrowing at 8%. Because of this, government spending on subsidizing mortgage rates under the scheme soared, and its final cancellation was only a matter of time.

What is happening now

The large-scale preferential mortgage program, officially phased out on 1 July 2024, was the most massive demand support in the history of the Russian housing market: 1.6 million loans were issued for a total of about RUB 6 trillion. Now state support for housing has become more targeted through the introduction of other mortgage programs:

  • Family Mortgage Scheme for families with children
  • IT Mortgage Scheme for employees of IT companies
  • Rural Mortgage Scheme for homes located in rural areas
  • Far Eastern Mortgage Scheme in the eastern and Arctic regions of Russia.

These, however, due to their narrower audience and stricter conditions, will not be able to fully compensate for the cancellation of the preferential mortgage program. The record high key rate makes general market rates effectively prohibitive. In monetary terms, the number of issued mortgage loans in July 2024 dived by 55% over June 2024. The volume of accumulated debt on mortgage loans this July decreased for the first time since 2019. The number of transactions in the primary market (in construction projects) sank by 51% this July against this June and continued to decline this August by another 13%.

Despite reduced demand, there is very high developer activity which has been breaking records for 7 months in a row. At the beginning of September 2024, about 117 million sqm of multi-unit residential buildings were under construction. And growth in supply amid reduced demand creates risks of market oversupply in the future.

What happens next

The end of the preferential mortgage program was planned to take place in a period of low market mortgage rates, but the gap between market rates and preferential rates had been growing steadily and reached record levels this year. Thus, due to the cancellation of preferential mortgages, demand in the market crumpled. It is aggravated by the expected continuation of a tight monetary policy, at least throughout 2025. The projected level of the key rate for this period is 14%-16%, so market mortgage rates will remain high in 2025, exerting strong downward pressure on demand.

Since the mortgage loan became the main instrument for home purchases during the scheme, demand could only be activated if we returned to those rates. The targeted mortgage programs mentioned above partly do so, but they will not be able to fully replace the large-scale preferential one. The most significant, though, Family Mortgage, was extended this July until 2030 with some restrictions: the program now applies mainly to families with a child under 6 years of age (and two other smaller groups of the population[1]). The number of families with children under 6 as per the latest census (2020) was about 7.1 million, but the number of potential borrowers until 2030 will plummet owing to the deceleration in birth rates (an average decline of 4% per year over the past 5 years) and the limitation of the program itself (it can only be used once).

Therefore, demand in the housing market does not have any clear prerequisites for growth in the coming years, and the volume of unsold supply will likely accumulate. Yet, existing schemes might develop, and new ones might be launched, which one way or another might support buyer activity and the entire residential market:

  • New targeted mortgage programs might be introduced based on professional or geographic criteria (public sector employees, representatives of professions valuable to the state, scarcely populated areas, etc). They will not carry the risks of market overheating or bubble since they exclude the purchase of homes for investment. But with high key rates, any such program requires huge state funding, so their introduction in 2024-2025 is unlikely. 
  • New payment schemes might be launched. The popularity of tranche mortgages[2] and various instalment programs is growing, and savings schemes are also being discussed (banks might introduce special target mortgage deposits on which buyers could accumulate funds for home purchases with partial co-financing from federal or regional authorities).
  • The flexibility of mortgage products might grow. Banks are starting to offer borrowers the inclusion of a clause in loan agreements to guarantee a reduction in mortgage rates when the key rate falls. That is, if the key rate drops in the duration of the agreement, the bank reduces the mortgage rate without having to conclude a new agreement.

Direct discounts or a major reduction in the cost per square meter are unlikely though since developers are constrained by the highly increased construction costs in 2022-2024 and will not agree to a considerable decrease in prices. Thus, in the coming years we can expect a reduction in new residential projects launched.

Currently, the housing market in Russia, for an indefinite period, is becoming to be dominated by buyers who qualify for one of the targeted mortgage schemes and whose list will be determined by the state. The game-changer might either be a pronounced and long-lasting increase in the population’s income or a drop in the key rate and, accordingly, market rates on mortgage loans, which is unlikely at least in 2024-2025. Therefore, residential construction volumes will likely decrease. A more detailed forecast on the residential market and the entire construction industry of Russia can be found in the current EECFA Forecast Report Russia that can be purchased on our website.


[1] Families with a disabled child and families with two or more children aged 7-17 living in regions with low housing construction activity (35 regions of Russia) or in a small town (with a population of less than 50,000).

[2] The bank issues a mortgage loan to a client for purchasing a home under construction in several parts. The total loan amount is divided into several tranches (the borrower has a minimum loan payment until the new building is put into operation).

EECFA 2024 Summer Construction Forecast

EECFA, our construction forecasting cooperation in Eastern European countries, released its 2024 Summer construction forecast on 25 June. View a sample report and buy any of the 8 reports or the package at eecfa.com. For discounts, contact us.

The expansion phase was over in 2023 in SEE as a whole, but the current contraction is not foreseen to last as long as the latest one after 2008. By 2026 this region could return to around its previous peak. The EE region as a whole is expanding, and we are still optimistic all the way on the horizon.

A closer look reveals that only Romania, the largest market, is behind the overall setback of the SEE region. Here the previous peak is not expected to be reached soon. Elsewhere in the region further expansion is our current view. Serbia’s trajectory is a bit different, but the market could stay at a high level despite the drop next year. Recovery in Türkiye is forecast to be so strong that it could well counterbalance a shrinking Russia. Ukraine is coming back from a very low level, hence the relatively good growth figures.

Southeast European construction outlook up to 2026

Bulgaria’s economy is set to grow by almost 2% in 2024 and 3% in 2025, while the country is heading to a eurozone membership, most likely in 2026. In parallel, construction output is forecasted to decline year on year in 2024-2026 due to expected drop in residential construction and heterogeneous, yet positive performance of the non-residential one. Civil engineering bears a potential for an accelerated growth if EU funds’ absorption bounces back and public investments in infrastructure speed up. 

Croatian civil engineering is moving into even higher gear now, especially with the recent update to the TEN-T Network, which greatly benefited Croatia. Accordingly, output in most civil engineering sectors will rise. Building output presents a more mixed picture, with some sectors having reached or come close to peak output, while others are thriving.

The outlook for Romania’s construction sector remains negative this year. Inflation is shrinking, but more slowly than desired, keeping interest rates relatively high for longer and impacting financing costs. Also, the switch between the EU programming periods, combined with still high construction costs and an election year, will mean lower efficiency in starting and implementing long-term projects. Because the macroeconomic outlook is good and if the other issues are resolved, by 2026 construction might start growing again.

Serbia is expecting to see more stabilization in the construction sector this year, with both building construction and civil engineering estimated to stay in the black. The latter is very close to recording a consecutive double-digit growth in 2024. The economy is picking up, interest rates are slowly receding, so there is confidence that construction can sustain high output levels. Demand stays relatively strong, while stable prices are to keep investments high this year.

Slovenian construction is forecasted to surpass its record 2023 output this year and continue its growth trajectory into 2025, exceeding EUR 6 billion for the first time. Major civil engineering projects will likely drive this growth, bolstered by flood reconstruction efforts. Public investment in housing is planned but is contingent on future public funding availability that will also impact non-residential construction. The industry faces workforce shortages, but increased immigration and declining construction costs are expected to mitigate these issues, supporting further growth.

Eastern European construction markets of EECFA up to 2026

In Russia, the increase in people’s solvency, the restoration of business activity and dynamic economic development ensured growth in construction output last year, but recovery trends are slowing down owing to both external restrictions and internal negative factors. The residential and civil engineering construction subsectors remain key for the industry, but their dynamics depend on the level of government participation and the volume of allocated budget funds. Even though negative trend is forecasted for the residential subsector in the coming years, the drop in overall construction output in 2024-2026 is not predicted to be significant as the market will be supported by the construction of export infrastructure projects.

Türkiye’s economy has been greatly affected by last year’s earthquakes that caused great human and material casualties, requiring the rebuilding of destroyed homes, workplaces, and infrastructure. The government’s costly obligations coincide with a return to conventional economic policies that require austerity. Massive reconstruction spendings have caused huge budget deficits and civil engineering is worst affected by this. Increased interest rates have created affordability problems for bank loans, mostly mortgage ones, so home purchases rely mostly on equity financing and serve as a hedge against inflation. Home permits in Q1 2024 rose due to permits issued in earthquake-hit regions. This, and the private sector’s returning appetite in most commercial building segments, aligns with the expected high GDP growth.

Ukraine is making great progress in overcoming the consequences of the full-scale invasion, showing economic growth. The issue of reconstruction is acute, though. The main problems in the market are rising prices and shortage of building materials, growing costs of logistics and a shortage of skilled labour. In energy the immediate restoration of energy generation facilities is required to provide stable electricity. State and international programs for the restoration and construction of housing will likely contribute to the revival of the construction market. In the coming years, the future of the market, more than ever, will depend on three things: results on the battlefield; Ukraine’s subjectivity in the international arena; and the ability to protect its interests against Russian diplomacy.