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Cyprus’ Housing Affordability Crisis: Why We Must Fix Supply, Not Subsidise Demand

4 February 2026

Housing affordability has become one of the most pressing socio-economic challenges in Cyprus. Rental prices across the island—and particularly in Limassol—have surged dramatically since COVID, placing increasing pressure on households, young professionals, and businesses trying to attract talent.

The reasons are structural, not cyclical.

Over the past few years, Cyprus has experienced a sharp increase in net migration, including an estimated 70,000 international IT and tech professionals relocating to the island. At the same time, housing supply has failed to keep pace. The result is a textbook supply-demand imbalance—one that market forces alone cannot correct quickly enough.

What Went Wrong?

Three factors have significantly exacerbated the problem:

  1. Low housing supply growth
    The pace of new residential development has been constrained by slow permitting, planning bottlenecks, and limited institutional participation in rental housing.
  2. Permitting delays and capacity constraints
    The newly formed EOAs have inherited a sharp increase in applications without the operational capacity to process permits fast enough. Delays translate directly into higher costs for developers—and ultimately higher rents.
  3. Misaligned government incentives
    Many existing policies focus on stimulating demand (through subsidies tied to specific locations or buyer categories) rather than increasing supply. In a constrained market, this approach is counterproductive: it pushes prices higher instead of making housing more affordable.

The Case for a Build-to-Rent (BTR) Sector

Cyprus lacks a meaningful, institutional Build-to-Rent (BTR) sector—a model that has proven effective in addressing affordability in multiple European markets.

Unlike traditional developers who rely on presales, BTR schemes are backed by permanent capital. Their objective is long-term rental income, not short-term exits. This structural difference matters.

Large-scale, professionally managed rental buildings benefit from:

  • Economies of scale

  • Lower per-unit construction and operating costs

  • More predictable pricing

  • Long-term alignment with tenants and cities

In short, BTR increases supply sustainably—and that is the only proven way to stabilise rents.

What Incentives Could Actually Work?

If the goal is affordability, incentives must target supply creation, not demand stimulation. A multi-faceted approach could include:

  • Targeted tax relief for BTR schemes

    Lower corporate tax rates or exemptions for qualifying long-term rental assets.
  • VAT deferral on construction costs for BTR developments

    Improving project cash flows and enabling more competitive rental pricing.
  • Clear regulatory recognition of BTR as a distinct asset class

    Giving institutional capital the confidence to deploy long-term funds in Cyprus.
  • Fast-track permitting mechanisms funded by additional EOA fees

    Developers would willingly pay for certainty and speed. Faster approvals reduce interest costs, which directly lowers the final cost of housing.

The longer land sits idle waiting for permits, the higher the financing costs—and the higher the rent or sale price must be. Speed is not a luxury; it is a cost-control mechanism.

Why Demand Subsidies Miss the Point

Subsidising demand in a supply-constrained market does not make housing more affordable. It does the opposite.

By increasing purchasing power without increasing supply, prices rise further—benefiting asset owners while excluding those the policy aims to help. This is not a theoretical concern; it is already visible in multiple sub-markets across the island.

The Bottom Line

Cyprus does not have a housing affordability problem because demand is too strong.

It has a problem because supply is structurally insufficient.

The solution will not come from more subsidies, but from:

  • Faster permitting
  • Institutional capital
  • Tax incentives tied to long-term rental supply
  • A credible Build-to-Rent framework

If we want sustainable, affordable housing, policy must shift decisively from stimulating demand to unlocking supply.

That is where the real solution lies.

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