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House price index

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Reference Metadata in Euro SDMX Metadata Structure (ESMS)

Compiling agency: Eurostat, the statistical office of the European Union

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Eurostat house price index (HPI) captures price changes of all residential properties purchased by households (flats, detached houses, terraced houses, etc.), both new and existing, independently of their final use and their previous owners. Only market prices are considered, self-build dwellings are therefore excluded. The land component is included.

The MIP scoreboard indicator is the year-on-year growth rate of the nominal house price index. Furthermore, the indicator standardised house price-to-income ratio is part of the MIP auxiliary indicators set. In the MIP domain are also published annual and quarterly figures on:

  • House price index, nominal – average rate of change, average index and % change T/T-3;
  • House price index, deflated – average index and rate of change.

The deflated house price index (or real house price index) is the ratio between the HPI and the national accounts deflator for private final consumption expenditure (households and non-profit institutions serving households (NPISHs)).

15 December 2025

The MIP scoreboard indicator is House price index, nominal (1 year % change) with an indicative threshold of 9%. The scoreboard indicator is calculated using the formula: [(HPIt – HPIt-1) / (HPIt-1)]*100.

Emphasis is on market prices of residential properties, non-marketed prices are ruled out from the scope of the HPI; so self-built dwellings are excluded. All transactions are included (both cash and mortgage). Focus is on:

  • The measurement of price developments of all residential properties purchased by households, independently of its final use; so dwellings bought by households for uses other than owner-occupancy are included (for investment, e.g. to rent it out).
  • The dwelling acquisitions, independently of its previous owner; so all purchases of new and existing dwellings are to be considered, including those existing dwellings transacted between households.

Income used in the auxiliary indicator standardised house price-to-income ratio is defined as adjusted household gross disposable income (B7G from ESA 2010) per head of population, based on Eurostat data.

Each published index or rate of change refers to the expenditure by the household sector for acquiring residential property in the corresponding geographical entity. Expenditure includes all acquisitions of residential property, covering transactions with other sectors and transactions that are internal to the household sector.

The target statistical universe is the household expenditure for the acquisition of residential property within the economic territories of the countries compiling the HPI. The households sector (S.14) to which the definition refers includes all individuals or groups of individuals irrespective of, in particular, the type of area in which they live, their position in the income distribution and their nationality status. These definitions follow the national account concepts in the European System of Accounts, 2010 edition (ESA 2010).

HPIs comprise all dwellings purchased in monetary transactions by households within the territory of a country; those by both resident and non-resident households (i.e. 'domestic concept').

The MIP scoreboard presents data for each EU Member State, as well as euro area (EA) and the European Union as a whole.

For every quarter, national indices are compiled by NSIs based on data for dwellings that were transacted during that quarter in each EU Member State. The compiled quarterly indices represent the whole calendar quarter.

The accuracy of source data is monitored by assessing the methodological soundness of price and weight sources and the adherence to the methodological recommendations. There is a variety of data sources both for weights (National Account data, Household Budget Survey data, Construction Statistics, etc.) and prices (administrative data, bank data (mortgages), construction companies, real estate agents, etc.).

The data collection depends on the data sources used across Member States - e.g. administrative data, surveys. The type of survey and the price collection methods are designed to ensure sufficient coverage and timeliness.

Another potential source of bias can be related to the price concept used. The HPIs produced by Member States generally use transactions prices, ideally measured at the first binding contract. This is in line with the objective of the HPI to measure the evolution of actual transaction prices as experienced by buyers and sellers. Nonetheless, even transaction prices (as recorded in administrative registers, for instance) may, in some cases, be subject to bias (underreporting). Member States are usually assessing the possibility of this bias occurring and if identified, corrective measures are implemented.

The following units are used:

  • Index: equal 100 in the base period. For any other period, the HPI can be reckoned of as the amount that the buyer would have to spend on average in that given period to buy a residential property having a value of 100 in the base period;
  • Percentage change on the same period of the previous year (rates);
  • 3-year % change.
  • Price-to-income ratio relative to the long-term average price-to-income ratio, calculated over the period 2000 to the most recent data available

The HPI data are compiled at national level, mainly by National statistical institutes. For Greece, HPI data are compiled from the quarterly index of apartment prices available at the Bank of Greece.

Eurostat has backcasted the missing annual figures for some countries, using econometric techniques (delta logs with OLS). The proxy variables were official data provided either by the ECB or by the national central banks.

Eurostat has in addition, in consultation with several Member States, complemented most of the cases of missing data for the auxiliary indicator “Standardised house price-to-income ratio” in the early years of the back series with appropriate estimates.

The backcasted time series are published in the MIP datasets, after the approval of the relevant NSIs. The target series are with a reference base year 2015=100 covering at least the last 10 years.

For more information on the backcasted data please message the MIP team functional mailbox: ESTAT-MIP@ec.europa.eu

Data collection is carried out by the Member states in the National Statistical Institutes. Data sources for prices are: administrative data sources, bank (mortgage) data, construction companies, real estate agents, etc. Weights are usually compiled from National Accounts data, Household Budget Survey data, Construction Statistics, etc.

The MIP related indicators are updated and released in accordance to the dissemination of the underlying data on a quarterly and annual basis.

The House Price Indices are released after one quarter from the end of the reference quarter (T+1Q).

The comparability is ensured by the application of common set of definitions and methods. Due to this harmonisation process, the HPIs released by Eurostat can be considered, among HPIs available in EU Member States, as most suited for cross-country comparisons.

As a key issue for HPIs is the heterogeneity of the housing market, where virtually every product (dwelling) bought and sold is different from the next one in some respect. The quality adjustment from one time period to the next has been a major methodological issue in compiling house price indices, with important consequences for cross-country comparability.

HPI data are considered fairly comparable over time. Nonetheless, because of several improvements in methodology, some breaks in time series exist. In such cases, if basic data allowed, back calculations were performed and historical series were revised.

Information on data, breaks in series, flags are provided in the footnotes, published under each data table.