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Irish household rents jump sharply after rent controls eased

Wed, 20th May 2026 00:01

DUBLIN, May 20 (Reuters) - The cost of renting ​a home ⁠in Ireland rose by 4.4% in the ​first quarter compared to the previous three months, Ireland's largest property listings website Daft.ie said on Wednesday, ​the ‌largest quarterly jump since it started collecting data in 2002. The scale of the rise suggests ⁠that landlords widely took up the opportunity to ⁠reset rents to market levels ​at the end of a tenancy under recent changes the government made to its rent control system, said Ronan Lyons, a professor of economics at Trinity College Dublin who analyses ​the ‌data for Daft.

Here are some details from Daft's report:

* The 4.4% quarter-on-quarter rise beat the previous high of 3.7% recorded in 2022. Rental prices were 7.8% higher than a year ago at the end of March and are on average ​40% above their pre-pandemic levels and 75% above the previous peak during the Celtic ‌Tiger economy of the early 2000s.

* The average market rent for a two-bedroom apartment in Dublin rose 6.9% year-on-year to ‌2,600 euros ($3,015) and by 13.3% and 18.4% respectively in Cork (2,120 euros) and Galway (2,290 euros).

* Listings have increased since the new rules came into force. While availability is still ​down in Dublin, the number of homes available to rent in the four other cities has ‌almost doubled since the start of the year.

* Trinity College's Lyons said this may be a timing effect with some landlords delaying listing properties until the new rules came ⁠into force ⁠in March. Overall supply remains very constrained with availability ‌only slightly above half the 2015-2019 average.

* "The goal of changing the rules, to increase the supply of rental ​homes (by encouraging investment) ​and thereby improve affordability for tenants, depends on whether new ‌rental housing is built. As the construction of new homes takes years, it will be some time before the ultimate impact of the rules can be assessed," Lyons said.

Corporate News Economic News Consumer Goods Real Estate Irish Residential Properties

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