Housing loans total HRK 67 billion, up by over 10% year on year.
The high demand for real estate is accompanied by a constant rise in prices, which are up by six to seven percent. At this rate, the price of a square metre of a flat could double in ten years’ time.
“Croatia is a country with too many motives for the high demand for properties, from the tax treatment, tourism and low interest rates to the moving of the capital of the extra rich from banks, the APN (Croatian Real Estate Agency), the fact that some indeed need a place to live, that some buy properties in companies’ names to pay less taxes, and the presence of foreigners,” Maruška Vizek of the Zagreb Institute of Economics told the daily.
“The market can’t offer enough properties for so many motives for there to be a drop in prices. The only solution is an adequate tax treatment, which won’t happen,” she added.
The central bank is worried about potential risks and that the crisis might spill over to the banking sector. Governor Boris Vujčić said recently the prices of housing properties were increasing more than incomes but not construction costs. All of that increases the risks of their corrections in future.
Most of the new housing loans (28% of the principal) are paid out with debt-to-income ratios of 30 to 40%. For another 26% of debtors, the ratio is 40 to 50%. For as much as 23% of the new housing loans, the monthly payment is more than half the debtor’s income, Večernji List said.
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