Ireland’s housing story since 2000 is a textbook of boom, bust, painful public rescue, a long and incomplete recovery, and then a fresh affordability crisis driven by chronic under-supply plus very large inward migration. Below I set out the timeline, the key numbers, and the supply/demand drivers with primary sources for the biggest claims so you can follow-up.
1) The boom (roughly 2000 → 2007)
House prices exploded. Average residential prices peaked in 2007 at €349,838 (CSO). This followed years of rapid credit growth, big income gains and a construction boom.
Construction output and land rezoning ran hot: tens of thousands of homes were being completed annually in the mid-2000s (estimates often cited 70–80k starts/completions across the peak years when including spec/backlog), with large volumes of developer credit flowing into property.
Why it mattered: prices relative to incomes became extreme — the house-price-to-disposable income ratio more than doubled in the 1997→2007 run. The result was a fragile market stacked on high leverage and speculative building.
2) The crash and immediate aftermath (2007 → 2012)
Prices collapsed: After the 2007 peak average prices fell sharply to a trough of about €205,476 in 2012 — a fall on the order of 40% nationally, and much deeper in Dublin (apartment prices fell by over 60% in places).
The banking sector imploded under property losses and wholesale funding runs: The Government introduced a broad bank guarantee in Sept 2008, nationalised Anglo Irish Bank (and later recapitalised other banks), and created the state “bad bank” (NAMA) to remove toxic property loans from bank balance sheets.
Scale of the fiscal/banking cost: The final tally of direct bank recapitalisation costs commonly cited is in the €60–€90 billion range depending on accounting — the official figure often quoted is about €62.8 billion of direct bank costs; NAMA acquired loans with nominal values in the €70–75 billion area and paid (via government guaranteed securities) far less in exchange. The Irish government also entered an EU/IMF programme in late 2010 (loans ~€67.5bn) to stabilise the sovereign position. Those interventions were massive relative to GDP and left a long public debt legacy.
3) The long, uneven recovery (2012 → c.2013–2019)
After the trough the economy (and house prices) slowly recovered as employment returned, exports rebounded and confidence returned. Construction fell to very low post-crash levels for several years, contributing to a long “lost decade” of insufficient supply relative to demand. Many mortgage arrears remained an issue for years.
By the mid-2010s the number of new builds remained well below pre-crash peaks; transactional activity was muted compared with earlier years.
4) Strong price recovery and the supply squeeze (2013 → 2023/24)
From the mid-2010s onward prices rose steadily and by the early 2020s had recovered and exceeded parts of the 2007 peak in many areas. Analysts repeatedly pointed to weak supply as the structural cause: not enough completions for the growing population and rising inward migration, plus loss of smaller landlords from the rental market, planning and infrastructural bottlenecks, and constrained development finance. Central Bank staff estimated that 52,000 new homes per year (or thereabouts) would be needed to meet demand over coming decades — a big step up from actual completions.
By 2024–2025 the market was once again very tight: second-hand listings plunged, asking prices and rents rose briskly, and many commentators blamed the shortage of homes for sale and the surge in people needing housing. Daft.ie and other analysts documented very low advertised stock and notable annual price/rent increases in 2023–2025.
5) Post-crash structural policy responses (2009 → 2015 → ongoing)
NAMA (2009/2010): set up to buy the worst development loans (nominal acquisition values ~€70–74bn; purchases at deep discounts and financed by government-guaranteed securities). Its role was to stabilise the banks and manage large development exposures off bank balance sheets. Over time NAMA sold assets and returned money to the State; it played a major role in managing the fallout from the construction bust.
Bank recapitalisations & privatisations: the State recapitalised and (later) re-privatised major banks over a decade. The direct cost of bank rescues (variously reported) was large (official figures cited ~€62.8bn in recapitalisation costs, with additional macro costs and the IMF/EU programme). Over the 2010s–2020s the State gradually sold its stakes (e.g., AIB privatisation moves in the early 2020s), recovering some value — but the fiscal scars were real.
6) The recent picture (2023 → Oct 2025): supply shortage + high migration = renewed price pressure
House prices and transactions:
By 2024–2025 prices and rents were rising again; Daft.ie reported sharp falls in listed supply (nationally very low numbers of second-hand houses for sale) and consistent year-on-year price/rent inflation in most urban areas. Reuters and other outlets flagged big rises in transaction prices since the low-supply era began after 2013 (some reporting cumulative rises of 100%+ in parts of the market since 2013—note: exact % varies by source and timeframe).
Construction/completions:
Output has improved from its post-crash nadir but remains below the level needed: construction reached roughly the low-to-mid 30,000s for completions in recent years (2023–2024), short of the Central Bank’s 52,000 p.a. estimate of what would be needed over the medium term to keep up with population and household formation trends. There was a surprising jump in Q2 2025 where new home building rose 35% year-on-year for that quarter (a positive sign), but annual totals still risk missing long-term targets because pipeline, planning, serviced land and financing constraints persist.
Supply-side frictions (why builders aren’t simply fixing it):
Planning delays / infrastructure lag, land servicing, cost inflation in construction, fragmented developer finance, risk/return for institutional builders, regulatory changes (including apartment rules) and a loss of smaller private landlords all raise the cost and complexity of ramping up supply quickly. Banks also complain there’s insufficient viable pipeline of projects to deploy housing development funds at scale. These are structural constraints, not simply a short blip.
Migration / demand shock:
Ireland’s net migration surged after the pandemic. CSO figures show net migration of 79,300 in the year to April 2024 (125,300 immigrants, 65,600 emigrants), up from 51,700 in 2022 — among the highest net flows in recent decades and a major driver of housing demand. Even if net migration cools, the level of annual inflows has materially increased household formation needs compared with the pre-2015 period. That tidal wave of people is an obvious demand shock to a market with constrained supply.
7) Putting the pieces together — why prices are high again
1. Legacy shortfall in supply: construction never fully replaced the homes lost to under-building after 2008. Output in the 2010s was far below what would have been needed to match population and household trends. Central Bank estimates of required annual builds (52k) demonstrate the gap.
2. Large positive net migration: tens of thousands of people arriving each year since 2022/23 substantially raised demand for housing (CSO). Short term supply response is slow.
3. Planner and finance bottlenecks: developers, institutional builders, and banks cite planning delays, land servicing, and a shallow pipeline of viable projects — these make quick scale-up expensive and risky.
4. Residual effects from the crash: banking consolidation, changed investor behaviour, and risk aversion among smaller landlords (many of whom exited the rental market) mean the private rental stock has shrunk in parts of the country — that feeds rent and price pressure.
8) The political and policy angle
The State’s response after the crash (NAMA, bank recapitalisation, EU/IMF support) stabilised the system but produced high public debt and constrained public fiscal space for years. Policy since has tried to accelerate planning reforms, subsidised building and boost supply, but implementation is slow and politically fraught (local resistance, infrastructure costs, design rules, etc.). Central Bank and independent economists repeatedly emphasise that supply is the binding constraint; but delivering the kind of supply increase needed will require simultaneous action on planning, land, finance, construction methods and incentives.
9) Key numbers
- Peak average price (2007): ~€349,838.
- Trough (2012): ~€205,476.
- Estimated bank recap costs (commonly cited): ~€62.8 billion (officially reported figure for bank losses/recapitalisations).
- NAMA acquisition nominal value: ~€71–74 billion (loans); NAMA paid far less via securities.
- Central Bank suggested build rate to meet demand: ~52,000 homes/year (estimate to meet long-run demand).
- Net migration (year to Apr 2024): +79,300 (125,300 in; 65,600 out).
10) Final assessment — the realistic take
The housing shortage is structural, not cyclical. Short-term boosts to completions can help (Q2 2025 showed a spike), but without sustained changes — more serviced land, faster planning, cheaper/safer finance for large builders, modern construction methods, and political will to put infrastructure where homes are needed — prices will keep outpacing incomes in many urban areas. Expect volatility: policy tweaks, interest-rate moves and temporary supply bumps will produce short-term easing at times, but the core mismatch (large inward migration + too few homes permitted and built) remains the dominant driver.
You can listen to a podcast on this topic here.
There is also a short video available here.