- The state's still transitioning from a post-communist economy.
- Wages are very low.
- Relatively high emigration rate "brain drain" (although people are starting to return).
- More supply, less demand.
You can buy a brand new apartment close to the centre for somewhere around $2000 per square metre / $200 per square foot. Depending on how your housing market work, that's either scandalously high, or shockingly low.
It is however, very very affordable as soon as you start earning a reasonable wage.
But these were the prices for a big, vibrant city. If you go to places with worse economy, it can get as low as $600 per square metre - in/near a nice historic city cente. And there are virtually no guns or organized crime in Poland, so even in poorer areas there isn't that much to be worried about in terms of security.
Off the top of my head:
- The state's still transitioning from a post-communist economy.
- Wages are very low.
- Relatively high emigration rate "brain drain" (although people are starting to return).
- More supply, less demand.
You can buy a brand new apartment close to the centre for somewhere around $2000 per square metre / $200 per square foot. Depending on how your housing market work, that's either scandalously high, or shockingly low.
It is however, very very affordable as soon as you start earning a reasonable wage.