Cities of Russia with sharply increased prices for “odnushki”

SRG: since October 2020, one-room apartments have risen most in price in Sochi

Over the year from October 2020 to October 2021 apartments on the secondary market have risen in price the most in Sochi. This is the conclusion reached by the analysts of the consulting company SRG, RBC reports.

Based on data from regional databases and from real estate sites, experts have found out the average cost of “odnushki” in ready-made houses in 50 largest cities of Russia and for 12 monitored the dynamics of prices for months.

Analysts named Sochi as the region with the sharpest rise in price – the price soared by 52.9 percent to 7.3 million rubles. Following the growth of the average indicator are Krasnodar (by 48.8 percent to 3.2 million rubles) and Sevastopol (by 37.3 percent to 5.4 million rubles). The fourth place was taken by Nizhny Novgorod (by 35.2 percent to 3.5 million rubles), and the fifth – by Ulan-Ude (by 31.9 percent to 2.4 million rubles).

In a number of cities, the average cost of one-room apartments increased from 20.2 to 28.4 percent – these include Irkutsk, Kemerovo, Bryansk, Novokuznetsk, Ivanovo, Tyumen, Barnaul, Khabarovsk, Voronezh, Penza, Stavropol, Makhachkala, Astrakhan and Tomsk. More than 14 percent for the year “odnushki” rose in price in Cheboksary, Tolyatti, Volgograd, Chelyabinsk, Izhevsk, Ryazan, Ulyanovsk, Tula, Yekaterinburg, Tver, Krasnoyarsk, Yaroslavl, Saratov, Novosibirsk, Balashikha, Samara and Lipetsk.

The minimum increase in the average price was observed in Kirov (7.3 percent), Orenburg (10.4 percent) and Magnitogorsk (11.7 percent). Moscow ranks 35th in the rating (17.1 percent), and St. Petersburg – in 41st place in terms of price increases for odnushki (14.3 percent).

However, analysts noted that since September Until October 2021, one-room apartments on the secondary market rose the most in price in Sevastopol (by 12.2 percent), and the least rise in price in Vladivostok (0.6 percent).

Previously, experts identified Russian cities with the most high prices per square meter of housing. In October 2021, these were Moscow (271.5 thousand rubles), Sochi (220 thousand rubles), and St. Petersburg (172.5 thousand rubles).

Comments

comments