As affordability crises grip Providencia and Ñuñoa, both renters and property owners are feeling the pressure of a market caught between stagnant wages and rising maintenance costs.
Foreign capital, peso dynamics, and limited supply are reshaping the top end of Santiago's property market—here's what discerning buyers need to understand before committing.
As yields tighten across the capital, property owners face pressure to maintain competitiveness while renters navigate rising costs and shrinking options.
As property prices climb past CLP 85 million and yields tighten, Santiago's renters face mounting pressure while small-scale investors reassess their portfolios.
As vacancy climbs across Providencia and Ñuñoa, a perfect storm of foreign investment, corporate leasing, and regulatory uncertainty is reshaping the rental landscape for ordinary Santiaguinos.
As Santiago's affordable housing crisis deepens, major development projects in the city's growth corridors are reshaping neighbourhoods—but not without tension between density, displacement, and genuine affordability.
As foreign investment reshapes Santiago's high-end real estate, newcomers to the prestige segment need to understand where money moves and how to navigate a market that's rewriting its own rules.
A wave of apartment approvals across Santiago is reshaping rental dynamics, leaving property owners scrambling while renters enjoy their strongest negotiating position in years.
As the city's property market cools, data reveals stark differences in rental income and capital growth across Santiago's most popular investment zones.
Stricter planning regulations around Las Condes and Vitacura threaten limited supply just as foreign capital accelerates competition for trophy properties.
Recent sales data from the Maipo and Quilicura corridors reveal a market in tension—where price floors are rising even as policy makers promise relief.
As Santiago's property market fragments between premium zones and emerging suburbs, data on government assistance programmes shows where first-home incentives actually create wealth.
As vacancy rates tighten across premium zones, Maipu's affordable fundamentals and transit-linked growth are attracting both landlords and tenants seeking value in a shifting market.
As vacancy rates tighten and demand surges across key neighbourhoods, both property owners and renters are navigating a transformed rental market with competing pressures and new opportunities.
As yields compress and vacancy rates rise across premium neighbourhoods, property owners are rethinking investment fundamentals while renters face tighter conditions.