The Muda Reserve project, located in the village of Muda, near Comporta on the Alentejo coast, is coming to life. The commercialisation of the 42 quintas built in the village will start soon, says the developer Vanguard Properties.
If you’re going to live in Portugal, you have to choose the best place, which is without a doubt Cascais. Located just a few miles outside Lisbon, this area offers tranquillity, views of the sea and many options for leisure activities.
Your dream house is waiting for you in the Bicesse district.
They’re calling it Marechal 720. Construction is underway on the luxury condominium in one of the most sophisticated and cosmopolitan Portuguese avenues.
The luxury real estate market in Portugal continues to grow, under the gaze of domestic and foreign investors. According to the Luxury Estate web portal, average demand in this sector stood at almost three million euro in the first half of 2018.
Residence permits are granted in Portugal in exchange for investing in the country. This is one of the main regulatory changes to the ‘golden’ visa regime that came into force on Monday 1st October 2018.
In recent years, Portugal has enjoyed a growing demand in the real estate market. Here the richest and most famous people buy their homes in search of privacy, beautiful nature and elegant architecture.
They are called Central and Uptown and are the most recent residential marketing projects in Vilamoura in the Algarve. With these developments, 214 charming new villas and apartments will reach the market in 2020.
There is a certain real estate practice that seems to be gaining ground in Portugal, based on a model used in France – the sale of properties with the reservation of the usufruct of the property in exchange, without paying the full amount of the agreed sale price, but rather paying a kind of agreed
The Casa Carrara house, in Praia da Luz, Lagos, designed by the renowned architect Mário Martins, is on sale at LUXIMO’S Christie’s International Real Estate and has attracted the attention of Portuguese and foreign investors.
Porto, or Invicta (the Unvanquished City), as the Portuguese sometimes call it, is more alive than ever. The charms of Portugal’s second city weren’t overlooked by the British newspaper the Financial Times, which recently listed five reasons why living in the city of Porto was worthwhile.
Around three hundred people accepted the challenge thrown down by Massimo Forte and Gonçalo Nascimento Rodrigues, specialists and independent consultants in mediation and real estate investments, to think about the "Out of the Box" market (referring to the real estate and financial sector opinion bl
The level of investment that comes to Portugal thanks to the Golden Visas it gives out to people from overseas is decreasing, though real estate continues to be the main driver of the programme.
Misericórdia, Santa Maria Maior and Santo António. These are the three neighborhoods that attract the most ex-pats who want to buy a house in the Portuguese capital. There are two new areas that have started to gain ground, too - interesting insider news for those looking to invest.
With house prices currently rising in the property market, buyers and investors are looking for cheaper alternatives to purchasing used houses or flats in Portugal.
The Algarve, Costa de Plata and more recently Lisbon: the domestic housing market is red-hot and more and more foreigners are investing in Portugal, a scenario that should continue in the near future, predicts Colm Wilkinson, regional manager of PortugalProperty.com Lisbon, in an interview with idea