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Real Estate

European real estate market outlook Q1 2026

We discuss what lies ahead for European real estate. Read more here.

Authors
Head of European Research, Real Assets
Senior Real Estate Investment Analyst, Europe
Image shows a central business district skyline.

Duration: 10 Mins

Date: 02 Feb 2026

Key highlights

  • European real estate performance has improved, and there are more signs of life after a steady end to 2025.
  • Economic growth is proving resilient and should modestly accelerate in 2026. Domestic strength is offsetting a more challenging external political environment.
  • We forecast a gradual recovery, led by industrials and residential, but core offices and retail parks now offer strong opportunities for investors.

European economic outlook

Activity

Robust industrial production and retail sales data for November suggest the Eurozone economy enjoyed a relatively strong fourth quarter. And favourable revisions to the back data hint at the economy gathering some momentum towards the end of the year, even if Purchasing Managers’ Indices were a touch weaker over December. A modest tailwind from fiscal easing should help the economy maintain this momentum into 2026. But stimulus could take longer to affect the real economy than hoped, especially in Germany. Overall, we expect growth to accelerate to 1.5% in 2027, up from 1.2%, as fiscal easing starts to build. 

Inflation

Inflation came in bang on the European Central Bank’s (ECB) 2% inflation target in December. But base effects should drag it below the target in January. Over the medium term, however, inflation is on track to settle near target. That’s because the price of services is likely to increase at an above-target rate throughout 2026, as indicated by ongoing strength in underlying run rates. Fiscal easing should eventually push up prices, if only modestly. We therefore expect inflation to return to target by the end of 2026.

Policy

Upward revisions to the ECB’s growth forecasts quashed expectations for further cuts. Indeed, market pricing now reflects our view that the ECB’s next move is a hike. A debate over the timing of this return to hikes is now opening up. We think that the effects of fiscal easing could take longer to show up in the real economy than some expect. We therefore don’t see a hike until 2027. But an earlier move cannot be completely ruled out. Over the near term, the outlook is clearer; rates will probably be held in February.

Eurozone economic forecasts

 (%) 2024 2025 2026 2027
GDP 0.8 1.4 1.2 1.5
CPI 2.4 2.1 1.9 2.0
Deposit rate 3.00 2.00 2.00 2.25

Source: Aberdeen January 2026
Forecasts are a guide only and actual outcomes could be significantly different.

European real estate market overview

The European real estate market is entering a new phase in its cyclical evolution. Political shocks weighed on market sentiment in 2025, ensuring the pace of recovery slowed to a more modest rate than expected prior to the Trump presidency. Political turbulence has kept economists and investors guessing about the next intervention and its impacts on inflation, interest rates and geopolitical relationships. 

Aberdeen Investments’ multi-asset house view maintains a risk-on outlook for 2026, with most asset classes expected to outperform cash. Global real estate was upgraded to +2 overweight in December. MSCI reports global real estate returns at 5% per annum as of September 2025. The UK and Europe led with 6.8% and 6.1%, respectively, while Asia-Pacific achieved 1.6% in the third quarter (in US dollar terms). As geographic and sector returns align positively, the overall asset class outlook has improved.

The MSCI Pan-European Index returned 6.5% in local currency terms for the third quarter of 2025, matching the previous quarter. Despite market stagnation in late-2025, returns stayed strong, reflecting real estate's resilience and stable valuations near cycle lows. Real estate remains a defensive asset with growth potential if economic conditions improve as expected.

The key question now is whether the recovery will accelerate. Our leading indicators suggest a gradual improvement. Real estate investment trusts (REITs) are trading at large discounts to net asset value and remain sensitive to interest rate expectations, but the FTSE EPRA NAREIT Index for Europe was up 8% over the year to 19 January 2026. This provides us with confidence in a gradual improvement in performance for the direct market in 2026. Operational performance has remained resilient, with many REITs achieving strong revenue growth through rising rents and stronger occupancy.

Non-listed investors are also feeling more upbeat. The INREV Confidence Indicator continued its sharp rebound in December 2025. The composite score rose to 59.4, just a touch shy of its peak level of 61.5 in December 2024, signalling renewed investor optimism. Financing conditions soared to 71, while economic expectations, leasing and operations, and investment liquidity all improved. Development activity remained in contraction below 50.

Another key recent dataset also came from the INREV Investor Sentiment Survey, released on 16 January. The latest survey shows that 38% of non-listed real estate fund investors are looking to increase their allocations this year, a sharp jump from 18% last year. Encouragingly, we should see fewer redemptions, as the share of investors looking to decrease allocations has fallen from 43% to 22% in 2026.1

Capital markets are gradually improving, with total investment projected at €200 billion in 2025, below the long-term average of €295 billion. Country-level capital flows have recovered to 85% of pre-pandemic levels, except in Germany and the Netherlands. Office investments are especially weak at just 43% of pre-pandemic averages, while industrial (101%), residential (84%), retail (70%), and data centres (143%) sectors are nearing or exceeding historic norms.

Finally, overseas capital flows will be critical against a backdrop of domestic economic pressures. Canadian investors deployed approximately €8 billion into Europe over the past 12 months, up 272% year-on-year, while Australian pension funds are showing increased interest. Capital that might otherwise have targeted the US could be redirected to more compelling opportunities in Europe.

Outlook for performance and risk

Geopolitical risks remain elevated, yet the market is showing signs of renewed optimism as we enter the new year. We have seen more interest from investors in the asset class, especially from international capital. Sentiment indices are suggesting a decent recovery in enthusiasm after the raft of geopolitical shocks in the first half of the year. 

Property-level returns recovered to 6.5%, as of September 2025, indicating early market recovery. We project all-property returns will rise to 7.1% in the next year, which is consistent with previous forecasts. Our three- and five-year annualised return estimates are 8.4% and 8.2%, respectively. Near-term returns will be driven by income, with rental growth and modest yield changes supporting capital growth in 2026 and 2027. The UK, Southern Europe, Sweden, Norway, and the Netherlands are expected to see the highest returns.

The main risks to our outlook are: the potential ongoing disruption from great power tensions, particularly from US foreign policy; a steeper yield curve because of greater sovereign risk and concerns about budget deficits (particularly in France); and an economic slowdown. Higher inflation is not forecast, but could result from some of the risks outlined above. That said, low supply should insulate cash flows from a weaker macro backdrop, and valuations remain close to their cyclical trough.

Core pricing remains appealing at this stage of the cycle due to expected rental growth, indexation, and the higher-risk environment. Yield spreads versus bonds have been stable this quarter. Core-plus and value-add strategies are supported by strong fundamentals, more opportunities, and lower debt costs. Most portfolio issues are asset-specific, not sector- or region-wide. Living, logistics, retail, core offices, and alternative assets are showing strong prospects.

European total returns from December 2025

  1. INREV Sentiment Survey 2026
  2. Green Street
  3. JLL Research
  4. JLL Research
  5. MSCI Pan European Quarterly Index
  6. CBRE
  7. Property Market Analysis Investor Intentions September 2025
  8. MSCI / RCA
  9. MSCI Pan-European Index

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