Swiss real estate prices rose moderately in 2024, with apartment prices up 2% and single-family homes increasing 1.2%, showing marked regional differences.

"We therefore remain cautious and expect Swiss real estate prices in 2025 to keep pace with inflation."
Swiss real estate is holding its ground, but the cracks are beginning to show. In 2024, apartment prices climbed by a resilient 2%, while single-family homes managed a modest 1.2% increase, according to the latest data from RealAdvisor. For the third consecutive year, apartments have outperformed houses, driving the market forward even as economic headwinds stiffen.
However, this annual growth masks a sharp deceleration as the year closed. The fourth quarter acted as a harsh reality check: apartment prices dipped slightly by 0.1%, and single-family homes barely moved, inching up a negligible 0.1%. This stagnation signals that the momentum driving the post-pandemic boom is evaporating. While the market hasn't crashed, it has certainly hit a wall, leaving investors and homeowners grappling with a new era of slow-motion economics.
The national average hides a fractured landscape where location is the only currency that matters. While some regions surge, others are sliding into decline. Schaffhausen has emerged as the undisputed winner, with city apartment prices jumping 1.8% and cantonal figures rising 1.7%. Winterthur (+1.3%) and Lausanne (+0.7%) also defied the gloom, posting solid gains that highlight the enduring appeal of key urban hubs.
In stark contrast, other regions are bleeding value. Basel-Stadt suffered a dramatic 2.0% drop in apartment prices, the sharpest decline recorded. Uri followed closely with a 1.7% fall, while Lugano and Lucerne also posted negative figures. This is no longer a uniform market; it is a fragmented battlefield where the gap between the winners in Zurich (+0.8%) and the losers in Basel is widening at an alarming rate.
While prices hold steady, the actual flow of deals has nearly evaporated. Transaction volumes across Switzerland fell by 6% in 2024, marking the second consecutive year of contraction. Despite interest rates beginning to cool, the market remains paralyzed, with activity levels sinking well below the ten-year average.
Nowhere is this freeze more evident than in Geneva. In a staggering collapse, the number of real estate transactions in the canton plummeted by 31% in the third quarter compared to the previous year. This represents the lowest quarterly figure in over a decade. Buyers have effectively gone on strike, refusing to engage at current price points, creating a liquidity crisis that threatens to lock up the market for the foreseeable future.
The days of quick sales and bidding wars are over. Properties are now languishing on the market, gathering dust as sellers refuse to lower prices and buyers refuse to pay them. Data reveals that single-family homes and apartments are staying on the market 40% longer than they did just two years ago.
This dramatic increase in 'time on market' reflects a profound stalemate. It is a standoff between buyer caution—fueled by economic uncertainty—and seller stubbornness. While supply constraints and low construction activity are preventing a price crash, the liquidity of the Swiss property asset class has significantly deteriorated. For sellers, patience is no longer a virtue; it is a costly necessity.
Don't expect a rebound anytime soon. The forecast for 2025 looks like a carbon copy of the last twelve months: modest price growth suffocated by low transaction volumes. RealAdvisor predicts that the current stalemate is here to stay, with supply constraints acting as the only floor under prices.
Jonas Wiesel, co-founder of RealAdvisor, issued a sober prediction: "We therefore remain cautious and expect Swiss real estate prices in 2025 to keep pace with inflation." This means real value growth will likely be negligible. For investors and homeowners alike, the message is clear: the boom is dead, and the market has entered a long, flat winter of stagnation.