Is There Still a Real Estate Boom in Jamaica Today?
Hurricane Melissa, a shrinking economy, global conflict, and a housing crisis have transformed Jamaica's real estate market. The result is neither boom nor bust, but something far more complicated.

For much of the past decade, Jamaica’s property market seemed almost unstoppable. New apartment towers rose across Kingston. Resort developments expanded along the north coast. Housing schemes stretched into former cane fields. Returning residents bought homes. Diaspora investors purchased retirement properties. Short-term rentals transformed entire neighbourhoods.
For years, the story was simple.
Jamaica was building. Prices were rising. Demand appeared endless.
Then came Hurricane Melissa. Then came war in the Middle East. Then came a shrinking economy.
Suddenly, a question began to surface across boardrooms, construction sites, banking halls, and family dinner tables: Is Jamaica’s real estate boom finally over?
The answer is both yes and no.
The boom that defined the years following the pandemic has undoubtedly changed. But the evidence suggests that Jamaica’s property market remains remarkably resilient. What has disappeared is not demand itself. What has disappeared is the illusion that every property, in every location, could rise indefinitely.
The market has matured. And perhaps that is exactly what needed to happen.
The Numbers That Refuse to Fit a Crash Narrative
If Jamaica’s property market were truly collapsing, the evidence would be difficult to miss. Developers would be cancelling projects. Banks would be reporting weaker mortgage demand. Construction activity would be falling off a cliff. Property prices would be declining sharply across multiple parishes.
Instead, the opposite continues to appear in the data.
The National Housing Trust is currently managing more than 41,000 housing solutions at various stages of development across Jamaica. Within that pipeline are approximately 10,700 units under construction, nearly 6,000 units at contract award stage, more than 11,500 in procurement, and more than 11,600 in planning and design.
The NHT plans to commence construction on another 10,675 housing solutions during the 2026–2027 financial year while delivering 5,673 units to market. The Housing Agency of Jamaica plans an additional 2,134 housing starts.
Taken together, those are not the numbers of a country retreating from housing development. They are the numbers of a country still desperately trying to catch up.
The Housing Deficit That Never Went Away
At the heart of Jamaica’s property story lies a simple reality. The country still does not have enough homes.
Government estimates continue to place Jamaica’s housing deficit at more than 150,000 units. That shortage matters because housing markets do not behave like stock markets. Property values can fall when supply overwhelms demand. But Jamaica’s challenge has been the opposite. Demand has consistently outrun supply.
Every year, new households are formed. Families seek larger homes. Young professionals attempt to enter the market. Returning residents come home. Diaspora buyers continue investing. Investors search for rental opportunities.
The result is a structural shortage that continues to underpin prices even during periods of economic weakness.
Hurricane Melissa Changed Everything
The most significant event to hit Jamaica’s housing market in recent history was not a financial crisis. It was a storm. - Dean Jones, Founder of Jamaica Homes
According to estimates from the Planning Institute of Jamaica, Hurricane Melissa caused approximately J$1.953 trillion in damage, losses, and additional costs, equivalent to roughly US$12.2 billion.
The scale is difficult to comprehend. Entire communities were damaged. Thousands of homes required repairs. Families who had intended to purchase property suddenly found themselves rebuilding instead.
Yet hurricanes create a peculiar economic contradiction. They destroy wealth while simultaneously generating reconstruction demand.
The aftermath of Melissa increased demand for contractors, engineers, surveyors, architects, building materials, electricians, plumbers, roofing specialists, and replacement housing. The result is that Jamaica effectively became several different property markets at once.
Some communities remain under pressure. Others are experiencing renewed demand. Properties located in areas perceived to be less vulnerable to flooding or storm surge have become increasingly attractive. Resilience has become a selling point.
A Shrinking Economy and a Growing Housing Sector
The contradiction becomes even more striking when viewed through the wider economy.
During the January to March 2026 quarter, Jamaica’s economy contracted by 5.9 per cent. Tourism arrivals weakened. Agricultural production remained under pressure. Consumer confidence softened.
Under normal circumstances, such conditions would be expected to place severe pressure on property values.
Yet the housing market has remained remarkably stable.
Why?
Because housing demand is not solely driven by economic growth. It is driven by necessity. People still need somewhere to live. Families still require homes. Investors continue seeking hard assets during uncertain times. Diaspora buyers continue to see Jamaica as both a lifestyle and investment destination.
The result is a market that has slowed but not collapsed.
The Cement Test
One of the simplest ways to judge a property market is not through estate agents. It is through cement.
Few indicators provide a clearer picture of construction activity than the volume of cement being consumed.
In February 2026, Carib Cement reported approximately 96,000 metric tonnes of cement sales, described as a record month. People do not purchase cement because they are worried about a housing crash. They purchase cement because they are building.
That single statistic may reveal more about Jamaica’s property market than hundreds of headlines.
The Mortgage Story
Another powerful clue lies within the banking system.
Mortgage lending now accounts for roughly 50 per cent of household credit in Jamaica. Banks continue reporting growth in mortgage portfolios. Demand for home ownership remains significant. Larger loan balances reflect the reality of higher property values and larger housing purchases.
Again, this is not the behaviour typically associated with a collapsing market. When property markets fail, mortgage growth usually weakens long before prices begin to fall.
That is not what is happening.
The Real Crisis Is Affordability
Yet none of this means the market is healthy for everyone.
In fact, the greatest challenge facing Jamaica’s housing sector today is not lack of demand. It is affordability.
Many developments marketed as affordable now carry price tags exceeding the reach of teachers, nurses, police officers, junior managers, public servants, and even dual-income professional households.
This is where the boom begins to feel very different depending on who you are.
For developers and landowners, values remain relatively strong. For existing homeowners, accumulated equity continues to grow. For many first-time buyers, however, home ownership appears increasingly distant.
The challenge facing Jamaica is therefore not whether homes are being built. It is whether enough of those homes are being built for the people who need them most.
The Shadow of Global Conflict
The war involving Israel, Iran, and the United States may seem geographically distant. Economically, it is anything but.
Jamaica imports virtually all of its fuel. The country spends approximately US$1.5 billion to US$2 billion annually on petroleum imports depending on global prices.
Higher energy costs feed directly into construction. Concrete becomes more expensive. Steel becomes more expensive. Transportation becomes more expensive. Electricity becomes more expensive. Mortgage affordability becomes more difficult.
Every geopolitical shock eventually arrives on a Jamaican construction site.
That reality means Jamaica’s housing market is increasingly shaped by forces far beyond its shores.
What Happens Next?
The most likely future is neither boom nor bust. Instead, Jamaica appears to be entering a period of selection.
The strongest locations will continue attracting investment. Resilient developments will command premiums. Well-priced housing will continue to sell. Overpriced properties may remain on the market for extended periods.
Artificial intelligence will increasingly influence how properties are marketed, valued, and discovered. Remote work will continue to reshape location preferences. Diaspora buyers will remain influential. Climate resilience will become a defining feature of property value. And affordability will become the central political and economic issue of the housing market.
The Verdict
If Jamaica’s real estate market were a person, it would no longer be a teenager racing recklessly toward adulthood. It would be entering middle age. Wiser. More cautious. More complicated. - Dean Jones, Founder of Jamaica Homes
The evidence does not support the argument that Jamaica’s property boom is over. Nor does it support the notion that the market remains in the explosive phase that characterised much of the period between 2021 and 2024.
Instead, Jamaica has entered something more nuanced.
A housing-shortage-driven market supported by more than 41,000 units in development, over 10,700 units under construction, a housing deficit exceeding 150,000 homes, rising mortgage lending, strong remittance inflows of US$542 million during the first two months of 2026, and billions of dollars in reconstruction activity.
Against that stand a 5.9 per cent economic contraction, J$1.953 trillion in hurricane damage, rising construction costs, geopolitical instability, and an affordability crisis that shows little sign of easing.
This is not a market in retreat. It is a market being tested.
And so far, despite hurricanes, wars, inflation, uncertainty, and a rapidly changing world increasingly shaped by artificial intelligence, Jamaica’s housing market continues to do what it has done for generations.
It keeps building.





What Is Holding the Market Up?
Several powerful forces continue to support prices.
1. Housing Shortage
Jamaica still has a structural housing shortage.
Even with thousands of new units being built, demand continues to exceed supply in many locations.
2. Diaspora Demand
Overseas Jamaicans continue to buy property for retirement, investment, family members, and future relocation.
While demand fluctuates with exchange rates and global economic conditions, it remains an important pillar of the market.
3. Rebuilding Demand
Thousands of damaged homes need repairs, rebuilding, or replacement following Melissa.
That reconstruction activity itself supports land values, construction employment, and demand for housing.
4. Construction Pipeline
Developers and the NHT continue to launch projects.
A true market collapse would usually see projects being cancelled rather than expanded.
What Is Holding the Market Back?
The boom is facing headwinds.
Affordability
This is probably the biggest issue.
Many new developments are priced beyond the reach of average Jamaicans. Teachers, nurses, police officers, junior managers, and many NHT contributors are finding it increasingly difficult to purchase new housing.
Higher Construction Costs
The construction sector continues to face higher material and logistics costs, partly linked to hurricane disruption and global pressures.
Slower Economic Growth
The Jamaican economy is still recovering from Hurricane Melissa and global uncertainties.
PIOJ forecasts indicate recovery, but not explosive growth.
Mortgage Affordability
Mortgage costs remain a challenge for many first-time buyers, especially in the middle-income market.
The Evidence Suggests the Market Has Not Collapsed
If Jamaica's property market were truly in trouble, we would normally expect to see:
Large numbers of abandoned developments
Significant price declines across the island
Developers halting projects
Major oversupply
That is not what is happening.
The National Housing Trust announced that it intends to commence construction on 10,675 new housing solutions during the 2026/27 financial year, with thousands of lots and houses scheduled for delivery. That is not the behaviour of a country expecting a housing crash.
The rebuilding effort after Hurricane Melissa has also created substantial demand for contractors, tradesmen, construction materials, and replacement housing. In many communities, reconstruction activity is adding to construction demand rather than reducing it.