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Jamaica Homes's avatar

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.

Jamaica Homes's avatar

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.

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