Jamaica Homes

Jamaica Homes

Jamaica Property Insider

Jamaica's Property Boom Hasn't Disappeared. It May Just Be Stuck in Traffic

Jamaica Homes's avatar
Jamaica Homes
Jun 09, 2026
∙ Paid
stock image
stock image

For weeks, the conversation around Jamaica’s real estate market has been overwhelmingly positive.

New apartment towers continue to rise above Kingston’s skyline. Housing developments are expanding across St Catherine and Clarendon. Tourism-linked projects continue to attract attention in St Ann and Montego Bay. Investors remain active. Diaspora buyers continue to enquire. Across much of the island, cranes, concrete mixers and construction crews remain visible reminders that significant sums of money are still being poured into property.

Against that backdrop, recent transaction data appears, at first glance, to tell a completely different story.

Completed sales reported during the first four months of 2026 fell sharply when compared with the same period last year. The headline number is difficult to ignore. Closed sales dropped from 655 transactions in 2025 to just 127 in 2026.

For some observers, that statistic alone may seem enough to declare that Jamaica’s property boom is fading.

That conclusion would be premature.

The real story may not be that the market has lost momentum. It may be that the market is becoming increasingly congested.

When examining the figures more closely, another number stands out. While completed sales declined, the volume of properties sitting under contract increased dramatically, rising from 236 to 614 over the same period.

That is not what a market in freefall normally looks like.

If buyers were disappearing, one would expect both completed sales and pending transactions to fall together. Instead, the pipeline of deals appears to be growing even as fewer transactions are crossing the finish line.

In simple terms, people still seem willing to buy.

The challenge appears to be getting those purchases completed.

User's avatar

Continue reading this post for free, courtesy of Jamaica Homes.

Or purchase a paid subscription.
© 2026 Jamaica Homes · Privacy ∙ Terms ∙ Collection notice
Start your SubstackGet the app
Substack is the home for great culture